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Union Policy 457

At the national council of the AMIEU in September 2006 a policy was adopted on the use of 457 Visas for short term migrants in the meat industry.

Live Export Petition

Please help
STOP the export of live animals
Sign this online petition
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HERE

Live Exports


Unions Lead Struggle
Against Live Exports
The Victorian Branch of the AMIEU led the struggle against the live sheep trade in the late 1970s and early 1980s. We predicted that the live sheep trade would bring about the loss of smallstock killing centres and the loss of many jobs.

In the mid 1970s there were two smallstock chains in Portland, year round, killing 6000 a day in the season. In May 1996 AMH announced that the Portland works would be permanently closed. As well as the Portland closure, the large export smallstock killing centres of Ballarat, Geelong, Donald and the western suburbs of Melbourne are all gone.

Now live cattle exports provide a major threat to the beef processing industry.

Coalition on Live Export Campaign

Meatworkers and animal libbers form alliance

Animal Liberation

It may surprise you that Animal Liberation condemn the fact that live exports mean lost jobs in the meat industry in Australia. Click on here to see what they say.

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Animal Liberation

Australia's Live Sheep Trade

The Facts
In September 1996, nearly 70,000 sheep were abandoned at sea on the carrier Uniceb and slowly burned to death or were drowned or starved. Each year, more than 100,000 sheep die on these voyages - of disease, heat, cold and starvation. Another 150,000 die in Middle East feedlots.

The Conditions
During the 3-week journey, sheep are immobilised in an area hardly bigger than themselves. They cannot exercise - they can scarcely move. They live on pellets, they stand in their own excrement.

The Slaughter
Sheep which survive the journey and the unloading are killed by having their throats cut without pre-stunning.

The Cost
To the sheep:
Long weeks of suffering, followed by an agonising death.

To the environment: Approximately 4,000 tonnes of manure and 2-6 million litres of urine are washed into the sea each voyage. Bodies of sheep which die at sea are thrown overboard.

To the economy: About 12,000 meatworking and associated industry jobs are lost to the Live Sheep Trade. (Until the world goes vegetarian, this is the lesser of the two evils).

Inside the Ship

A look inside one of the ships. Conditions are similar to intensive livestock production.

Fire on the ship

On 27 March 1980, the Farid Fares caught fire and sank. The entire "cargo" of 40,605 sheep perished.


The torment and death often begin even before the voyage - many accidents occur. Click here to see a picture of a truckload of sheep that died on the way to the ship when the truck carrying them overturned. Warning: It's not pretty.

Things CAN change

In September 1995, the South African government banned the importation of live sheep. They said:
"The transportation of meat in live form is archaic and inhumane."

What can you do?

Write to The Minister for Primary Industries & Energy. Public silence permits this obscene trade to continue. Your protest helps stops it.

Sample letter to The Minister that you can print.


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