LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 16: A zoo keeper holds a bucket of horse meat to feed the lions at the new lion enclosure 'Land Of The Lions' at London Zoo on March 16, 2016 in London, England. The enclosure will be opened by the Queen and is modelled on the village Sasan Gir in Gujarat, India, where lions and villagers live side by side. It is five times the size of the previous enclosure and facilitates for a breeding group of endangered Asiatic lions, of which only several hundred remain in the wild.

After Aline Oudin felt obliged to seek a temporary residence for her cherished 28-year-old chestnut horse Ténor du Pluvinage, she posted an inquiry appealing if anybody might provide him a suitable paddock to live out his days.

Illegal Trafficking of Horse-Meat 

The Guardian has recently reported a case of horse-meat trafficking in Europe, when a guy in his 60s answered that he was searching for a peaceful companionship for the juvenile mare he recently purchased for his daughter, Oudin agreed to enable him take the pony off with the condition that she may meet him on a routine basis.

According to the statement of the owner in an interview made by the guardian - the online media site that covered the article, she has claimed that everything occurred in a flash that she did not even get enough time to ponder what just have occured.

She also stated that the guy appreciated Ténor, and because of that she gave me her full trust of taking of Tenor and tha she was in considerable anguish at having to leave from my friend of 23 years.

Oudin sent out requests and advertisements in an attempt to find out what had occurred to her pet. She found the pony was already transferred to a slaughterhouse month prior.

Nine years later, 18 persons, namely two veterinarians, are scheduled to testify in person in Marseille on Monday, charged of being part of a huge criminal smuggling operation that reportedly provided horsemeat unsuitable for biological digestion to distributors and processors throughout Europe.

The news media site Cheval Magazine has also reported that the appellants, from France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Spain, are suspected of buying and selling thousands of pensioned draft horses and thoroughbreds, as well as equines, to Belgium, where they were reportedly provided counterfeit recognition and monitoring records prior to actually becoming forwarded back to slaughterhouses in the south of France.

They risk up to ten years in jail if charged of the crime as part of an organized organization or delivering fraudulent and misleading goods intended to endanger population wellbeing. Eight of the suspects have been detained since 2015, when European authorities broke up the continent's structure.

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Horse-Meat Trafficking in Europe


The examining magistrate, Mathilde Bloch, stated that investigators had demonstrated carelessness or positive conduct indicating the cooperation of the two veterinarians suspected of altering paperwork.

Oudin, from Meurthe-et-Moselle in eastern France, is estimated to be among of more than 150 horse owners who turned over their aging horses expecting they would be cared for in their final years.

Following much study, the owner discovered that the horse was murdered when he was given pesticide, slithering, and anti-inflammatory medications that had rendered him completely unsuitable for consumption, told the French media, LeParisien.

"I have been genuinely upset. I kept this horse for two decades and he was like family to me."

Several of the physicians' solicitor, Lionel Febbraro, attributed his claimant's participation on ignorance over extremely difficult European standards. Although the experts acknowledge it can't be nice to find that your pony stopped at the slaughterhouse, nobody perished ill.

 

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