Snakes skinned alive for purses and clothes

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IntlSet

Bonjour!
Jan 29, 2006
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Urgh, I knew I didn't like snakeskin items for a reason...

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/li...=482849&in_page_id=1879&in_a_source=&ito=1490

Pythons skinned and left to die. The shocking reality behind fashion's new obsession

By TOM RAWSTORNE - More by this author » Last updated at 08:49am on 20th September 2007
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NaomiSnakeDressDM_228x429.jpg
Animal instincts: Naomi Cambell models a snake-skin dress at a Dolce & Gabbana show






Pythons skinned alive and left to die in agony. Alligators killed with hammers and chisels. This is the truly shocking reality behind fashion's shameful new obsession:

At a slaughterhouse, deep in the Javanese jungle, blood-stained hands untie a wriggling sack and pull out a ten-foot long python.
The snake is stunned with a blow to the head from the back of a machete and a hose pipe expertly forced between its jaws. Next, the water is turned on and the reptile fills up — swelling like a balloon.

It will be left like that for ten minutes or so, a leather cord tied around its neck to prevent the liquid escaping.

Then its head is impaled on a meat hook, a couple of quick incisions follow, and the now-loosened skin peeled off with a series of brutal tugs - much like a rubber glove from a hand.
From there the skin will be sent to a tannery before being turned into luxury shoes or handbags. Finally, they will be snapped up by an army of pampered Western fashionistas desperate for the latest look and happy to pay thousands of pounds to get it.

Meanwhile, back in Indonesia, the python's peeled body is simply tossed on a pile of similarly stripped snakes. After a day or two of unimaginable agony it will die from the effects of shock or dehydration.

Barbaric, cruel, stomach turning - those are just a few of the words used by those who have witnessed snakes being skinned alive. But in Europe, the mention of reptile skin - be it snake, lizard, alligator or crocodile - draws a very different response and a very different vocabulary.

'Exotic skins are hot right now, there's a real buzz,' enthuses designer Roberto Cavalli, who has dressed Kate Moss to Sharon Stone.
'I love to use reptile skins because it excites me to take material that is seen as "wild" and mix it with a look that shouts glamour and sophistication.'
Sad to say, Cavalli is not alone in the fashion world in his attitude to the latest must-have 'fabric'. The European Union is the world's biggest importer of reptile skins.
Between 2000 and 2005, it is estimated that 3.4 million lizard, 2.9 million crocodile and 3.4 million snake skins were brought into the EU.
And this year, like never before, skin is most certainly 'in'. Indeed, the hottest fashion debate in town is not about the ethics of the trade - but whether to opt for python or anaconda.
Take, for example, Jimmy Choo, makers of shoes and bags. The high-end fashion house's £1,695 Rio clutch handbag is available in the skins of either of the above.
Or what about treading in Sienna Miller's fashion footsteps with a pair of python-skin boots by the American designer Devi Kroell? Yours for just a shade under £1,000. Something else? Try Calvin Klein's alligator jackets, Celine's white python skirt or a metallic python bag by Zagliani - injected with silicone for an ultra-soft feel.
Jennifer Lopez has been spotted out and about sporting the Zag-bag while Desperate Housewives star Eva Longoria's passion for a giant £1,300 python bag by Prada saw websites inundated with drooling postings from envious fashion-watchers.
'Wow will you look at that!!!,' wrote one such contributor. 'You get a lotta python for your money. It's beautiful!' But, as environmentalists are only too quick to point out, it looks a whole lot more beautiful on the snake.
On the banks of the River Arno there's an Italian town whose motto goes as follows: 'Always make sure people walk on Santa Croce shoes and dress in Santa Croce skins'.
As the saying implies, Santa Croce has been the home of the Italian tanning industry for centuries. But, while it has traditionally specialised in treating hides from cattle and sheep, nowadays the factories are full of the skins of exotic species such as snakes, crocodiles and ostriches.
Make no mistake, it's big business - the Centro Rettili, one of the largest tanneries, last year dealt with 3,000 individual crocodile skins and 50,000 snakes - producing 170,000 metres of python skin (roughly 100 miles, the distance from London to Birmingham).
The three-storey factory is run by Roberto Bachi, who set up the company in 1985 and has 20 employees.
Their work consists of turning the sundried skins that arrive at the tannery into a material that is both workable and highly desirable.
'We work for all the big designer labels - Versace, Gucci, Chanel, La Croix and Fendi and the skins are used for handbags, belts and shoes,' explains Mr Bachi.
The crocodile skins, he says, are farmed in America while the snakes are imported from Indonesia. 'In the Indonesian jungle, they are caught using ropes. I know some of these poor people have been killed in the process,' he adds.
'They have been crushed or strangled to death and the python also ingests its prey once it is dead - it's not a very pleasant end if you are caught by a python.' Very true Signor Bachi. But reverse the roles and the same is true.
Equally pertinent are the growing concerns about the impact the reptile skin trade is having on fragile species and the eco-systems in which they live.
For while the fashion industry defends its use of these animals by claiming that they are either farmed or harvested under a strict system of quotas, environmentalists say the reality of what is happening is not that simple.
Consider the plight of the reticulated python, the most popular of snakes when it comes to the manufacture of shoes and handbags.
Found primarily in South East Asia, it is the world's longest snake, with exceptional specimens growing up to 30 ft in length. It is fast growing, has a beautifully patterned skin and has been plentiful in the past.
However, experts warn that the population is under severe threat.
This is recognised in part by the fact it is on Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species - an agreement to which more than 170 countries have put their names. CITES aims to protect specific species from extinction by controlling the trade in these animals.
This year, for instance, it stipulated that 157,000 reticulated python skins could be exported from Indonesia. The figure has stayed relatively stable for years and one might be forgiven for imagining that the population can sustain the removal of that number of snakes every year.
But those on the ground say that simply is not the case. Dr Mark Auliya is based in Malaysia and is the South East Asian scientific officer for TRAFFIC, an organisation linked to the World Wildlife Fund which helps monitor the international wildlife trade.
He warns that the reticulated python population is under pressure. 'While the quota established by the Governmental authorities stays the same, every year the hunting areas required to fulfill that quota grows larger,' he said.
'This means that 20 years ago a certain amount of pythons could be harvested from a much smaller area than today.
'Also, there is clear evidence that large specimens are getting rarer and rarer. It shows that the reticulated python cannot cope in the long term with the high out-take by the commercial skin trade.'
While clearly better than nothing, the CITES quota system has long been criticised for being far too 'generous'.
'It is really a convention on trade and not on protection,' says Clifford Warwick, a consultant biologist and one of Britain's leading reptile experts.
'Any quotas set by CITES or by anyone else I take with an absolute pinch of salt.'
For every animal or animal product that goes through the system legally, it is estimated that another will be smuggled. Evidence of the scale of this illicit trade emerged recently when more than half a ton of python skins were discovered hidden in audio speaker parts in a lorry being driven from Malaysia to Singapore.
'In Indonesia relatively low-level bribery gets something through,' says Mr Warwick.'
CITES certificates can be bought at very little cost, forged or copied and they are very rarely inspected. It is not a problem - it is simple to move snake and reptile skins around.
'If you have half your trade in the world slipping through the net, you effectively have no control.'
Both Dr Auliya and Mr Warwick's own experiences also raise questions about claims that the snakes or reptile skins used in the fashion industry come from farmed stocks. Mr Warwick says that less than 10 per cent of reptiles are farmed because the process is too expensive and too complicated.
Even alligator ranches in America, he explains, have to be 'topped up' with wild adult specimens because the breeding process has such a high mortality rate.
'The slaughter process is pretty dire,' says Mr Warwick.
'The snakes are often nailed to a tree with a large nail. It doesn't kill them because they have a small brain and there's little chance of actually hitting it. (click link to read rest)
 
Very interesting article and sad to see happen but it's the truth. I mean it goes for all animals killings not only for fashion but for food as well. It's the same process if you were eating meat too. Even though some are farmed, they still have to go through a certain type of killing. Any kind of animal has a price tag to it. People also eat snake too, they don't eat them alive now...

I disagree and agree with the article. Killing for fashion is nothing new but there should be more laws about killing the animal into extinction. But then again..nobody wants to do something. There are so many causes that need attention and not enough people willing to make a move on.

Thanks for the post, very good article.
 
If I was ever attracted to snakeskin anything before, this killed it. It's so horrifying that I really can't even remember how I felt about snakeskin before this . . . Isn't that strange?
 
I didn't post this in order to anger anyone. I'm no saint either, but I think it pays to be informed. Making informed decisions about what we purchase is a good thing, in my book! But if it doesn't bother you that snakes are skinned alive, fine -- to each her own.
 
I didn't post this in order to anger anyone. I'm no saint either, but I think it pays to be informed. Making informed decisions about what we purchase is a good thing, in my book! But if it doesn't bother you that snakes are skinned alive, fine -- to each her own.

Well said. :tup:
Ignorance is not bliss - be informed, consider the consequences, and THEN do whatever you deem to be right.
 
That is so horrible. I haven't ever owned anything in skin (I really don't care for them, snakes scare me) and I am so thankful now. That is simply awful.
 
Oh dear God I am sick reading this. I would never wear fur after hearing how the animals are killed but I succumbed briefly to the Chloe snakeskin Betty bag. I am so glad I sold it now & thoroughly ashamed of myself for ever owning it!
This is just sick!
 
This is the unfortunate truth... lots of people say that high end designers don't skin snakes alive or that they treat the snakes humanely before making them into accessories... unfortunately, that's not true.
 
That's really horrible. I think it's so tacky to wear skins like that plus personally I think exotic skins are pretty fugly. I don't feel bad about wearing leather because I eat the meat and I'm sure the cows aren't bludgeoned on the head like this and left to be tortured. Leather however is where I draw the line. I think some aligator skin looks nice but I would never even wear that and would rather get a fake. Nor would I wear fur either. Plus they are just tossing the rest of the snake aside without using it all, just for the skin. It's wasteful and cruel that they don't at least kill the snake completely.
 
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