WORLD DAY
FOR
ANIMALS
IN LABORATORIES
27 APRIL 2024

CALL TO ACTION

Come and join us for the 2024 march through Liverpool.

Meet in St John`s Gardens 12pm. The first speech will be at 1pm, with the march starting at 13:30pm. There will be speeches and stops en route. Veggies will be there to keep you filled with fabulous food (and there are many amazing veggie/vegan restaurants in Liverpool).

If you can`t attend the march we hope you can demonstrate outside your local labs, or shops with links to vivisection. Tag #wdail2024 in your social media posts so we get to see you in action. Let`s make it the biggest range of demonstrations against animal testing held in one day!

If you or your group are up for this, please tell us:

· Your name, email and address as we are looking to get leaflets to participating groups across the UK.

· Where you are going to be and why: location; how many animals are tested on; and why you chose this particular venue to protest. If you don't know where to protest locally then please get in touch so we can help advise you.

· Any particular activity such as a banner drop or local leafleting

· If you are willing to contribute either a video or live stream.

Wishing you and your group every success and an appreciation for all that you do for the animals.

The march route will be as follows:


The amazing Viva La Vegan are stocking our t-shirt for WDAIL 2024!
There is Unisex sizing...
and there is Ladies sizing...
There is also a useful tote bag!
If you have any questions about the t-shirt please contact Viva La Vegan directly.



On behalf of the World Day for Animals In Laboratories Organising Coalition and associated groups:

Merseyside Animal Rights
Animal Justice Project
Speak
Team Tino
Vivisection Exposed

TRAVEL ADVICE

By Train
Liverpool Lime Street is the mainline station serving Liverpool city centre from towns and cities across the UK and it`s a 5-minute walk to St John`s Gardens where the march commences.
Liverpool Central is the closest underground station, which serves trains from Wirral, Chester, Ormskirk, Southport, Bootle, Waterloo, Kirkby, and North/South Liverpool Merseyrail services.  It is also located approximately 10-minutes’ walk from St John`s Gardens.

By Bus
Arriva and Stagecoach buses operate across the Merseyside area, including Wirral.  A journey planner tool is available on the Merseytravel website to help you determine your bus service and route - www.merseytravel.gov.uk.
The closest bus station to St John`s Gardens is Queen Square Bus terminus, which is approximately 5 minutes’ walk away.  Other services stop at Renshaw St, Sir Thomas St, Water St and Liverpool ONE terminus, which are also within walking distance.
Megabus travels to Liverpool and drops off at Liverpool ONE COACH station -
uk.megabus.com/city-guides/liverpool
National Express travels to Liverpool and drops off at Liverpool ONE COACH station - www.nationalexpress.com/en/destinations/liverpool

By Car
Liverpool is accessed directly via M62, M58 or M56 (these motorways can be accessed via M6).
Access from the Wirral peninsula is via the Mersey Tunnel. The current toll fee per car is £2.00 each way.
There are plenty of car parks around the city centre that are well signposted, these are mostly owned by NCP. However, the cost of a full days’ parking in the city centre can be expensive, so please factor this into your journey cost if travelling by car.

By Air
Liverpool John Lennon airport is the city’s international airport, located approximately 7.5 miles from the city centre. The Arriva 86A bus runs between the airport and city centre. The closest rail station to the airport is Liverpool South Parkway, located 3 miles away.

By Taxi
The following taxi companies operate across Liverpool:
Delta - 0151 922 7373
Alpha - 0151 722 8888
Uber also operates across Liverpool.

Places To Stay
Air BnB
Local Hotels

About WDAIL:

World Day for Animals in Laboratories is over 40 years old. The day was founded by the National Anti-Vivisection Society (NAVS) in 1979. Throughout the 1980s there were demonstrations and protests to mark World Day by anti-vivisection organizations in the UK and overseas. Among the targets were the Ministry of Defence’s Porton Down laboratory, Cambridge University and Shamrock Farm primate breeder.

In 1987 Oxford University was chosen by Animal Aid as the target for its Blinded by Science campaign and nearly 3000 people held a march and rally. The target was sight deprivation experiments carried out by Colin Blakemore including sewing up the eyes of monkeys and keeping kittens in the dark.


Ten years later in 1997 hundreds took part in the World Day Oxford Liberation Tour - marching around the city centre, then converging on the homes of Blakemore and the head of physiology. The City’s main museums, all the science departments and the science library closed for the day.

One of the main campaigns of the late nineties targeted Hillgrove Farm in Witney, Oxfordshire. When a five mile exclusion zone was thrown around the laboratory cat breeder, national demos went ahead instead in Oxford, against the University’s department of psychology which used cats from Hillgrove, causing traffic chaos. Hillgrove closed down in 1999.

In 2004, Speak – the Voice for the Animals was founded to a new animal research facility being built by Oxford University. Protests were held regularly, including for World Day, and construction of the new facility ground to a halt for 16 months. It eventually opened in November 2008 but the Speak campaign went on and in 2013 World Day returned to Oxford for a noisy march against animal experiments there.


Further information:

Speak Campaigns
Animal Justice Project
Safer Medicines
NAVS

About Animal Experiments:

Each year inside British laboratories, almost 4 million animals are forcibly experimented on. Every 8 seconds, one animal dies. Included are experiments on more than 800,000 animals which were categorised by researchers as causing “MODERATE” or “SEVERE” suffering.
SpeciesTotal Procedures
(2022)
Dogs4,122
Monkeys2,197
Horses8,212
Cats102
Other Mammals76,893
Mice1,971,262
Rats185,749
Birds136,190
Fish371,237
Reptiles12
Amphibians5,228

Objections to animal experiments fall into two categories, moral objections and scientific objections.

Moral Objections

We have no right. Animals are not ours to do with as we please.
The extremity of the suffering. Vivisection puts feeling creatures through about as much suffering as it is possible to put a feeling creature through, from surgical procedures without anaesthetic to drownings, from electric shocks to foreign object implants.
Consistency. It's now (since 1998) illegal to vivisect gorillas, chimpanzees and bonobos in the UK. If it's wrong to forcibly compel a chimpanzee to undergo painful experiments, then it's wrong to forcibly compel a mouse to.
The public is increasingly against it (especially the younger generation).
For example, according to Ipsos Mori, a clear majority of under 21s they surveyed responded that 'Experimenting on animals is always morally wrong'
Malpractice and failing regulation. Undercover investigations have revealed appalling breaches in what little protection exists in vivisection laboratories.
For example, workers at HLS (one of the biggest contract test laboratories in the UK) were filmed punching beagle puppies in the face. As another example, workers at the Royal College of Surgeons found it amusing to tattoo the word "crap" on a monkeys forehead (for this breach the laboratory was fined a mere 250 pounds and even this was subsequently overturned on appeal).
It is not just the animals that suffer and die in the laboratories. Millions are additionally killed every year in squalid breeding facilities and as "surplus stock".
Violence leads to violence. People who train themselves to "not be squeamish" about inflicting extreme suffering on animals, are capable of anything. This can only be detrimental to society's moral progress.

Scientific Objections

Reliability. A research methodology must be reliably predictive, not just occasionally right.
Animals are poor model for humans.

Paracetamol is toxic to cats.
Chocolate is toxic to dogs.
Penicillin is toxic to guinea pigs.
Chimpanzees (one of our closest relatives in the animal kingdom) are essentially immune to AIDS, malaria and hepatitis B.
Learning about the wrong diseases. For example, we are wasting resources studying (artificially created) mouse cancer instead of human cancer. Data from mouse cancer studies has proven itself not reliably predictive of human response.
Life saving human cures may have been thrown away because they failed animal tests (for example we nearly lost the useful cancer drugs Gleevec and Tamoxifen in this manner).
Testing on animals does not safely screen drugs that are harmful to humans.
Examples include Vioxx (which caused heart attacks and strokes), Thalidomide (which caused birth defects) and TGN 1412 (which caused multiple organ failure!). In fact 9 out of 10 drugs tested safe on animals prove harmful to humans.
Decades of cruel animal experimentation has glaringly FAILED to find cures for the most feared human diseases like cancer, aids and alzheimers.
More reliable alternatives exist. These include cell and tissue studies, computer modelling, micro-dosing and autopsies.

According to the Safer Medicines Trust adverse reactions to drugs passed safe after animal tests kill 197,000 people in the EU and 128,000 in the US each year. The Trust says:

‘It is estimated that up to 95% of new drug candidates fail to translate into effective treatments for humans despite having appeared safe and effective in animal studies Even drugs that have been declared safe after clinical trials can go on to harm people in the general population. The arthritis drug Vioxx killed up to 111,000 people after appearing to be safe in animals, including monkeys.’

Extensive studies of animal tests ability to predict the potential of drugs and chemicals to cause cancer and birth defects have found them to be ineffective Animal studies are unable to reliably and consistently predict human responses. Cancer Research UK acknowledges:

‘We do trials in people because animal models do not predict what will happen in humans’.

PLACES TO EAT IN LIVERPOOL:

Down The Hatch
Basement, 62 Duke St, Liverpool L1 5AA
Dirty vegan junk food, including burgers, hotdogs, “ribs”. Also incorporates WOO TAN SCRAN - all vegan chinese). Open til midnight
Vibe Vegan Cafe (dog friendly)
Chancery House, Paradise St, L1 3HE
Breakfast, lunches, fairtrade coffee, cakes. Liverpool one shopping centre, open til 8pm.
Guac 'n' Roll (dog friendly)
51 Kempston St, L3 8HE
Punk rock theme vegan kitchen. Burgers, wraps, burritos, homemade cakes. Open til 9pm
The Caledonia (dog friendly)
22 Caledonia St, Liverpool L7 7DX
Traditional pub serving a fully vegan menu.  Located approximately 10-15 minutes’ walk outside of the main city centre. Open til 1am
Sanskruti
Ormond/Bixeth St Corner, Liverpool L3 9NA
Vegetarian & vegan Indian restaurant. Open til 10pm
The Egg Cafe
Top Floor, 16-18 Newington, Liverpool L1 4ED
Well-established vegetarian and vegan café, serving a small menu of vegan dishes, as well as drinks and cakes. No disabled access. Open til 10pm

Contact:




Event



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Email: info@wdail.uk