Sunday, 21 August 2011

So Long, and thanks for all the beagles.


Avid readers of The Isle Of Thanet Gazette may remember that on June 10 we ran a small article on the front page about the lab animals kept at Pfizer's Research and Development site at Sandwich.
For those of you not up to date, US drug firm Pfizer announced it will pulling out of the area in February.
At the time, ours was the only paper to ask "what happens to the animals when Pfizer leaves".
In truth the question was first asked by reader Sandie Ralph who posted the following on our facebook page:
"Whilst we all feel for the people that will lose their jobs when Pfizer closes, has anyone given a thought to the lab animals that are on site at the Sandwich site ?"
A fair question considering Pfizer's track record.
So my first port of call was to contact Pfizer spokeswoman Lauren Starr and ask "How many animals are being kept at Pfizer's Sandwich site and what will happen to them when Pfizer leaves?."

An absurd exchange not unlike the following ensued:

ME: How many animals are being kept at Pfizer's Sandwich site and what will happen to them when Pfizer leaves?
LAUREN: We are committed to humane and compassionate care of our research animals.

ME: Can at you at least tell me how many do have?
LAUREN: We are committed to humane and compassionate care of our research animals.

ME: Are they going to be destroyed?
LAUREN: We are committed to humane and compassionate care of our research animals.

ME: You are not giving much away, don't think that will reflect badly on the company?
LAUREN: We are committed to humane and compassionate care of our research animals.

-ad nauseum etc etc-

ME:

So I contacted a likely local animal group to explain the deal with Pfizer and reported their reaction. The following shortened piece was printed:

PHARMA giant Pfizer has been accused by an animal welfare group of being "cynical and cowardly" after refusing to say what will happen to its animals when its Sandwich site closes.

A Pfizer spokesman said: "We are committed to humane and compassionate care of our research animals."

Andrew Tyler, director of the Tonbridge-based Animal Aid, said: "I think it is utterly cynical and cowardly for Pfizer to conceal this particular point. They have a duty, they have made use of these animals and they should come clean. It is simply not sufficient for them to keep it quiet. They should set up a fund and make sure these animals are homed."

And that was it. I had expected Animal Aid might have picked up the baton or a facebook campaign might have gained some momentum but there you have it.

Fast forward to today and I have just spent the afternoon hanging out with a couple of science bods from Pfizer.
I brought up the issue of said animals in question (I understand they were beagles) and asked what the deal was.

The response?

Well lets just say if you was thinking of starting up a campaign to save them you are too late.
Pfizer has taken care of it- humanely and finally.

Allegedly there were a dozen of these animals- I don't think it would have taken much for the gigantic pharma firm to re-home them, or at least given them some quality in what life they had left.

You win some, you lose some.




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