wspa global review 2009

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World Society for the Protection of Animals

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World Society for the Protection of Animals

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WSPA International 222 Gray’s Inn Road London WC1X 8HB United Kingdom

T: +44 (0)20 7239 0500F: +44 (0)20 7239 0653E: [email protected]: www.wspa-international.org

WSPA operates as an alliance of charitable organisations, the principal being established in the United Kingdom with registered charity number 1081849

© 2010 All rights reserved

No part of this publication may be reprinted or reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publishers.

Writers: Michaela Miller and Kate Green Editors: Kate Green and Michelle Harrison Production manager: Michelle Harrison Designer: Russell Neal Visual editor: Georgina Ash Printer: www.triangleprint.co.uk With thanks to Conor McGeown and Richard Cunningham

Thanks to WSPA supporters, 2009 saw…

50,000 chickens reared in high welfare settings as part of the China model farm project

46 of Borneo’s injured and displaced

orangutans relocated to a safe rainforest home

Over 85,000people across the world back ‘Prou’, the Catalonian people’s anti-bullfighting campaign 219

fellow animal welfare organisations receive training – from veterinary skills to volunteer management – making their work for animals more effective

0 reports of cubs poached for bear dancing in Orissa state, India, after a year of forest guard training and

local education activities

660 teachers across

10 countries, including India and the Philippines, trained in teaching animal welfare messages to shape a compassionate new generation

Relief efforts launched in response to

18 disasters across Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America and Oceania, providing many thousands of animals with emergency feed and care

31 national governments place value on meeting animals’ needs by backing a Universal

Declaration on Animal Welfare, including all EU member states and Nicaragua

8,400Australians call on their members of parliament to reject the cruelty of long distance transport, inspired by our hard-hitting Humane Chain campaign

Improved lives for nearly

13,500 equines in Cambodia, China, Colombia, Israel, Nicaragua, Palestine, Thailand and Uruguay following veterinary care from mobile and static clinics

A world first:

9 rehabilitated bonobos successfully released into a forested region of the Democratic Republic of Congo

4 bears rescued from the violence of baiting and rehomed in the

lifelong sanctuary of Pakistan’s Kund Park, built and funded by WSPA

Nearly

30,000 people educated about responsible pet ownership and rabies prevention, protecting many thousands of dogs

Cover image: Pakistan, 2009. Marvie, a female Asiatic black bear, relaxes in the WSPA-funded Kund Park sanctuary, where large, enriched enclosures provide a lifelong refuge from the brutality of bear baiting.

ContentsAbout us 2

Welcome 3

2000-2009: A decade of making animals matter 4

Inspiring animal welfare worldwide 6

Protecting the world’s strays 8

Changing conditions for working equines 10

Safeguarding wildlife 12

Acting for animals at risk:disaster preparation and response 16

Campaigning for farm animal welfare 18

Creating compassion through education 20

Empowering animal advocates 22

Financial summary 24

Thank you 26

How you can help 28

Read the latest WSPA news at www.wspa-international.org

Printed on 100% recycled paper

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2009 has taken us ever closer to achieving some of our key long-standing goals, including seeing an end to the violence of bear baiting in Pakistan and the suffering of India’s dancing bears. While we continue to use your generous support to end these examples of acute animal cruelty, WSPA is now also in a position to look forward to tackling the many animal welfare challenges that face us with fresh ideas and approaches.

The world is always changing, but we can now see more clearly than ever the effects of human behaviour on animals, as habitat destruction, climate change and food security all shoot up the global agenda. With these universal challenges both creating new and compounding existing animal welfare problems, our responses to farm animal welfare, disaster management and all the issues we work on must be ever more compelling, sustainable and sophisticated.

WSPA is ready for this challenge, with a new five-year strategy to begin in 2010 and energetic leadership from Mike Baker, Chief Executive Officer. Mike joined us in 2009 and brings many years of valuable animal welfare experience with him, most recently from his role as CEO of equine charity The Brooke. Mike, our trustees and WSPA staff remain committed to the issues you have shown you are passionate about, including the various harsh challenges facing the world’s wildlife and the inhumane slaughter of whales. But we must move all our animal protection initiatives forward knowing that we are part of a global community, and that if we work smart, animals, people and the environment will feel the results of our endeavours far beyond each individual action.

To improve the lives of the greatest number of animals possible, in a way that best utilises your generous support, we must ensure animals appear in the global debates they are so relevant to. This is something our work in 2009, particularly the campaign for a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare, has left us in a unique position to do. At the same time, WSPA’s strong history of practical, grass roots work with animals and member societies will continue, and we are pleased to report that more and more of these hands-on projects are contributing to the world’s understanding of animal welfare. In 2009, many of our innovative projects – including showcasing the strengths of humane responses to rabies outbreaks, convincing governments of the value of compassionate approaches for people and dogs – demonstrate that WSPA is at the forefront of creating and proving new best practice for animal welfare that can be replicated worldwide.

This is truly exciting to us, and we hope that what you read within this review inspires you. The dedication of our staff and member societies is matched only by that of our supporters – we make local, national and international change possible together. WSPA is about real improvements in animals’ lives, and that is what you are helping us achieve.

We hope you will be as proud as we are of WSPA’s many achievements in 2009, and will join us in thanking Peter Davies, outgoing Director General, for his great commitment throughout his tenure. We are now looking forward with enthusiasm to what we can do in 2010 to create a world where animal welfare matters and animal cruelty ends, and hope you will stay with us on this journey.

With sincere thanks and best wishes,

Mr Dominique Bellemare BSc LLB MBA President

Mr Mike Baker Chief Executive Officer

WSPA Board of TrusteesWSPA’s UK-based Board of Trustees is largely composed of representatives from some of the world’s largest and most influential animal welfare organisations and offers guidance to all regional WSPA boards.

President Mr Dominique Bellemare BSc LLB MBA Canada

Sr Vice-President Professor Ranald Munro BVMS MSc DVM MRCVS UK

Jr Vice-President Ms Hanja Maij-Weggen The Netherlands

Secretary Mr Peter Mason New Zealand

Treasurer Dr Andrew Rowan DPhil USA

Dr Bjarne Clausen Denmark

Dr Chinny Krishna PhD India

Mr Carter Luke USA

Ms Marcelle Meredith South Africa

Dr Toralf Metveit Norway

Dr Dennis Turner Switzerland

Ms Sonja Van Tichelen Belgium

Ms Cecilia Vega Leon Mexico

Mr Mark Watts UK

Dr Hugh Wirth AM KSJ BVSc Hon DVSc MRCVS FAVA Australia

WSPA senior staff Chief Executive Officer Mr Mike Baker

Deputy CEO and Director of Marketing and Communications Mr John Trampleasure

Director of Programmes Mrs Carol McKenna

Interim Director of Resources Mr Andy Turnbull

Chief Veterinary Adviser

Mr David Wilkins MRCVS MBE

WelcomeThis has been an exciting year for WSPA, and we are proud to have you with us on our present journey.

The World Society for the Protection of Animals brings about change to benefit animals, ranging from local improvements in the treatment of working and companion animals to national agreements that animals’ needs must be respected.

We prevent animal suffering by running and supporting effective campaigns; carrying out projects that are based on and add to sound science; making education central to what we do; and working with a wide range of partners.

With our member societies, governments and international agencies we are leaders in preparing for and responding to disasters, ensuring that the animals which are so vital for community recovery are not forgotten.

In partnership with our Member Society Network – the world’s largest alliance of animal welfare organisations – we seek to achieve our vision: a world where animal welfare matters and animal cruelty ends.

Our work is recognised by the United Nations and Council of Europe.

About us

A WSPA disaster team react to post-earthquake animal need, Costa Rica

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2000UK

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2000-2009 A decade of making animals matter

Our ambitious campaign to persuade the United Nations to adopt a Universal Declaration

on Animal Welfare is launched. A Declaration would encourage governments to make and enforce laws

that benefit animals – perhaps the biggest single step forward for welfare that we can take. By the end of 2009, 36 countries and over two million people have given their support, meaning animals really do matter more than ever.

We sponsor ‘Design against Fur’, the Fur Free Alliance’s annual awareness-raising competition

and are pleased to see students from China – the world’s largest fur producer – win the grand prize. Keen to build on burgeoning welfare awareness, WSPA will support the Alliance’s China-based exhibit of anti-fur artwork in 2010.

At the 57th meeting of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) we release shocking footage of a minke whale being slaughtered, helping to uphold the ban on commercial whaling. But the battle is not yet won. In 2009 a huge 70,000 supporters joined WSPA in calling on the IWC to reject ‘coastal whaling’ – a threat to the worldwide whaling ban. You were heard: the proposal failed.

Borneo’s Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Sanctuary is saved from closure by WSPA

supporters, protecting the welfare of 650 injured or orphaned ape inhabitants. Today, our support remains vital in helping the sanctuary safeguard the welfare of as many orangutans as it possibly can.

Campaigning against the cruelty of bullfighting with Spanish member society ADDA results

in Barcelona’s 2004 anti-bullfighting declaration, saving many animals from fear and torment. Our work continues: in 2009, over 85,000 WSPA supporters backed ‘Prou’, a local citizen-led campaign calling for a bullfighting ban

in Catalonia. The Catalonian people’s dedication has forced a parliamentary vote on the issue, due in 2010.

We rescue and care for animals in Cuba and Myanmar when storms ravage

these geographically-vulnerable nations. Working with government vets, WSPA provides desperately needed animal feed, veterinary supplies and expertise. This was a record year for our disaster relief teams – your donations funded aid for more than 223,000 animals affected by 21 disasters.

Thousands of teachers across Chile, Costa Rica, Kenya and Zanzibar take part in our workshops, learning how to make animal welfare come alive and feel relevant for young people aged 5–16. Our educational resources, including fact sheets and stories, help teachers introduce animals’ worth and needs to the next generation. Today, we’re training teachers in 16 countries.

Rustam – a frightened and badly injured bear – is saved from a horrific bear baiting

event and taken to our new Kund Park sanctuary. Flash forward to 2009 and our work has grown and evolved. Thanks to your support for our ongoing education and campaigning work with local partner the Bioresource Research Centre, hundreds of bear baiting events were prevented this year, saving so many animals from suffering.

Life-saving medicines are delivered

to the animals of Kabul Zoo and emergency clinics held for hundreds of Afghanistan’s working animals once combat ceases. Your generosity means our work to protect animal victims of human conflicts goes on. In 2009, we gave the Palestine Wildlife Society US$10,000 of veterinary supplies to treat animals caught in the Gaza crossfire.

Over the last 10 years WSPA supporters have helped us change animals’ lives for the better, working all around the world and with a wide range of dedicated partners. Here are just a few of the amazing things that you have made possible.

We hope you will be inspired by this review to work with us over the next 10 years to deliver more real improvements to the day-to-day lives of animals all over the world. Your support means everything: it means we can respond to the challenges animals face when they most need our help, and convince the international community that animals matter.

We work with First Nations (indigenous) communities in Canada to introduce animal

protection by-laws and run spay-neuter clinics, showcasing humane dog population management and replacing cruel alternatives such as shooting. This year, your support enabled us to collaborate with First Nations’ representatives and member societies, together developing a national strategy to end inhumane dog control in communities across Canada.

Bull fighting image © ADDA, Whale tail © Jonas Fr. Thorsteinsson 54

• We hope you joined us in celebrating when all 27 member states of the European Union championed animal welfare by formally announcing their support. Achieved through dedicated, long-term lobbying, this is a huge step towards UN acceptance.

• We were delighted when the Brazilian Ministry of Environment backed the development of a UDAW. Brazil’s regional and international influence means it has the potential to improve the lives of millions of animals.

• Your support funded a series of events at UN headquarters during World Animal Week, looking at how good animal welfare practices can contribute to several of the UN’s Millennium Development Goals, including poverty reduction. Hosting the events alongside supportive governments, we attracted representatives from 80 countries. Following the meetings, Tanzania was inspired to propose the formation of an animal welfare stakeholder group.

• In response to lobbying by 75,000 WSPA supporters across the country, Canada moved closer to becoming the first North American nation to back a UDAW when members from all four political parties spoke in favour of support in the House of Commons.

Why we need you: plans for 2010With your help we will:

• encourage all our champions – individuals, governments and organisations – to gather even more support and help us move towards UN endorsement

• ensure animal welfare is integral to the UN agenda by promoting it at key international events, including the summit reviewing the Millennium Development Goals

• provide practical examples of how good animal welfare benefits animals, people and the environment and is linked to the achievement of international political goals such as poverty eradication and environmental sustainability

• lobby governments in countries where animals are suffering to raise the profile of animal welfare, to commit to considering animals and to back a UDAW.

How we workWe work with governments, influential organisations and individuals to campaign for the development of a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare (UDAW) at the United Nations General Assembly. We seek this springboard for change to provide the United Nations (UN), governments, industry and public with animal welfare principles, and so improve how we interact with animals. Once endorsed by the UN, a UDAW will signify the first global recognition that animals feel pain and that their welfare should be respected.

With your help: successes in 2009 • Our campaign for UN adoption of a Universal

Declaration on Animal Welfare (UDAW) gained great momentum – by the end of the year it was supported by more than two million people, representing every country in the world.

• Thanks to your ongoing commitment, 31 national governments announced official support for a Declaration in 2009. All see a UDAW as essential in creating policies that will inspire positive attitudes towards animals.

Inspiring animal welfare worldwide

Nicaragua declares itself for animal welfareNicaragua’s vibrant National Earth Festival hosted an animal milestone in June: the country’s senators pledged unanimous support for the development of a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare (UDAW). As the first Latin American nation to give full government backing, this indicates both a growing commitment to protecting animals within Nicaragua and an understanding of the links between animals, people and the environment.

This environmentally-themed festival, attended by government officials, NGOs, artists, academics and students, was a natural venue for the announcement: good animal welfare practices have positive impacts on the natural world, which is damaged by abuses such as factory farming.

Government backing is more than a gesture – Nicaragua is currently considering new legislation to safeguard both pets and wildlife. We expect Bolivia and Chile to declare themselves for a UDAW in 2010, creating a swell of support in this important and eco-diverse region.

Pacific island state Palau officially backs a Declaration

All 27 EU member states add their support

Both Brazil’s Ministry of Environment and the nation of Samoa give full support. WSPA discusses the links

between good animal welfare and sustainable development with more than 30 permanent missions and UN agencies

January: March: May: Nicaragua’s senators unanimously get behind a UDAW

WSPA hosts a series of meetings at the UN. High profile celebrities including actress Brooke Shields boost public awareness

MPs from all four political parties adopt a motion calling for Canadian backing

Serbia becomes the 36th nation to support a UDAW

June: October: November: December:

Billions of animals suffer pain and distress every single day. Yet there is no global agreement to recognise their welfare as an issue of importance. This leaves animals vulnerable to cruelty and people ignorant of how kinder treatment for animals can benefit humans and the environment.

“Animal welfare is not some unaffordable luxury. It’s an essential part of solutions to some of the most pressing problems facing us today. Our supporters recognise this and their tireless efforts for this campaign have been truly inspiring.” Mike Baker, WSPA Chief Executive Officer, speaking at UN headquarters in New York

“One reason animals are so vulnerable to cruelty is because there is no universal agreement between nations that animals can suffer and feel pain. The campaign for a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare could be the beginning of the end for animal cruelty across the world. It’s up to us to give these animals a voice.”Singer Leona Lewis endorsed the campaign for a UDAW in 2009

Campaigning for a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare: a year of momentum

Thank you for helping us focus an international spotlight on animals. Campaign with us at www.animalsmatter.org, relaunched in 2009©

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How we workWe work with governments, intergovernmental organisations such as the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and our member societies to implement humane population management and eliminate cruel control methods. In doing so, we prove that humane approaches effectively combat the spread of disease. We also promote responsible ownership to safeguard animals and people, and work with partners in Asia to bring an end to the dog meat trade.

With your help: successes in 2009 • With your support, we worked on humane dog

population and rabies management projects with 27 governments, including Colombia and Zanzibar. We trained animal wardens and vets in the humane handling, treatment and, where necessary, euthanasia of suffering dogs and cats, and helped develop laws relating to responsible ownership.

• We showcased 10 humane dog population management and rabies control projects in India, Sierra Leone and Sri Lanka to inspire governments to adopt kinder and more effective methods. A joint campaign with the Kathmandu Animal Treatment Centre, municipal authorities and the World Health Organization (WHO) was a particular success: human and canine rabies cases dropped significantly after 10,000 dogs were vaccinated in Kathmandu, Nepal.

• We safeguarded animal welfare by reviewing standards and providing recommendations and training at three Gates Foundation-funded rabies projects in the Philippines, South Africa and Tanzania.

• Worldwide, 17,269 dogs and 1,642 cats have been sterilised and 36,125 animals vaccinated against rabies thanks to the projects you fund, preventing so much potential suffering for animals and the communities they live in.

• Millions of stray animals have a better chance of being treated with compassion, thanks to new population management guidelines. Created by the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) with input from WSPA experts, they call on all 174 member states to urgently move to humane methods of stray control.

• Nearly 30,000 people have learned about responsible pet ownership and rabies prevention through our education projects, bringing about vital changes to animals’ lives.

• You helped us fight the agonies of the dog meat trade alongside the Korean Animal Welfare Association. Evidence from undercover

investigations is now being used to push for an amendment to South Korea’s animal protection legislation.

Why we need you: plans for 2010With your help we will:

• campaign vigorously against cruel methods of rabies control and intervene where they are failing both animals and people, by promoting humane vaccination-based alternatives

• encourage countries including Chile, China, Egypt and India to use dog population management practices that protect both dog welfare and community health

• empower local partners to end the terrible suffering caused by the dog meat trade, ensuring they have the tools to mount strong campaigns in South Korea, Thailand and Vietnam

• promote the scientific evidence that supports our campaigns and proves humane approaches work, by monitoring the difference we are making to animals’ lives.

Protecting the world’s strays

A race against time: saving Bali’s street dogsIn the wake of a rabies outbreak on the idyllic island of Bali, the government began to poison dogs. Despite condemning tens of thousands of animals to an agonising death, this attempt to eradicate the disease failed, as it has in many other countries before.

You funded a targeted local vaccination and education programme in one of Bali’s nine regencies, developed by WSPA and adhering to WHO guidelines. Carried out by member society the Bali Animal Welfare Association, this ongoing project is showing that vaccination is an effective and humane alternative for rabies control. The lives of 60,000 healthy dogs have been saved and the disease prevented from spreading.

We plan to present this showcase of good practice to Bali’s government alongside a renewed offer of help. Our programme can easily be replicated island-wide, rendering the cruelty of culling a thing of the past.

Thank you for saving strays from cruelty and neglect. Find out more about how we are achieving change at www.wspa-international.org/wspaswork

There are hundreds of millions of stray dogs and cats in the world, with little or no protection from starvation, disease and mistreatment. The use of inhumane population control methods means they are also vulnerable to poisoning and shooting, cruelties often resulting from the mistaken belief that culling animals will protect people from risks such as rabies.

“In the past, local people would not even have considered that poisoning dogs was wrong, and would have done nothing to stop it. Now, thanks to our work with WSPA, they know better ... cruelty is no longer accepted as a norm.” Mauricio SantaFe, veterinarian of member society Paraiso de Mascota, Cali, Colombia

Bright collars clearly identify vaccinated dogs

WSPA funds the Sierra Leone Animal Welfare Society’s work to improve dog welfare

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With your help: successes in 2009 • Our groundbreaking initiative to improve working horse

welfare continued to pay real dividends for animals this year. Developed with the University of Bristol, this pioneering project focuses on fundamentally changing the way humans treat and relate to their horses, changes that are responsible for the better day-to-day health and welfare of an ever-increasing number of equines.

In 2009, working horses in impoverished communities in Cambodia, Nicaragua, Palestine, Thailand and Uruguay began to benefit from changes to their owners’ knowledge and attitudes. Eighty-five local equine owners have been trained to understand and solve common welfare problems; in turn these community ambassadors have encouraged more than 2,000 fellow owners to find affordable yet vital ways to keep their horses healthy. Measures as simple as ensuring that a regular water supply and shady resting places are available during the long, hot days are making a huge difference to the wellbeing of many working equines.

• Your generosity has allowed us to improve the treatment of thousands of horses, mules and donkeys in Xinjiang Province, China, by training hundreds of government animal health workers with equine charity SPANA. Local vets are now cleaning wounds before applying treatment, making accurate diagnoses and giving owners preventative health advice, stopping suffering before it starts.

• Thanks to you, 13,437 equines in Cambodia, China, Colombia, Israel, Nicaragua, Palestine, Thailand and Uruguay and have a far better quality of life – the result of veterinary care provided through eight mobile and static clinics.

Why we need you: plans for 2010With your help we will:

• improve the lives of many more working equines by continuing our successful preventative education and health projects in the Americas, Asia and the Middle East

• provide training and advice to help member societies improve the effectiveness of their equine welfare work, making even greater change for animal wellbeing possible

• help vets in countries like Cambodia and China, where equine medicine is not usually included in the veterinary curriculum, to develop their skills in treating ponies and donkeys.

Changing conditions for

working equines

Lightening the load for Cambodian poniesIn 2008, we found Cambodia’s ponies working long hours and pulling heavy loads. We saw severe lameness and painful wounds caused by badly-designed harnesses and carts. The animals’ distress was unremitting. But at the close of 2009, working ponies have a brighter future.

With your support and in partnership with the Cambodian Pony Welfare Organisation, WSPA has been able to provide thousands of equine treatments and extensive preventative care through a mobile clinic run by two Cambodian vets.

In addition, we have introduced our ‘human behaviour change’ initiative. Nineteen local representatives have been trained to help Cambodian communities devise affordable, practical approaches to achieve better care for their animals.

This approach has been a huge success: people are changing their ways. In the communities where WSPA is working, most ponies now have better access to water and are feeding on grass free of poisonous insecticide; communities are mending roads to prevent equine injuries. Small steps mean big differences for these animals’ welfare.

They are arguably the hardest-working animals,

providing essential labour for developing communities, yet

many of the world’s 90 million working horses, donkeys and

mules suffer on a daily basis. A lack of understanding of these

animals’ needs and how best to meet them leads to a huge

amount of preventable injury, disease and pain.

How we workWe improve equine welfare

worldwide by providing owners with the knowledge and

training they need to look after their animals properly

and prevent injuries and illness. By working through vet-staffed clinics and directly

with horse and donkey owning communities,

we have an immediate impact on the

animals’ welfare, also benefitting the people

that rely on them.

“What can I say about WSPA supporters? I am so grateful. I couldn’t do anything without their help. Everything I do for the animals, I can do because of them.”Zvika Tamuz, founder of Pegasus, an Israeli member society supported by WSPA

“We must think about the donkey like we think about ourselves. Each thing that harms us also harms the donkey, so we must think this way.” Kamal, participant in a WSPA owner behaviour workshop, Palestine

Thank you: together we are making equine lives happier and healthier.

Keep in touch with our progress at www.wspa-international.org/wspaswork

New nosebands are provided by a WSPA-funded mobile clinic, run by

the Palestine Wildlife Society

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• For the first time, there were no reports of cubs poached to become dancing bears in India’s Orissa state – a fantastic result for our work with the Wildlife Trust of India. You helped us: train and equip 800 forestry officials to protect bears from poachers; raise public awareness about how bears suffer in captivity through street theatre and workshops; develop alternative, cruelty-free livelihoods for 80 bear owners.

• Our battle to end bear baiting in Pakistan continued. With member society the Bioresource Research Centre, we prevented 216 immensely cruel baiting events and persuaded 101 powerful landlords to stop hosting them. We rescued four bears, taking them to a lifetime of safety at Kund Park. Your support also enabled us to begin work on a second sanctuary, which will provide homes for the bears yet to be freed from the violence of baiting.

• A wildlife crime hotline, run by Vietnamese member society Education for Nature (ENV), received hundreds of calls from members of the public reporting illegal advertisements for bear bile products. Although the cruelty of bile extraction is banned in Vietnam, there have been reports that it persists. With your support, we are able to fund and advise ENV in their efforts to help the authorities stamp out one of the world’s most inhumane trades.

• Several hundred whales have been saved from slaughter, thanks in no small part to a WSPA supporter action. In the lead up to the International Whaling Commission’s annual meeting, 70,000 people from 60 countries wrote to their governments to demand that Japan’s bid to start coastal whaling be denied; it was.

• Our ground breaking document outlining humane ways to reduce conflict between people and bears – which often arises over crops and other food sources – was endorsed by the world’s leading bear specialists and conservationists, bringing compassionate solutions into mainstream thinking. With your support we are moving closer to a future free from the shooting and poisoning of ‘nuisance bears’.

How we workWe work on wild animal welfare issues that affect species ranging from bears to elephants and whales, campaigning to protect their wellbeing through a combination of practical field work, government lobbying and public awareness activity, often working in partnership with our member societies.

With your help: successes in 2009 • We were proud to be part of a world first: the release

of nine bonobos back into the wild. With your help, WSPA and member society Les Amis des Bonobos freed these gentle apes into a forested region of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Ongoing education for local communities on the benefits of protecting wildlife is helping to keep them safe.

• Thirty-nine malnourished, traumatised and orphaned orangutans are now being cared for at the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation’s Nyaru Menteng Sanctuary, thanks to your support. In addition, 2009 saw 46 orangutans – which your generosity saved – return to the wild.

• Seven Romanian bears were rescued from cramped conditions in tourist attractions and taken to a sanctuary located in the Carpathian Mountains. Your support means they are experiencing the feel of grass and the joy of splashing in pools for the first time in their lives.

Safeguarding wildlife

“If WSPA supporters were not there, had not helped us in doing the work that we are doing, this would not have happened. And I can’t but thank them ... I think the bears are grateful – I think thanks would come from them.”Aniruddha Mookerjee, Senior Director of the Wildlife Trust of India, on this year’s progress towards ending bear dancing

“They all seemed to thrill at the freedom of being back in the forest ... The little bonobos, like human children flinging themselves out of school at the end of the day, were visibly excited. They ran around climbing trees, pulling off handfuls of leaves and hurling them down in sheer glee.”WSPA’s Dr Nick de Souza, who took the role of chief veterinary adviser at the world’s first bonobo reintroduction

Millions of the world’s wild animals are exploited, abused, hunted and slaughtered every year for food, fashion, entertainment, the pet trade and traditional medicines. Many species also face conflict with their human neighbours, as competition for food and land endangers their welfare and even their lives.

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“It broke my heart to see the beautiful elephants up close, knowing the horrific methods used to kill them, but it was great to see how WSPA is working with the communities to show them animal friendly measures to mitigate the human wildlife conflict.”Olympic gold medallist Leisel Jones comments after filming a documentary on human wildlife conflict with WSPA

Facing up to whalingLaunched in Oslo in August 2009, our breathtaking photographic exhibition Eye to Eye gave thousands of Norwegian citizens a close-up, life-size view of the beauty of whales. The exhibition, developed with photographer Bryant Austin (pictured far right) and Norwegian animal welfare groups, has been featured prominently in the national press and is now enjoying a successful tour of Norway.

The media exposure, coupled with over 2,000 Norwegian signatures to our anti-whaling petition, is helping us achieve our goal – to provoke debate about whale welfare in one of the world’s most pro-whaling nations. We will work to increase the number of petition signatories and present it to the prime minister in 2010 as the most significant example of domestic opposition to Norwegian whaling in over 15 years.

A spicy solution to elephant injuries An unusual elephant protection project is taking place around Tanzania’s scenic Mikumi National Park, in an area where roaming elephants often destroy local farmers’ crops. Although it is illegal to harm elephants, they are frequently injured and even killed by desperate farmers who, in a bid to save their livelihoods, resort to snares, poison and nail-lined paths. Snares in particular cause deep wounds as the elephants struggle to free their trunks and feet.

WSPA is seeking to protect elephants by helping these warring neighbours peacefully co-exist. To date we have trained 24 farmers in humane crop protection, introducing them to affordable and cruelty-free deterrents such as rope fences treated with chilli – elephants hate chilli and will avoid areas surrounded by the scent!

We are also forging links at government level in order to ensure the elephants’ long-term safety. One exciting development is an innovative insurance and compensation scheme for people affected by conflict with wildlife.

Why we need you: plans for 2010With your help we will:

• provide Les Amis des Bonobos with the veterinary support and training necessary to return more bonobo groups to safe forest homes

• increase the pressure on Norway to stop whaling by gathering evidence of the cruelty involved, lobbying governments and harnessing strong public feeling

• fund the long-term care of bears living in the Romanian Bear Sanctuary, supporting member society Millions of Friends to ensure these rescued animals have the most natural lives possible

• complete a second sanctuary for baited bears in Balkasar, Pakistan, and work with our local partner to rescue and home the estimated 70 bears that remain at risk of baiting

• extend the use of proven and humane methods to reduce conflict between bears and people across Turkey, working with national wildlife authorities to protect both wild bears and community livelihoods

• protect bears by ensuring the cruelty of bear dancing is understood and rejected in India. We will do this by investigating the number of remaining dancing bears and providing owners with alternative, cruelty-free livelihoods and by educating around 10,000 people in areas where bear dancing and poaching still occurs as to why these animals matter

• push our campaign to end bear farming in Asia forward, working with local partners and the governments of South Korea and Vietnam to make the farming and trading of bear bile history.

Thank you for protecting the world’s wild animals.

Read more about what we’re achieving for them together: www.wspa-international.org/wspaswork

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Jugnu, an Asiatic black bear, is now safe from baiting at the WSPA-funded Kund Park sanctuary in Pakistan

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With your help: successes in 2009 • Thanks to you we directly protected 25,000 animals

from suffering and death by responding to 18 disasters. Tens of thousands more animals were indirectly protected through our disease prevention work and distribution of emergency feed.

• When the strongest earthquake in over a decade struck Costa Rica, we gave more than 5,600 animals emergency feed and veterinary care, our teams working with the country’s civil defence and animal health departments to swiftly deliver help where it was needed most.

• Your support allowed us to help thousands of Samoa’s animals after the October tsunami. In partnership with the Animal Protection Society of Samoa, other non-governmental organisations and the New Zealand government, our dedicated team provided veterinary care and emergency feed for ill and injured cats and dogs.

• Our disaster experts helped 9,000 animals in the wake of Typhoon Mirinae, distributing emergency feed and vitamins as WSPA became the first animal welfare organisation to be invited into Vietnam to assist in a disaster’s aftermath.

• When a tornado devastated 11 villages in Orissa State, India, people and animals were left homeless and starving. Our India-based team worked with government vets and humanitarian agencies, including the Indian Red Cross Society, to deliver aid. We provided materials for 600 shelters and feed for 2,000 working animals.

• Your support enabled us to carry out vital risk reduction work, helping communities in Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, India and Myanmar take preventative action for animals. Working with local officials and international aid organisations, we ran Myanmar’s first animal evacuation drill; hundreds of animals and owners from seven villages are now better prepared to survive a disaster.

Why we need you: plans for 2010With your help we will:

• roll out a US$1 million long-term recovery project in Haiti, delivered by the Animal Relief Coalition for Haiti (formed by WSPA and the International Fund for Animal Welfare and consisting of 21 animal welfare organisations)

• work with the United Nations and international aid agencies to integrate animals into humanitarian plans for disasters

• train more government agencies in contingency planning for protecting animals in disasters

• establish expert disaster assessment and response teams in Africa and China, expanding our reach for animals

• develop a risk-reduction programme in Mexico and further develop those already working to protect animals in Colombia, India, Myanmar and Thailand

• ensure our disaster teams and veterinary emergency response units based in Africa, Asia, Central America and South America are ready for animal emergencies.

How we workWe prepare communities for the worst, training and equipping those most at risk to safeguard their livestock and companion animals. We also provide immediate relief when disaster strikes, working with member societies, national and local governments and humanitarian aid agencies to bring veterinary treatment, disease prevention, shelter and feed to distressed animals.

Acting for animals at risk:

disaster preparation and response

‘We are relieved to get this help from your organisation as people like us are totally dependent on these animals for livelihood.” Bahadur Rai, resident of Raipur village in Bihar, received help when the region was hit by flooding

Disasters devastate communities, and in the ensuing chaos, animals are often forgotten. However their survival and welfare are vital, both in their own right and to help whole regions recover.

Practice makes perfect for animal rescue When Colombia’s capital staged the largest urban risk exercise in South America’s history, based on a simulated earthquake, our experienced disaster team was asked to run two scenarios: rescuing working horses and saving dogs and cats from a collapsed high-rise structure.

Our participation, demonstrating best-practice animal aid, is one indicator of growing international recognition of the need to protect animal victims of disasters. We were delighted to work alongside the United Nations and International Red Cross to showcase how working closely with humanitarian organisations benefits both animals and people – groups that share emotional and practical ties.

“The event was a huge success ... We were able to demonstrate to many international observers how important it is to consider animals in emergency planning for urban risk situations and how, with a little planning, animals can be saved too,” said James Sawyer, WSPA head of disaster management.

In 2009 WSPA teams responded to disasters in … Bermuda, Brazil, Costa Rica, gaza, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Mexico, Nepal, the Philippines, Samoa, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam.

Thank you for helping make the world a safer place for animals.

Read blog updates from our teams in the field at www.animalsindisasters.typepad.com

In post-tsunami Samoa, WSPA’s Dr Juan Carlos Murillo works with an owner to ensure his pig is healthy

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• We also launched a pilot humane slaughter programme in Brazil’s Santa Catarina State, working with the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Food Supply to train 621 slaughterhouse staff. Improvements to animal care are already obvious: stunning and handling are more humane, an important first step in protecting the many millions of farm animals slaughtered in Brazil every year.

• We continued to support the Food Animal Initiative (FAI) in setting up ‘model farms’ to establish high welfare, sustainable and commercially competitive farming practices. In 2009, this project was recognised as best practice by the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development, and by the end of the year, your donations meant many animals were living in compassionate conditions: in China three high welfare farms were rearing over 50,000 chickens and Brazil’s first model farm hosted humane handling training for 200 workers.

Why we need you: plans for 2010With your help we will:

• focus our campaign against the live transport of farm animals on the intensely inhumane sheep export route from Australia to the Middle East:

- collecting evidence of the cruelty involved in the trade along this route

- lobbying politicians and the meat industry in the Middle East and promoting chilled meat alternatives

- galvanising public support in Australia through our Humane Chain website, which is already helping many thousands of Australians lobby their government

• extend our pilot humane slaughter scheme to other parts of Brazil, and continue our programme in China. Alongside this we will press for appropriate legislation to protect animals facing slaughter in these and other countries

• support the FAI in its development of the high welfare ‘model farm’ projects in Brazil and China.

How we workWe work with member societies and other partners to promote humane rearing, transport and slaughter and convince governments to introduce and enforce strong animal welfare laws. We aim to end intensive farming by exposing the suffering involved and supporting initiatives that showcase humane and sustainable alternatives.

With your help: successes in 2009 • Thanks largely to a WSPA-led national and international

public campaign, the government of New Zealand is looking at banning the live trade of animals to the Middle East – a hugely significant step for the welfare of thousands of sheep. In November, the Agriculture Minister stated that the chances of Saudi Arabia meeting the high welfare standards set by the government for new trade are minimal.

• Our USA-based ‘Eat Humane’ campaign enabled Americans to make animal-friendly choices. A restaurant and retailer database, added to www.EatHumane.org in November, helped consumers find humanely produced food. By the end of the year the site had attracted 46,170 visitors; the resulting choices sending a strong message to retailers and producers.

• Millions of pigs and chickens are receiving more humane treatment at Chinese slaughterhouses, thanks to your support. With partner the Beijing Chaoyang Anhua Animal Product Safety Research Institute, we trained more than 4,000 workers, managers and government officers from 15 provinces in humane slaughter, safeguarding the welfare of animals in their care.

“WSPA’s Animal Welfare Prize allowed us to gain knowledge in every field of animal production … It made us aware of the need to apply animal welfare concepts in our professional lives, always aiming for a better quality of life for the animals.”A student explains how WSPA has influenced agricultural studies at Fundação Universidade Regional de Blumenau, Brazil

Going the distance for transported animals Handle with Care, the coalition we have led since 2008 to fight the long distance transport of live animals, continued throughout 2009. Garnering public, media and political support, we’ve made great inroads for animal welfare.

In just two years, the coalition has exposed a trade which subjects millions of animals to almost unimaginable suffering. Our achievements include saving 3,000 pigs from a long road and sea journey between mainland USA and Hawaii and at least 50,000 sheep a year from a horrific three-week voyage from New Zealand to Saudi Arabia. Together, we improved the enforcement of European Union regulations, meaning fewer horses transported from Spain to Italy.

Following this successful collaboration, coalition members will continue to campaign where they can bring the greatest benefit to animals. WSPA is committed to targeting the severe cruelty of the three-week sheep export route from Australia to the Middle East.

Global impacts: Attending the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December reinforced our belief that good farm animal welfare, fostered through the development of small, locally-run sustainable farms, is key to achieving environmental sustainability – halting the pace of climate change – and ending poverty and hunger. We will continue to stress this message as we call for the UN to adopt a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare.

Thank you for supporting better lives for farm animals. There is so much still to do: keep in touch with our efforts and results at www.wspa-international.org/wspaswork

Campaigning for farm animal welfareMore than 60 billion farm animals each year provide food and incomes for our increasing human population. Most live, are transported and die in acutely cruel conditions. Denied sunlight and space in a barren environment, these animals suffer from the very start of their lives.

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Cattle roam on the WSPA-supported ‘model farm’, Brazil

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A WSPA-supported education initiative, run by RSPCA Papua New Guinea

• Our ‘train the trainer’ agreement with the government of northern Peru meant 120 teachers took part in humane education workshops. This key agreement has been endorsed by the Peruvian National Commission for Cooperation with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.

• With your support, we translated and distributed Concepts in Animal Welfare, our resource for veterinary students, across Indonesia and Vietnam to inspire science-based compassion.

• We put the spotlight on animal welfare at the highest levels, delivering two Concepts in Animal Welfare workshops to 75 academic lecturers, representatives of the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and government agencies in Argentina, China and Peru. In Thailand, the veterinary council and eight vet schools agreed to incorporate animal welfare into their curriculum.

• Thanks to you we provided professional support, guidance and resources to member societies in 14 countries, strengthening their influence in the community and improving their ability to advance conditions for animals.

Why we need you: plans for 2010With your help we will:

• support Brazil, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, India, Kenya, Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico and Tanzania in their efforts to introduce animal welfare into primary and secondary schools

• work with veterinary schools in Argentina and throughout Asia, including South Korea and Vietnam, to integrate Concepts in Animal Welfare into their curricula

• evaluate our teacher training to ensure that it is delivered consistently and to the highest standards, making the greatest possible impact

• focus on developing quality long-term relationships with our trained teachers and provide them with a supportive network, increasing the sustainability of our education work

• broaden our audience by making our teaching resources database – www.animal-education.org – available in multiple languages

How we workWe incorporate animal welfare into national curricula worldwide by persuading governments, education authorities, teachers, lecturers and non-governmental organisations that animal welfare is essential to a well-rounded education. We provide educational programmes: First Concepts in Animal Welfare, for teachers of young people aged 5–16, and Advanced Concepts in Animal Welfare, for veterinary and animal science students.

With your help: successes in 2009 • Students aged 5–16 in Brazil, Chile, Kenya, Peru and

Thailand will learn to respect and care for animals, after your support enabled us to forge 14 new partnerships with education ministries and teacher training institutes. With them, we will embed animal welfare into school curricula.

• Partnerships with Zanzibar’s authorities resulted in a landmark decision to make animal welfare part of the national curriculum and work with us on teacher training. We are excited that the Ugandan Curriculum Development Centre has also agreed to work with us on a similar project, benefitting more of Africa’s animals and children.

• Your generosity enabled us to train 660 teachers from 10 countries including the Dominican Republic, India, Kenya, Mexico and Vietnam in teaching animal welfare messages.

Creating compassion through education

“This kind of training will really help good teaching practice. Before I was not aware of the importance of encouraging children to protect animals, but now I want my students to treat animals well and to value what they do and give to us.”José Castillo, primary school teacher in Pirua, Peru, speaking after WSPA teacher training

Every teacher, every pupil: Zanzibar welcomes animal welfare 2009 saw Zanzibar agree that all primary teachers will be trained to deliver animal welfare messages. Thanks to this landmark acknowledgment of the importance of animals, generations of children will learn about animals’ needs and values, incorporated into subjects including science and religious studies. The potential for lasting improvements to animal wellbeing is enormous.

WSPA is working with Zanzibar’s curriculum development agency to ensure humane education becomes part of the primary teacher training syllabus swiftly and effectively. We are also taking baseline data so we can measure how animal welfare awareness grows. The island’s authorities have taken responsibility for the cost and quality of the training, showing real commitment.

In 2010 we expect to see the first wave of Zanzibar’s new primary teachers trained in humane education and will work with Uganda’s education authorities to replicate this, benefitting so many animals in eastern Africa.

Thank you for helping to bring animal welfare to a whole range of audiences across a host of nations.

You can learn more too, at www.wspa-international.org/wspaswork

The benefits of animal welfare education will be felt by Zanzibar’s children and animals

So much animal suffering is caused by ignorance. A lack of humane education means many millions of people simply do not understand that animals are capable of feeling pain, leading to cycles of inadvertent cruelty.

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• To increase member societies’ ability to create real and lasting change for animals, we offered a comprehensive two-year fundraising programme, beginning in 2008. At the close of 2009, 38 societies were learning how to bring in sustainable funding. So far 11 of the 23 groups that joined in 2008 have reported more than 30 per cent growth.

• We put member societies in touch to share skills. In one example, we asked RSPCA Queensland – which has educational expertise – to help RSPCA Papua New Guinea present a week-long animal welfare training session for educationalists, enabling them to deliver messages of animal care and respect.

• By the end of 2009, there were 1,018 WSPA member societies across 156 countries, forming the backbone of the global animal welfare movement.

Why we need you: plans for 2010With your help we will:

• train and support member societies that share WSPA’s animal welfare priorities, helping increase the sustainable changes they can make to animals’ lives in the key areas we work on together

• enable member societies to get greater support and funding from their local governments and communities

• encourage groups to work together and share expertise to achieve improvements in animal welfare, by identifying opportunities and assisting with costs

• give grants to member societies to help them improve the effectiveness of their work for animals and ability to place animal welfare high on their countries’ social agendas

• build on the success of www.animalwelfareonline.org, continuing to promote it to member societies and other relevant audiences as a forum for sharing good practice.

How we workWe work with over a thousand animal welfare organisations across the globe: our Member Society Network. We enable these groups to share resources, experiences and work together to improve the lives of thousands of animals. By providing training in an array of subjects, we equip them with the tools necessary to have a real and lasting impact on animal welfare.

With your help: successes in 2009 • We launched www.animalwelfareonline.org – a

website sharing best-practice animal welfare information – in October. Available in three languages, it includes an extensive resource library. Instantly successful, by the end of the year it had allowed 5,000 unique visitors from 111 countries to access a wide range of useful materials.

• You enabled us to give grants to 123 member societies, funding a huge variety of projects and resources, from surgical equipment to help turtles in El Salvador to an animal welfare roadshow aimed at university audiences in Beijing.

• You funded the training of staff from 219 member societies in topics including veterinary care, developing education programmes, preparing for disasters and working with the media. These skills are essential for member societies to improve conditions for animals.

“We gain so many advantages from our membership, including participation in WSPA workshops, programming support and friendly associations with WSPA staff… an unbeatable combination.” Stephanie Brown, Canadian Coalition for Farm Animals

Animal welfare organisations around the world face a tough challenge in changing people’s attitudes and actions towards animals. For those that lack resources, support or knowledge this can seem an almost impossible task.

Thank you: your support empowers animal advocates to improve all sorts of animals’ lives, all over the world.

Meet them at www.wspa-international.org/members

“I want to thank you for believing in us and for giving us this great opportunity to grow our organisation.” gisela Vico, President of Asociación Nacional Protectora de Animales, speaking after WSPA fundraising training

International connections, local impactsIn Tanzania’s Kahama district thousands of working donkeys provide a lifeline for the community, carrying everything from building materials to maize. Many endure serious wounds from badly fitting harnesses, injury from overloading, and malnutrition and dehydration.

WSPA supporters enable us to provide advice and funding to vital groups like the Tanzania Animal Protection Organisation (TAPO), which is working to change these suffering animals’ lives. TAPO runs education programmes to convince owners of the need for good harnessing and explains how to avoid injury to their donkeys.

This year, we supported TAPO to establish 15 donkey owner clubs, the members of which are skilled ambassadors that promote good animal welfare within their communities. Through their efforts, the donkeys of Kahama will feel the positive effects of animal welfare organisations working together.

Empowering

animal advocates

Bonobo image © Lola Ya Bonobo22 23

Financial summary

Treasurer’s report After a challenging year in 2008, total income increased by 24 per cent from US$45 million to US$56 million, an excellent achievement in a year of continued global economic uncertainty. All regional fundraising offices performed well and increases in income were seen across the board, most notably in Canada with an increase of 52 per cent, the USA with 39 per cent and Germany with 33 per cent. The main increases were seen in regular giving which rose by US$7 million. In addition, the changing global financial situation meant that other currencies strengthened against the dollar compared to 2008 and this also contributed to the increase in global US dollar income.

Total expenditure increased from US$43 million to US$50 million, an increase of 17 per cent. Fundraising costs increased as a percentage of total expenditure from 20 to 24 per cent, mainly due to significant investment in new donor recruitment in Denmark, the USA and the Netherlands. This investment is reflected in the increase in income from regular giving.

Organisational support costs remained constant but fell slightly to 3 per cent as a proportion of total expenditure.

Expenditure on animal welfare increased from US$31 million to US$37 million and this represents 70 per cent of all expenditure.

WSPA has had an excellent year and is in a financially sound position. The surplus increased from US$2 million to US$5 million, in line with the Trustees’ reserves policy. Whilst this is in part due to currency fluctuations, the real underlying reserves have increased to keep pace with the growth of the organisation.

This strength is welcome at a time of economic uncertainty and helps provide firm foundations for the development of our new five-year strategy. Even though the global animal welfare challenge continues to grow in scale and complexity, we are confident that with our new strategy and your generous support, we can make a lasting difference to the lives of animals around the world.

Income2009

US$’0002008

US$’000

Appeals, gifts and donations – regular 33,404 26,061

Appeals, gifts and donations – single 14,559 12,731

Legacies 6,537 5,761

Investments 943 332

Trading 71 48

55,514 44,933

Surplus2009

US$’0002008

US$’000

5,041 1,880

Expenditure2009

US$’0002008

US$’000

Companion animals 5,970 4,102

Wildlife 8,644 6,042

Farm animals 6,006 4,203

Disaster management 3,373 2,768

Member societies 5,850 3,682

Education 405 477

Public awareness campaigns 5,436 8,152

UDAW 820 2,067

Fundraising 12,056 8,521

Organisational support 1,836 1,834

Other 76 1,205

50,473 43,053

The figures are extracted from WSPA global consolidated accounts which are non-statutory and unaudited. They are provided for general information purposes only. All accounts of individual WSPA offices however are audited locally. For further details of WSPA’s global financial affairs, please contact WSPA International. For more financial information about individual WSPA offices, please contact the relevant office (details on back cover) or consult WSPA International.Dr Andrew Rowan, Treasurer

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17%

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11%

26%

12%

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60%

24%

2%

3%

1%

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WSPA AfricaMerial

WSPA Australia and New ZealandDaniel and Berry Almagor; Rita Andre; Karen Bevilaqua; Denis Brophy; Jeff and Debbie Compton; Wayne and Jenny Mary Fitzherbert; Cynthia Fraser; Dr Fiorina Gabba; Hunter Hall; Carolyn Handley; Gayl Harrison; Intrepid Travel Pty Ltd; Duncan Macintosh; Nigel Madeley; Robyn McKeown; Andrew Milner; Jane Mundy; Open Kora Fund; Mary O’Sullevan; Vivienne Porter; Jane Rich; Maria Ridsdale; Dr Alice Simpson; Joan Sturzaker; Meridy Taite; Marjorie Wallace; Robyn and Terry Wiles.

WSPA CanadaElizabeth Aszkanazy; August Foundation: The Irene Joy Stewart and Florence Maud Shedden Endowment for Domestic and Wild Animal Welfare; BMO Bank of Montreal; Calgary Foundation; Eden Conservation Trust; Betty Hasler; Investissements Giuseppe Monticciolo; Emi Isabey; King Animal Clinic; LUSH Handmade Cosmetics; Matt & Nat; The Schad Foundation; Taylor Irwin Family Fund; Tides Canada; United Way of Greater Victoria.

WSPA BrazilLuiz Luccas, Leonardo Brandão and Marta Cintra of Merial.

WSPA NordicAage V. Jensen Charity Foundation; The Foundation of the 24th of December 2008.

WSPA germanyFressnapf Tiernahrungs GmbH; GLC Animal Foundation.

WSPA South East AsiaMs Tipthawin Chatakom of Thai Airways International.

WSPA UKHannah Altman; Nancy Andrews; Anna Rosa Forster Charitable Trust; Betty Lawes Foundation; Paul Davies; Europaische Tierschutzstiftung; Lady Annabel Goldsmith; Ben and Kate Goldsmith; Green Dot Guides (Natural Collection); Stephen Hall; Claus Hecht-Johansen; David Innes; MBNA; Persula Foundation; Francesca Quint; R G Hills Charitable Trust; Rufford Maurice Laing Foundation; Lady Jacquie Rufus-Isaacs; Ruth Smart Foundation; Schweizer Tierschutz STS; Suzanne and Tom Thomson; Tubney Charitable Trust; William and Katherine Longman Charitable Trust; Zoozoo / Greener Solutions Group Ltd.

Numerous donations were made in memory of loved ones. A special thank you to Brian and Helen Fowler in memory of their fathers, and to Anthony Maynard’s family, friends and Reading Cycle Club. A thank you to all those who left legacies which contributed to the £2.5m received.

WSPA USAAmgen Foundation Matching Gift Program; Sheri Berman and Gideon Rose; The Carl Jud Foundation; Cecil B DeMille Foundation; Ms Karen Corcoran; Helga Fuller; Mrs Sommer Houser; Irene C Evans Trust; Judi and Howard Strauss Foundation; Ms Peggy Kavookjian and David Nora; Miss Ruby McKibben; Diana and Abner Kingman; Marilyn Meyers; Ms Karen Moore; Dr Holly Morris; Lorraine Oberfeld and Alejandro Doring; Wendie and Stephen Ryter; Ms Eugenie Sotiropoulos-Foss; Amanda and Andrew Street; Thrivent Financial for Lutherans Foundation; Ms Marlene Titus; William and Charlotte Parks Foundation for Animal Welfare.

Numerous donations were made in memory of loved ones. A special thank you to: Mrs Charlotte Allen; Ms Dorothy Butterworth; Mrs Morray Cohen; Elizabeth Hay Revocable Trust; Mr Joseph Hahn; Gail Henning; Mrs Virginia Knowles; Mr Rene Porteau; Mrs Anne Sabin; Mrs Betty Stahl; Ms Helen Titus; Mr Cary Townsend; Mr and Mrs Henry Zimpelmann.

Celebrities In 2009 we received generous support from the following celebrities: Christina Applegate; Jamie Archer; Dominic Brunt; Keisha Castle-Hughes; Jackie Chan; Mark Charnock; Claire Cooper; Kristin Davis; Ricky Gervais; Betty Gofman; Chrissie Hynde; Robin Ince; Leisel Jones; Joanna Krupa; Steve Leonard; Leona Lewis; Kellan Lutz; Rosie Marcel; Terry Nutkins; Miranda Richardson; Thrisadee Sahawong; Brooke Shields; Michaela Strachan; Tiffani Thiessen; Karen Walker.

“In the chaos of a disaster, animals are often left behind or forgotten. Thankfully, WSPA supporters do remember them. In 2009 an earthquake ripped through Costa Rica, leaving people and animals homeless and starving. Our disaster teams were able to respond immediately, entering the stricken areas to provide feed and veterinary care for thousands of suffering dogs, cats and cattle. This quick and effective response only happened thanks to the kind support of our donors.” gerardo huertas, Disaster Operations Director for Latin America, WSPA Central America, Mexico and the Caribbean

“To create lasting change for animals across the globe, governments must recognise their welfare as an important issue. Your generous support enabled us to take animal welfare to some of the top tables around the world this year, where we lobbied key decision-makers to support a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare (UDAW). We had many successes in 2009, just one of which was Nicaragua becoming the first Latin American country to back a UDAW at the United Nations. Thank you.” Justine holmes, head of Policy and Research, WSPA International

Without you our work to change animals’ lives for the better would not be possible.

Your support has ensured this young orangutan’s safe haven, the Nyaru Menteng sanctuary in Indonesia, remains open

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We can translate your passion for animal wellbeing into real improvements to animals’ lives that they will feel both now and in the future. Knowing we have your support and commitment enables us to effectively plan and continue our vital animal welfare work. There are so many different ways in which you can help WSPA to help the world’s animals:

“I have just made my donation for the dogs of Bali but would like to add my sincere thanks for all the work you do for the animals of this world who suffer at human hands so often... Any contributions I can make to yourselves and other animal charities is my drop in the ocean to help put right what others have done to these wonderful animals. The world would be a terribly bleak place without them. Keep up the good work.”Supporter feedback, UK

How you can help

• make a regular donation

• host a WSPA fundraising event for your friends or colleagues

• join our campaigns and partner with WSPA to save animals

• give as you earn through your company charitable giving scheme

• make animal friendly choices when you shop, eat and travel

• nominate WSPA as your company’s ‘Charity of the Year’

• tell your friends, family and colleagues about our work

• leave a legacy or gift in your Will

• visit our websites or contact your nearest WSPA office to find out more (see back cover). WSPA’s Northern Dogs project works with indigenous

Canadian communities to protect animal welfare

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World Society for the Protection of Animals

WSPA INTERNATIONAL222 Gray’s Inn RoadLondon, WC1X 8HBUnited KingdomT: +44 (0)20 7239 0500F: +44 (0)20 7239 0653E: [email protected]: www.wspa-international.org

WSPA AFRICAPO Box 105476Dar es SalaamUnited Republic of TanzaniaT: +255 22 378 0387F: +255 22 378 0397E: [email protected]: www.wspa-international.org

WSPA AUSTRALIAGPO Box 3294SydneyNew South Wales 2001AustraliaT: +61 2 9902 8000F: +61 2 9906 1166E: [email protected]: www.wspa.org.au

WSPA BRAZILAv. Princesa Isabel323 – 8 andarCopacabana 22011-901Rio de JaneiroBrazilT: +55 21 3820 8200F: +55 21 3820 8229E: [email protected]: www.wspabrasil.org

WSPA CANADA90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 960TorontoOntario, M4P 2Y3CanadaT: +1 416 369 0044F: +1 416 369 0147E: [email protected]: www.wspa.ca

WSPA CENTRAL AMERICA,MEXICO AND THE CARIBBEANMall Paseo las Flores Business Center,5th FloorApartado Postal 516-3000HerediaCosta RicaT: +506 2562 1200F: +506 2562 1225E: [email protected]: www.wspa-latinoamerica.org

WSPA CHINA501B, Dong Wai Diplomatic BuildingNo.23, Dongzhimen Wai AvenueBeijing, 100600ChinaT: +86 10 85325211 ext 0F: +86 10 85324211E: [email protected]: www.wspa-international.org

WSPA GERMANYWSPA Welttierschutzgesellschaft e.V.Reinhardtstraße 1010117 BerlinGermanyT: +49 30 923 7226 0F: +49 30 923 7226 29E: [email protected]: www.wspa.de

WSPA INDIA906, 9th FloorInternational Trade TowerNehru PlaceNew Delhi 110019IndiaT: +91 11 46539341F: +91 11 46539345E: [email protected]: www.wspa-international.org

WSPA MIDDLE EAST222 Gray’s Inn RoadLondon, WC1X 8HBUnited KingdomT: +44 (0)20 7239 0500F: +44 (0)20 7239 0653E: [email protected]: www.wspa-international.org

WSPA NETHERLANDSBenoordenhoutseweg 232596 BA Den HaagThe NetherlandsT: +31 70 314 2800F: +31 70 314 2809E: [email protected]: www.wspa.nl

WSPA NEW ZEALANDPrivate Bag 93220Parnell 1151AucklandNew ZealandT: +64 9 309 3901F: +64 9 336 1947E: [email protected]: www.wspa.org.nz

WSPA NORDICVesterbrogade 34, 11620 Copenhagen VDenmarkT: +45 33 93 7212F: +45 33 93 7210E: [email protected]: [email protected]: www.wspa.dkW: www.wspa.se

WSPA SOUTH AMERICACarrera 13 #29-21 Of.234Manzana 1, Parque Central BavariaBogotaColombiaT/F: +571 285 5472 / 5748E: [email protected]: www.wspa-latinoamerica.org

WSPA SOUTH EAST ASIA19th FloorOlympia Thai Tower444 Ratchadaphisek RoadSamsennokHuay Kwang, Bangkok 10310ThailandT: +66 2 513 0475F: +66 2 513 0477E: [email protected]: www.wspathailand.org

WSPA UK222 Gray’s Inn RoadLondon, WC1X 8HBUnited KingdomT: +44 (0)20 7239 0500F: +44 (0)20 7239 0653E: [email protected]: www.wspa.org.uk

WSPA USALincoln Plaza89 South StreetSuite 201BostonMassachusetts 02111USAT: +1 617 896 9214F: +1 617 737 4404E: [email protected]: www.wspa-usa.org