Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Baywatch' Star Pamela Anderson Calls On Alberta Premier To End Chuckwagon Races

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jul, 2019 08:29 PM

    CALGARY - Canadian-born actress and animal rights activist Pamela Anderson has renewed her call for an end to chuckwagon races.

     

    Anderson has sent a letter to Alberta Premier Jason Kenney and his agriculture minister urging them to stop the popular rodeo event.

     

    "After recently moving back to my beautiful native Canada, my heart sank as I read about six horses who died in this year's chuckwagon races at the Calgary Stampede. I urge you to direct the Stampede to ban these deadly races," writes Anderson.

     

    "Please use your authority to end chuckwagon racing before more horses die."

     

    The races are a nightly spectacle during the Stampede. Crowds watch as horse-drawn wagons accompanied by outriders thunder around a dirt track.

     

    Anderson is an honorary director with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. About 20 of the group's members gathered in front of the Alberta legislature last week to call for an end to the sport.

     

    More than 70 horses have died in the event since 1986.

     

    Anderson, best known as one of the swimsuit-clad lifegaurds in "Baywatch" in the 1990s and as a model for Playboy, wrote a similar letter to another Alberta premier in 2012. She asked Alison Redford to use her influence to persuade Stampede organizers to "end these spectacles."

     

    Anderson said in that letter that she was ashamed the races were allowed to continue even as horses died.

     

    The Calgary Stampede has said it will thoroughly review chuckwagon safety after the fatalities this year — the deadliest in nearly a decade.

     

    "The Stampede's commitment to the safety of animals and the conditions of their participation in our events is paramount to our values and brand integrity," said a statement at the close of the rodeo earlier this month.

     

    The Stampede tightened safety rules for the races in recent years, but Anderson says in her latest letter that it obviously wasn't enough.

     

    "More than a dozen horses have died since then, because these races are inherently cruel and dangerous," she writes.

    "This cruelty and indifference do not represent the Canada I know and love."

     

    The Agriculture Department said last week that it is confident the Stampede's review of the latest horse deaths will address how best to bring in measures to improve safety and animal care.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying
    A statement from the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 26-year-old Pee Lee Pi of Surrey was arrested July 12 and charged with the second-degree murder of 68-year-old Tee Bor.

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying

    Tories Ask CSIS To Probe Ex-ambassador's Comments About Advice To China

    OTTAWA - Conservative MPs want Canada's intelligence agency to probe whether a former Canadian ambassador is encouraging China to interfere in the upcoming federal election.    

    Tories Ask CSIS To Probe Ex-ambassador's Comments About Advice To China

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics
    Effective immediately, all hot food and any type of cooking or barbecuing is banned in Coquitlam's Mundy Park.

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax
     Nov. 12, 1995: Brenda Way — known as "Pitt Bull" — was murdered and her body left in a parking lot behind a Dartmouth apartment building sometime in the early morning hours.

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat
    EDMONTON - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is dismissing claims by conservative politicians that national unity is under threat.

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground
    "When I drove through, I saw a trailer that was all twisted, up in the air," said Andre Parent, a Montrealer who lives at the Camping Horizon campground in summer.

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground