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The activities of SUST

All over the world, countless animals in overcrowded shelters live sadly or struggle for their survival in wild colonies. Day after day, even today, animals that have become inconvenient are still abandoned, deported or mistakenly kept for lack of better knowledge. The Susy Utzinger Animal Welfare Foundation contributes with effective means to the fact that animal suffering can be reduced or even prevented sustainably.

This animal welfare work is based on four pillars:

1. Competence Centre Animal Shelter: Animal shelters become high-quality transition stations for homeless animals, where animals are kept and promoted in a way that is appropriate for their species and finally transferred to good new places.

2. Neutering campaigns: Braking the animal misery

3. Education and training of specialists: Specialists are given the opportunity to optimise their knowledge and improve animal welfare.

4. Education of the population: love of animals with heart and mind

These four elements form the important basis for sustainable animal welfare projects.

Those animals that are not yet able to benefit from the effects of this reconstruction work and have been born into a world where they are not wanted need the emergency aid of SUST.

Emergency aid as a basis for sustainable animal welfare projects: saving lives of animals

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Great operation of the Large Animal Rescue Service (GTRD)

February 2023

In January 2023, the Large Animal Rescue Service CH/FL had to be called out several times because cows had shifted the cover of the slurry pit and subsequently fell into the depths.
In this particularly dramatic case here, the cow was not only threatened with death by asphyxiation from the toxic gases that occur in highly concentrated form in manure pits, but also death by drowning. The manure was so high that the cow had to swim in it to avoid sinking.
The large animal rescue service CH/FL, which was called out, first had to catch the cow (also swimming in the feces) and lure it to the small opening before the severely hypothermic animal could be gently pulled out with the help of a special rescue harness.
While most equine emergencies are covered by insurance or private funding from their owners, the costs incurred in rescuing so-called farm animals often present financial problems for the farmers involved. To ensure that these important operations are nevertheless carried out, SUST, together with the GTRD, runs the campaign "Farm animals also deserve professional rescue" and for years SUST has financed the uncovered costs of rescues of so-called "farm animals".
Country:
  • Switzerland
5 Pillars:
  • Emergency Aid
Great operation of the Large Animal Rescue Service (GTRD)
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