Shocking Revelation: The Bloody Chain of European Fox Fur Production! Frenzied Foxes Gnawing on Each Other's Flesh

Two water voles pitifully gazed at the outside
According to the British 'Daily Mail' reported on February 10, recently, animal rights organization 'Open Cages' shared a shocking video online to expose the bloody chain of production,The video was shot at a farm in Lithuania. In the video, the water voles trapped in iron cages went mad, attacking each other and gnawing on each other's flesh,The were cuddling together for warmth
These crazy animals frantically jumped up and down in the cramped cages, one water vole was brutally torn in half. Swarms of flies buzzed around the dirty cages, the huddled on the iron floor for warmth, cuddling together in the crowded environment,This water vole's fur was scratched off by the iron wire

In one cage, a water vole curled up into a ball. Open Cages members explained that this water vole, under immense psychological pressure, kept rubbing against the iron wire, which stripped its back and sides of fur. In another cage, a black water vole's body lay, its three legs were gnawed off by rats,Its three legs were gnawed off by rats
In addition, many water voles had various sized, bloody wounds, and there were many rotting, swollen water voles' bodies in the farm

Open Cages' shared video also included an interview with farm workers. This worker described the behavior of water voles in the farm, saying: 'They always do this, it seems to be caused by stress'
A water vole was gnawing on a companion

'When they were still cubs, these wounds appeared on them'
'We throw food over, sometimes food falls on them, they lick it off each other, and gradually these wounds form'
Open Cages' CEO Connor Jackson told the 'Daily Mail' : 'Such appalling scenes are very common throughout the fur industry, but people have no reason to treat animals in this way'

However, a large farm in Lithuania, 'Lithuanian Fur', questioned the content of the video. Its manager said, 'We have never seen such a thing'
The farm told the media: 'Not treating injured animals is a crime. And if water voles die on the farm, it will be recorded in a special log, and the bodies must be safely placed in the refrigerator before being transported to the body disposal place'
Water vole's corpse
Whether farms in Europe are truly managed in a standardized way, whether the farm manager is deliberately concealing the facts, we can only know. But it cannot be denied that under every piece of is a bloody, agonizing struggle of life.

“”“”
“”