Yesterday New Zealand's ministry of Agriculture and Forestry announced adoption of the Animal Welfare (Commercial Slaughter) Code of Welfare 2010. J-Wire reports that the new Code effectively bans kosher slaughtering in New Zealand by requiring that all animals slaughtered commercially be stunned prior to killing. Kosher beef will still be able to be imported from other countries. However, New Zealand has a ban on the importation of unprocessed chicken because of concern over certain diseases.
Rabbi Jeremy Lawrence of Sydney's the Great Synagogue said that there were alternatives short of an outright ban on kosher slaughtering that the government could have adopted. He called the new rules a "deliberate decision" to override the religious freedom of the Jewish community. He added:"This is a case of misplaced values, bad science and bad legislation." Rabbi Moshe Gutnick, acting President of the Organisation of Rabbis of Australasia, said that they will do everything possible to get the decision reversed. While there is no direct appeal from the adoption of the new rules which go into effect 24 hours after publication, they could be challenged in court as infringing the country's Bill of Rights Act. The only other countries that ban kosher slaughtering are Iceland, Norway and Sweden. [Thanks to Joel Katz (Relig. & State In Israel) for the lead.]