Fireworks, beauty in the sky, terror on the ground

Ban Animal Trading writes:

With the festive season upon us, Ban Animal Trading urges you, the reader, to make the compassionate decision to celebrate this time with the joy it deserves, and without the cruelty that goes hand-in-hand with the use of fireworks.

In celebrating our own enjoyment of the festive season with bangs and showers of explosions, far too many of us tend to overlook or ignore the helpless souls who live among us: the animals. Our dogs, cats, birds, and other pets celebrate the festive season with us and suffer immensely under the assault of fireworks and crackers.

Year after year, bigger and louder fireworks are illegally brought into and sold in this country. Importers try to outdo each other, selling to the public in ever greater numbers and often in flagrant violation of the provisions of the Explosives Act.

Yet at what cost?

Our poor animals pay the price.

When one considers that animals have a more acute sense of hearing than humans, and react to sounds that are inaudible to humans, is it any wonder that they go crazy trying to escape the onslaught of noise caused by fireworks and crackers? Baby birds are scared into jumping out of nests and thousands of wild animals are displaced because of the stress and fear caused by fireworks. Dogs and cats break chains, jump fences (often impaling themselves in the process), squeeze through impossible openings, and lose their homes in their terrified attempts to escape the auditory assault on them.

More often than not, the truly unfortunate innocents are caught in actual explosions and severely injured and killed; if not by the fireworks themselves, then by cars as they run lost and terrified in our streets. Most never find their way back home.

Is this truly the permanent price they must pay for a few hours of ‘entertainment’?

We urge you not to support this outdated practice and to know, understand and, most importantly, enforce your rights relating to the use of fireworks. All explosives are governed by the Explosives Act 26 of 1956 read with the applicable Regulations.

The most important provisions of the Regulations are as follows:

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