International Animal Rescue
Dedicated to the rescue and rehabilitation of suffering animals

IAR founder John Hicks and friend

"Each and every one of us has the ability to look at an animal and see if that animal is in pain. And if an animal is in pain, surely if we are human – if we are caring, thinking people – surely it is our responsibility to try to do whatever we can to stop that suffering."

John Hicks, IAR Founder

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Malta

OwlInternational Animal Rescue first became active in Malta in 1990. Since that time there have been significant improvements in the welfare of wild and domestic animals on the island.

When IAR started working in Malta, birds were being shot in the public gardens and nature reserves, unsterilised dogs and cats were running wild, and the dolphinarium had just imported dolphins from the old Yugoslavia in a ’humanitarian’ effort to save them from the ravages of war. However, since then our determined efforts to help the animals of Malta have finally begun to pay off.

EU membership

Alpine swiftAs one of the ten candidate countries for accession to the European Union in 2004, Malta had to work hard to bring its position on environmental and animal welfare issues into line with other countries. Thanks to the EU, for the first time in its history Malta now has animal welfare legislation in place. One of the issues hotly debated both in Malta and in Brussels was the hunting of birds. Regrettably, during negotiations the government obtained special concessions for the hunters, one of which allows the spring shooting of quail and turtle doves and the trapping of songbirds.

Enforcement

Speedboat donated by IARAnd yet the government has demonstrated its determination to stamp out illegal hunting. In an effort to control the illegal shooting of migratory birds that fly over the island, the Administrative Law Enforcement department (ALE) was set up - a team of more than 30 officers dedicated to fighting wildlife crime. On 28 May 2002 the Malta Independent newspaper carried a report on six people fined for illegal hunting. The cases were brought to court by Inspector Miruzzi of the ALE. This wouldn’t have happened in 1990.

IAR has donated speedboats and engines to the ALE to assist them in catching illegal hunters at sea and the government has also purchased a number of other boats. Enforcement at sea is now vastly improved and IAR continues to support local efforts to clamp down on illegal shooting and trapping activities.

IAR Malta

Max Farrugia, Chairman of IAR Malta, runs a bird rehabilitation hospital from his house in Valleta. Species that he has nursed back to health after shooting injuries have included honey buzzards, hobbies, kestrels and short eared owls. When they have recovered, rescued birds are released back into the wild.

Contact Information

If you find an animal in distress, please call us on 00 356 994 71212.

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August 2008
Volunteer gives glowing report of her time in Goa
Gal Marwitz from Israel has given a glowing account of the time she spent volunteering at IAR’s clinic and rescue centre in Goa.

July 2008
Wildlife traders sent to prison in Indonesia
Following a joint raid earlier this year by the Forestry Department, International Animal Rescue and the Institute of Animal Advocacy (LASA), two traders in Jatinegara market, Jakarta, Indonesia were arrested.

June 2008
Update on IAR’s work in Indonesia
As well as macaques and slow lorises, our team in Indonesia has ended the suffering of a number of endangered Javan gibbons living in misery in a centre known as Cikananga.

June 2008
Goa vets examine hawksbill sea turtle
In June the vets at the International Animal Rescue centre in Goa had an unusual patient in the form of a giant Hawksbill sea turtle.

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