• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • EYES ON ANIMALS – Watching out for their Welfare
  • English
  • Nederlands
  • Deutsch

Eyes on Animals

Watching out for their Welfare

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
DONATE
  • About us
    • What we do
    • Our team
    • Key Figures
    • Our Vision
    • Contact
  • News
    • Latest news
    • Good news
    • Bad news
    • Featured news
    • Newsletter
  • Inspections
    • Farms
    • Markets
    • Transports
    • Slaughterhouses
    • Special projects
    • Other
  • Training
    • Police
    • Truck drivers
    • Poultry-catchers
    • Slaughter personnel
    • Training Material
    • Request a training
  • Industry Tips
    • Animal transport
      • Cattle
      • Pigs
      • Poultry
    • Slaughterhouses
      • Cattle
      • Pigs
      • Poultry
      • Ritual slaughter
    • Educational videos
  • Publications
    • In the media
      • Print
      • Television
      • Radio
      • Videos
    • Newsletters
    • Special reports
    • Training Material
    • Annual reviews
  • Help us
Home » Our inspections » Follow-up check of Cape Coast cattle slaughter slab, Ghana

Follow-up check of Cape Coast cattle slaughter slab, Ghana

December 11, 2024

For the past 5 years Eyes on Animals and WACPAW (West Africa Center for the Protection of Animal Welfare) have been visiting the Cape Coast cattle slaughter slab in Cape Coast, Ghana.  The purpose of our visits was to check on the handling of the cattle and provide assistance and advice where possible, in the hope to decrease stress and suffering of the animals.  On our first visit, cattle were forced to fall down and had their four legs tethered tightly together and then had their neck “sawed” open.  The suffering was severe, particularly because many of the cattle had also first endured a grueling transport journey, crammed on the back of a small truck without suspension, often also tethered to the point of not being able to stand up after being thrusted off the truck.  Fortunately, things have changed here. Conditions are improving, greatly due to on-going presence by WACPAW’s inspector in Cape Coast and equipment from EonA.  The butchers of this slaughter slab were trained by WACPAW/EonA on how to use a captive bolt pistol to render the cattle first unconscious before bleeding them out. As well, the teams persuaded them successfully to allow the cattle to remain standing on all 4 legs, putting an end to tripping the cattle and tethering their legs up. They were given 2 captive bolt pistols and several thousand of cartridges.  Today the WACPAW inspector returned to the slaughter slab and was pleased to see the cattle continue to be rendered unconscious before slaughter and are kept upright. 

We are also very pleased that the butchers are very skilled now in stunning correctly. They are not impatient or anxious anymore around the cattle, but rather wait for the right moment to aim and stay calm around the large cattle.

  • share 
  • share 
  • share 
  • save 
  • email 

Filed Under: Our inspections, slaughterhouses

Primary Sidebar

Search

Featured

Regional slaughterhouses are disappearing — and animals are paying the price

Across the Netherlands, regional slaughterhouses are disappearing at an alarming pace. Not because … [Read More...] about Regional slaughterhouses are disappearing — and animals are paying the price

Featured

Injured sows at Lunteren assembly centre: NVWA investigation ruled inadequate

January 29, 2026

The Dutch Trade and Industry Appeals Tribunal (College van Beroep voor het Bedrijfsleven, CBb) has … [Read More...] about Injured sows at Lunteren assembly centre: NVWA investigation ruled inadequate

Our most recent newsletter

Dear friends,

Last night, just before bed, my phone beeped with this message from a Dutch dairy farmer: “We immediately started keeping the calves with the cows after returning from your conference!”

Read more…

Subscribe to our newsletter

Subscribe

* indicates required

Eyes on Animals op X

eyes_on_animals Eyes on Animals @eyes_on_animals ·
14 Apr

🐖 Eyes in Animals is ‘On the Road Again’. Following piglets, on the way to Croatia for slaughter. Poor animals… #pigs #Piglets #animaltransport

Reply on Twitter 2043973474914271353 Retweet on Twitter 2043973474914271353 2 Like on Twitter 2043973474914271353 9 Twitter 2043973474914271353
eyes_on_animals Eyes on Animals @eyes_on_animals ·
12 Apr

🇲🇳 EonA was invited to give a special presentation on farm-animal welfare at a conference in Mongolia. We talked about the importance of stunning prior to slaughter and what other measures can be taken to reduce suffering during transport. #animaltransport #slaughter #slacht

Reply on Twitter 2043302126089015442 Retweet on Twitter 2043302126089015442 1 Like on Twitter 2043302126089015442 3 Twitter 2043302126089015442
philip_ciwf Philip Lymbery @philip_ciwf ·
11 Apr

“There is no fundamental difference between man and animals in their ability to feel pleasure and pain, happiness, and misery”
Charles Darwin

#KindnessToAllKinds
#EndFactoryFarming
@CIWF_Global

Reply on Twitter 2042851254418694288 Retweet on Twitter 2042851254418694288 429 Like on Twitter 2042851254418694288 1117 Twitter 2042851254418694288
Load More...

ANBI

Latest news

Meat printer prints plant based meat

NOS-news: The meat printer

October 13, 2022

Veggie burger

Vox: Plant-based meat is better for the planet

November 18, 2021

All Future Vision news

Footer

Donate with Paypal

Paypal Eyes on Animals
One-time donation:
Monthly donation:

Reading Material

  • In the Media
  • Newsletters
  • Special EonA reports
  • Legislative texts
  • ANBI

Our Amsterdam Office

Amsterdam House Hotel
Eyes on Animals main office is in downtown Amsterdam, at the Amsterdam House Hotel. The generous and warm-hearted hotel owner donated to Eyes on Animals, free of charge, a beautiful room where our inspectors can work, hold meetings and store their material.

Copyright © 2026 · Eyes on Animals | Website by Webkompaan