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MARK KERRISON | Photojournalist

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  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA UK activists for a protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-020.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a PETA UK protest outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-019.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a PETA UK protest outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-015.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches is used by PETA activists to protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-014.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1st July, 2020. An animal rights activist dressed as a giant pigeon arrives for a PETA UK protest outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-009.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a protest by PETA UK activists outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-025.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches arrives for a PETA UK protest outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-010.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA activists to protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-016.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a PETA UK protest outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-002.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches is used by PETA activists to protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-017.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA UK activists for a protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-012.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandage giant pigeon on crutches holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a protest by PETA UK activists outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-023.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA UK activists for a protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-003.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA UK activists for a protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-008.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a protest by PETA UK activists outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-007.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA UK activists for a protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-018.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA UK activists for a protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-021.jpg
  • Bracknell, UK. 29 October, 2020. PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-013.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches is used by PETA activists to protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-005.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a PETA UK protest outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-024.jpg
  • A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches is used by PETA activists to protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle on 1 July 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-001.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1st July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches is prepared by PETA activists for a protest outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, who is currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-013.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA UK activists for a protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-006.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon is used by PETA UK activists for a protest against pigeon racing outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-011.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a protest by PETA UK activists outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-022.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 1 July, 2020. A bandaged giant pigeon on crutches holds a sign reading ‘End Pigeon-Racing Cruelty’ at a protest by PETA UK activists outside Windsor Castle. Animal rights charity PETA UK is calling on the Queen, currently isolating at Windsor Castle, to cut ties with pigeon racing following a PETA US investigation which revealed that all eight birds sent by the Queen to participate in the 2020 South African Million Dollar Pigeon Race (SAMDPR) died in quarantine and that fewer than a quarter of the birds entered for the race subsequently complete it.
    PETA-pigeon-racing-Windsor-004.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-010.jpg
  • Bracknell, UK. 29 October, 2020. PETA supporters, including one wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat, protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-015.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-020.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-028.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-036.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-033.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-024.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products. (photo by Mark Kerrison/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-003.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-021.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-007.jpg
  • A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-022.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th July, 2022. PETA supporters dressed as guards pour fake blood over themselves on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-009.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-015.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-014.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-016.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-019.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-023.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-032.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-022.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-030.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-027.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-011.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-008.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-014.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-004.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-015.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-010.jpg
  • A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th July, 2022. PETA supporters dressed as guards pose daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th July, 2022. A PETA supporter dressed as a guard poses daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th July, 2022. PETA supporters dressed as guards pose daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-010.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th July, 2022. PETA supporters dressed as guards pour fake blood over themselves on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-011.jpg
  • PETA supporters dressed as guards pour fake blood over themselves on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur on 11th July 2022 in London, United Kingdom. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-001.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-001.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 21st October, 2021. PETA supporters dressed as bloodied sheep protest outside a branch of Urban Outfitters in Oxford Street to call for an end to wool sales. The protest forms part of an international PETA campaign to urge Urban Outfitters Inc brands including Anthropologie and Free People to stop selling materials cruelly taken from animals.
    PETA-Urban-Outfitters-wool-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 21st October, 2021. PETA supporters dressed as bloodied sheep protest outside a branch of Urban Outfitters in Oxford Street to call for an end to wool sales. The protest forms part of an international PETA campaign to urge Urban Outfitters Inc brands including Anthropologie and Free People to stop selling materials cruelly taken from animals.
    PETA-Urban-Outfitters-wool-004.jpg
  • PETA supporters dressed as bloodied sheep protest outside a branch of Urban Outfitters in Oxford Street to call for an end to wool sales on 21st October 2021 in London, United Kingdom. The protest forms part of an international PETA campaign to urge Urban Outfitters Inc brands including Anthropologie and Free People to stop selling materials cruelly taken from animals.
    PETA-Urban-Outfitters-wool-002.jpg
  • PETA supporters dressed as bloodied sheep protest outside a branch of Urban Outfitters in Oxford Street to call for an end to wool sales on 21st October 2021 in London, United Kingdom. The protest forms part of an international PETA campaign to urge Urban Outfitters Inc brands including Anthropologie and Free People to stop selling materials cruelly taken from animals.
    PETA-Urban-Outfitters-wool-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-034.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-026.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-029.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-021.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-031.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-025.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-035.jpg
  • A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 8th September, 2021. A PETA supporter wearing a Venetian crocodile mask poses outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-017.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8 September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-009.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-013.jpg
  • Two PETA supporters wearing Venetian crocodile masks pose outside the Hermès store in New Bond Street in protest against the luxury fashion house's use of exotic skins on 8th September 2021 in London, United Kingdom. PETA's campaign was launched following the release of video footage by The Kindness Project showing crocodiles being mutilated, electrocuted, stabbed and shot on farms in Australia with ties to Hermès and PETA are calling on the fashion brand to cease using exotic skins for their products.
    PETA-Hermes-crocodile-skins-016.jpg
  • Bracknell, UK. 29 October, 2020. A PETA supporter wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-009.jpg
  • Bracknell, UK. 29 October, 2020. A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-016.jpg
  • Bracknell, UK. 29 October, 2020. PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-018.jpg
  • Bracknell, UK. 29 October, 2020. PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-010.jpg
  • PETA supporters, including one wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat, protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-004.jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-008.jpg
  • A PETA supporter wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-003.jpg
  • PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-017.jpg
  • PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    PETA-Eli-Lilly-forced-swim-012.jpg
  • PETA supporters dressed as guards pose daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur on 11th July 2022 in London, United Kingdom. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-015.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th July, 2022. PETA supporters dressed as guards pose daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th July, 2022. PETA supporters dressed as guards pose daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-008.jpg
  • PETA supporters dressed as guards pose daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur on 11th July 2022 in London, United Kingdom. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-007.jpg
  • PETA supporters dressed as guards pose daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur on 11th July 2022 in London, United Kingdom. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-005.jpg
  • PETA supporters dressed as guards pose daubed with fake blood on Westminster Bridge ahead of a Parliamentary debate to discuss replacing bearskins used for the Queen’s Guard’s caps with faux fur on 11th July 2022 in London, United Kingdom. It requires the skin of at least one bear to make a cap, some bears being shot several times before they die, and PETA contends that a new faux bear fur created in conjunction with luxury faux furrier ECOPEL looks and performs the same as the bearskin currently used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps.
    PETA-bearskins-Westminster-002.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-007.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-009.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 2nd December, 2021. PETA's 'bear' is pictured during the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Windsor Castle as part of a campaign intended to urge the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to drop the use of real bearskin caps. Last month, PETA and luxury faux furrier ECOPEL revealed the world’s first faux bear fur, which looks and functions like the bearskin used to make the Queen’s Guard’s caps. PETA states that it takes the skin of at least one bear to make each cap, some bears being shot several times before they die and bear cubs being left to starve when mother bears are killed, and ECOPEL has offered to supply the MoD with faux bear fur free-of-charge until 2030 (the MoD spent more than £1m on 891 bearskin caps in the past seven years according to a FOI request).
    PETA-Windsor-Castle-bearskin-005.jpg
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