Did you mean worse speaker:Mary Creagh?
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps his Department is taking to ensure that local authorities keep (a) paths and (b) streets clear of horse manure.
Mary Creagh: ...”, a new sculptural work of art by Katrina Palmer, in which she celebrates the creation of the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry. These brave women went out on to the battlefields of world war one on horses to bring back the injured men and to offer them medical assistance. Inscribed on the sculpture is a line of heroic modesty: “nothing special happened”. It is important in this centenary...
Mary Creagh: I am very surprised to hear that. I remember that during the horse meat scandal one of the big problems was that there were not enough trading standards authority officers to go round and do the job, with an enormous amount of testing and enforcement activity in terms of human health and environmental health, and food testing and technology. That was in 2012, or 2013, and I would be surprised...
Mary Creagh: I am very surprised to hear that. I remember that during the horse meat scandal one of the big problems was that there were not enough trading standards authority officers to go round and do the job, with an enormous amount of testing and enforcement activity in terms of human health and environmental health, and food testing and technology. That was in 2012, or 2013, and I would be surprised...
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many horses in each licensed establishment were used in medical experiments in the UK in (a) 2012 and (b) 2013.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department what guidance her Department issues to medical establishments who use horses on the regulation and disposal of carcasses.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many medical research establishments in the UK are licensed to use horses in procedures.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Health which UK establishments are (a) licensed to slaughter horses and (b) currently slaughter horses.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many horses were slaughtered in each licensed establishment in the UK in 2013.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how much the Food Standards Agency spent on (a) the sampling regime for testing for horsemeat in 2013 and (b) sampling horse carcasses for phenylbutazone residue in 2013 after the 100% sampling regime was introduced.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Health on what date licences were granted for horse slaughter to the five UK abattoirs which were in possession of such licences in January 2013.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs pursuant to the answer of 20 March 2013, Official Report, columns 699-700W, on horses: France, from which country each horse imported from third (non EU) countries was imported from in each of the last four years.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs how many horses were slaughtered in UK abattoirs, by horse passport issuing agency, in each of the last four years.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many horses, in which abattoirs, have been slaughtered without the presence of a Government vet in the last five years.
Mary Creagh: ..., Food and Rural Affairs with reference to the answer of 25 March 2013, Official Report, columns 897-8W, on phenylbutazone, what the outcome was of the 12 investigations into the validity of horse passports from horse carcasses which tested positive for phenylbutazone.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs what systems and checks are in place to prevent the export of horses for slaughter from the UK.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs pursuant to the answers of 28 January 2013, Official Report, column 594W, on horse meat: exports, what the (a) value and (b) weight of horse meat is that was (i) exported, (ii) slaughtered for export and (iii) slaughtered for domestic use in each of the last five months for which figures are available.
Mary Creagh: ...Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs with reference to the response by the Veterinary Medicines Directorate to Freedom of Information request AT1 250, at which abattoir each horse was slaughtered.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Health pursuant to the answer of 11 February 2013, Official Report, column 521W, on horses: slaughterhouses, how many horses have been slaughtered in (a) total and (b) each abattoir in the UK in each of the last five months for which figures are available.
Mary Creagh: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs how many full-time staff work as part of the his Department's Horse Passport team; and how many such staff worked for the team in each of the last five years.