LONDON, England - Ho feta halofo ea batho ba baholo ba Borithane (52%) ba re haeba ba bona phoofolo e tšoaroa hampe kantle ho matsatsi a phomolo e ka ba emisa ho etela naha eo hape.
Ho ea ka phuputso e ncha ea YouGov e rometsoeng ke mokhatlo oa machaba oa liphallelo oa liphoofolo SPANA (Mokhatlo oa Tšireletso ea Liphoofolo Linaheng Linaheng), batho ba fetang motho a le mong ho ba bahlano ba batho ba baholo ba Brithani (22%) ba bone liphoofolo li tšoaroa hampe ha li le phomolong mose ho maoatle, empa ho feta karolo ea boraro ea tsena. batho ba phomolong (77%) ha baa ka ba leka ho tlaleha ketsahalo ea morao-rao ea tšoaro e mpe eo ba e boneng. Bongata ba batho bana ba matsatsi a phomolo (71%) ba re ba bone liphoofolo tse sebelisoang indastering ea bohahlauli li sa tšoaroe hampe.
Phuputso e boetse e fumane hore ba fetang kotara (28%) ba batho ba baholo ba Borithane ba kileng ba ea phomolong kantle ho naha ba nkile karolo mesebetsing e amanang le liphoofolo joalo ka kamele safari kapa lipere le lipalangoang moo ba neng ba amehile ka boiketlo ba liphoofolo tse amehang.
SEO U LOKELANG HO SE NKA HO SEHLOOHO ENA:
- Phuputso e boetse e fumane hore ba fetang kotara (28%) ba batho ba baholo ba Borithane ba kileng ba ea phomolong kantle ho naha ba nkile karolo mesebetsing e amanang le liphoofolo joalo ka kamele safari kapa lipere le lipalangoang moo ba neng ba amehile ka boiketlo ba liphoofolo tse amehang.
- According to a new YouGov survey commissioned by international animal charity SPANA (the Society for the Protection of Animals Abroad), over one in five British adults (22%) have seen animals being mistreated when on holiday overseas, but over three-quarters of these holidaymakers (77%) made no attempt to report the most recent incident of mistreatment that they saw.
- Over half of British adults (52%) say that if they saw an animal being mistreated abroad on holiday it would put them off visiting that country again.