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My name is Gill. I’m 47 years old and a registered Nurse with a practice preference history for care of the mentally ill and infirm due to for instance Alzheimers or other dementia–related illness.

HLS came to my attention after watching covert photography inside HLS on a TV programme ‘It’s a dog’s life’. A vivisector was punching, kicking and throwing against a wall a terrified beagle dog not compliant enough in its docile terror for this foul–mouthed sub-human specimen of humanity.

I went to HLS one Friday this year. The vast flatness of the buildings. The tall chimneys and barbed wire fencing. The cold eyes of the guards, irritation on the police's faces, standing in the frosty coldness. The silence and sadness put me in mind of TV footage of Auschwitz concentration camp. Animals were cargoed in, vans and lorries gaining access.

I could recount numerous experiences to you of daily life death, courage, human courage and sacrifice, but standing outside HLS was the 2nd saddest day of my life.

The experiments are unnecessary. The safety of human health cannot rely on these vile experiments. There is no public accountability and home office inspectors are inadequate, incompetent and collaborative.

If this government put human health and welfare above foreign investment and financial gain, they would invest more in relevant and reliable methods and close HLS forever.

HLS is hell on earth, and none of us need it.

Gill Adelius, Registered Nurse

 

 

 

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