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dinsdag 31 maart 2026

The smell was the first thing that struck 'We Animals' photo journalist Resha Juhari: exposing the animals within our food systems

https://weanimals.org/

INSIDE BALI'S UNREGULATED PIG SLAUGHTER

Bali Slaughter
The face of a pig who stares out of a tiny metal cage, called a “blangsung”, at a slaughterhouse. Undisclosed location, Badung Regency, Bali, Indonesia, 2025. Resha Juhari / We Animals

It was horrible to see pigs being killed in such a way. They were beaten over the head with clubs, then their throats were slit. This was the first time I had seen it in person.” — Muhammad Fajri, photojournalist

The smell was the first thing that struck We Animals photojournalist Resha Juhari when he stepped into a roadside slaughterhouse in Bali, Indonesia. Even through a mask, the stench of urine and decay was overwhelming. A pig looked out from inside a metal cage, next to piles of intestines, blood, and butchered meat. The scene was not an isolated case.


We were able to obtain unprecedented access to these facilities and took the opportunity to document what was inside. Across Bali’s Badung regency, photojournalists Resha Juhari and Muhammad Fajri visited eight small slaughterhouses. They documented conditions and practices inside facilities that appear to operate with little oversight, raising concerns about animal welfare, worker safety, and public health.

For most consumers, slaughter remains out of sight. But as global concern grows around animal welfare, food safety, and environmental protection, the conditions documented in these facilities raise a difficult question: how much oversight exists behind the pork that reaches the table?

We have shared these visuals with local NGOs advocating for change, and hope that our investigation will encourage authorities in Indonesia to consider implementing legal protections for animals.

[Content warning: Contains confronting images and/or video footage]

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PHOTO OF THE MONTH

Buffalo Racing
A jockey and a pair of yoked buffaloes begin a Kambala buffalo race. The jockey hits the animals with a bamboo cane to increase their speed and steers them with a plough handle. Loud vocalizations are made by the people present to urge the buffalo on. Mulki Kambala Track, Mulki, Karnataka, India, 2025. Manju N Gowda / FIAPO / We Animals
Good photographs transport us.

This image, by Indian photojournalist Manju N Gowda, was captured at a 2025 Kambala buffalo race. A jockey and a yoked pair surge forward through water and mud. He strikes them with a bamboo cane to increase their speed, steering with a plough handle. Around them, spectators are yelling, cheering.

We’re often told not to anthropomorphize. But here, it is difficult not to. In this frame, we are inside the chaos. We feel the water splash. We brace for the strike of the cane. There is no option but to run.

Context

Kambala is a traditional buffalo race rooted in the culture of the Tulu people in coastal Karnataka, India. Once held in paddy fields as village entertainment, it is now staged at large, sponsored events, often organized by local politicians and Kambala committees.

This photo is part of a larger assignment done in partnership with FIAPO (
Federation of Indian Animal Protection Organisations)
 to challenge the narrative that Kambala is a harmless cultural tradition and advocate for new state-level legislation.
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TRANSFORMING THE WAY WE SEE AND TREAT AQUATIC LIFE

Celebrate World Aquatic Animal Day with us on April 3—join in person or online.

At George Washington University, our founder, Jo-Anne McArthur, will deliver the keynote address at this year’s World Aquatic Animal Day. The theme: The Human Gaze: Impacts on Aquatic Animals.

Alongside leading advocates Amy P. Wilson, Lori Marino, Randall Abate, and Kathy Hessler, the panel will explore how the fields of law, science, and photojournalism “see” aquatic animals, and what that means for their lives.

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HOURS LEFT TO DOUBLE YOUR IMPACT

Double Your Impact
A rescued red fox looks into the camera while The Fox Project (TFP) staff discuss her care. We Animals founder Jo-Anne McArthur visited TFP in Kent, UK in late 2025 to document their work. Jo-Anne McArthur / The Fox Project / We Animals



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