PETA India Director to Be Experimented On in Demand for Rescue of 1200+ Beagles and Other Animals Imprisoned and Poisoned at Palamur Biosciences 

For Immediate Release:

28 August 2025

Contact:

Dr. Anjana Aggarwal; [email protected]

Sanskriti Bansore; [email protected]

Delhi – Following an explosive whistleblower-led exposé by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals India (PETA India) that revealed egregious abuse of dogs, monkeys and other animals at Telangana-based Palamur Biosciences, on Friday a group of ‘scientists’ will confine PETA India Director, Poorva Joshipura, in a restraint chair and force her to undergo the same cruel procedures that real animals are subjected to in laboratories. PETA India’s aim is to urge the Committee for the Control and Supervision of Experiments on Animals (CCSEA) to facilitate the rescue of the 1200+ beagles, monkeys, cows, pigs and other animals at Palamur Biosciences—a recommendation made in a detailed report by CCSEA-appointed inspectors submitted to the agency on 17 June. Among the animals imprisoned at Palamur Biosciences are 73 beagles who are no longer used for breeding or experiments, that the facility itself has marked as for ‘rehabilitation’, but that so far the CCSEA has not ordered to be rescued and that Palamur Biosciences has refused to let go despite offers from NGOs to facilitate the dogs’ care, rehoming and adoption into loving homes.

When:             Friday, 29 August, 12 pm sharp

Where:           Dharna Road, Jantar Mantar, Sansad Marg, Janpath, Connaught Place, New Delhi, Delhi 110001

“At Palamur Biosciences, dogs with treatable conditions are reportedly killed, wild monkeys who have been abducted from their forest homes are experimented on, and pigs are poisoned,” says PETA India Director Poorva Joshipura. “PETA India is calling on CCSEA to shut down this house of horrors and to facilitate the rescue of its surviving animals who desperately need care.”

The CCSEA-appointed inspectors’ report submitted to the agency on 17 June documented that the facility confined far more dogs than were approved by CCSEA and couldn’t provide an inventory of any animals; animals were reused frequently in painful experiments in violation of CCSEA guidelines; dogs, minipigs, and cows were in poor condition, yet Palamur could provide no suitable medical records; animals were experimented on without adequate pain management procedures; and animals were killed without first being sedated; and other examples of cruelty and mismanagement. The report concludes, ‘The operational deficiencies observed at PBPL [Palamur Biosciences] are not isolated incidents but indicative of entrenched structural, procedural and ethical failures. The scale and severity of non-compliances documented during the inspection raise significant concerns regarding the facility’s adherence to established standards of animal welfare and regulatory accountability.’

PETA India – whose motto reads, in part, that ‘animals are not ours to experiment on’ – opposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information, please visit PETAIndia.com or follow PETA India on X, Facebook, or Instagram.

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