Racing suspended at Australia’s ‘deadliest’ greyhound track in Purga, west of Brisbane
The race in Queensland’s new Greyhound Racing Center was suspended for insecure conditions, a decision made after a series of dogs of a brand new three-piece facility of $ 85 million.
The annual Brisbane Cup was abandoned on Saturday after two races, and the planned meetings on Monday and Thursday were canceled in what Queensland describes as the “best” Greyhound racing place.
RQ, said in a statement, “The decision was given after the Q2 Parklands runway was not suitable for the race,” he said.
A high -speed collision in a greyhound race in Q in May in one of the new place’s heating races.Credit: Protection of Greyhounds Coalition
According to the competing campaignists, at least 11 greyhounds have died in Q in March since the runway attempts, and after most of the races were injured, euthanasia.
Most recently, Beau Ripple was euthanazine on the track on June 28, after being injured in front foot injury. This is nine on June 16 after Texas Wedge’s deaths, Spring Freyaa on June 3 and Travis on May 17.
The former worker Queensland government put $ 44 million on the facility in Purga in the south of Ipswich, which officially opened the Racing Infrastructure Fund last month.
Minister Grace Grace, who announced the place in 2022, said he was engaged to help design the runway of runway design and injury prevention.
Amy Macmahon, President of the Coalition of the Protection of Greyhounds, said the approach was clearly unsuccessful.
Macmahon, until last year for South Brisbane, the Greater MP, Q’nin 59 of the nationwide 59 of the nationwide of the 11 of the 11, which made it “the country’s most deadly part of the country,” he said.
