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China ends sale of dogs for meat and fur

By Steve Jacobs

In a historic move, China has ended the sale of live dogs and dog meat for food and fur, animal welfare groups expect.

Beijing's Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs last week published a new National Animal Genetic Resources Directory that gives a list of animals that can be treated as livestock, such as pigs, cattle, sheep and goats, horses, rabbits and chickens.

More than 100 Chinese activists rescue dogs and cats from a truck headed to slaughterhouses in Guangzhou on the eve of China's annual Yulin dog meat festival in 2017.

More than 100 Chinese activists rescue dogs and cats from a truck headed to slaughterhouses in Guangzhou on the eve of China's annual Yulin dog meat festival in 2017.Credit: Humane Society International

Notably, for the first time, dogs are not on the list.

International animal welfare organisation Four Paws says the change will effectively end the legal trade of dogs for meat and fur.

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"Our understanding is that only animals on the list can be bred, raised, traded, and so on for food or fur under this ministerial regulation," said Dr Karanvir Kukreja, project manager for Four Paws’ Ending the Dog and Cat Meat Trade Campaign.

"To the best of our knowledge, there is no actual ban on consumption," he said.

The new regulations follow the landmark city-wide bans of dog eating in the southern cities of Shenzhen and Zhuhai in April.

Animal protection group Humane Society International estimates that 30 million dogs are killed for human consumption across Asia each year. Of these, between 10 million and 20 million dogs are slaughtered in China.

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A spokesperson for the ministry told a reporter that "humans' ideas of civilisation and eating habits are constantly changing, and some traditional customs about dogs will also change".

The spokesperson said that dogs have a long history of domestication. In the past, they were mainly used in nursing homes and for hunting. Now they have more diverse uses, including for human companionship and to help police in search and rescue operations. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation does not include dogs with livestock and poultry.

Kukreja said Beijing had not issued any information about this month's Yulin dog meat festival during which thousands of dogs were usually killed for their meat.

Dr Katherine Polak, veterinarian and head of Four Paws Stray Animal Care in south-east Asia said, "Now is the time for Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia to finally act as China has done to protect public health and to bring an end to this cruel trade.

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"In addition to immense animal suffering, the trade is also responsible for outbreaks of diseases such as rabies and cholera.

"And as we now know, global health and economy can suffer as a result of deadly zoonotic viruses that are emerging from live animal markets where dog and cat meat are regularly sold," she said.

Dr Peter Li, China policy specialist for Humane Society International, welcomed the news, saying: "Now that the Chinese government has officially recognised dogs as companions and not livestock, we are hopeful that China will take stronger steps to hasten the end of the dog and cat meat trade for which millions of animals continue to suffer every year. The announcement presents cities across China with the perfect opportunity to act upon the government's words by protecting dogs and cats from the meat trade thieves and slaughterhouses.

"In just a few weeks' time, the dog slaughterhouses of Yulin city will fill up with terrified dogs awaiting brutal slaughter for its infamous festival. A great many of those dogs will have been stolen from homes and streets before being transported to Yulin.

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"They will be precisely the much loved companions and helper dogs referred to in the national government's statement as being not for food. The Yulin festival is a bloody spectacle that does not reflect the mood or eating habits of the majority of the Chinese people, and its continuation flouts the sentiment expressed by the Ministry of Agriculture. As the ministry observed, attitudes and appetites about dogs have changed and so now it is time for Yulin's dog slaughterhouses to lay down the butcher's knife, and consign the festival to the history books.”

Shenzhen highlighted the relationship between dogs and humans when passing its ban in April.

"Dogs and cats as pets have established a much closer relationship with humans than all other animals, and banning the consumption of dogs and cats and other pets is a common practice in developed countries and in Hong Kong and Taiwan. This ban also responds to the demand and spirit of human civilisation," the city government said.

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/world/asia/china-ends-sale-of-dogs-for-meat-and-fur-20200531-p54y2y.html