Hey Gook, you still expect us to believe that you and Chung aren't
eating American domestic dogs and cats? All the other habits you had
over there you brought here; why would this be the exception
https://awionline.org/awi-quarterly/2013-summer/awi-investigates-illegal-dog-meat-trade-philippines-and-thailand
y Rosalyn Morrison
This past March, I traveled from Bangkok—where I had been attending
the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on International Trade
in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)—to Manila to participate in an undercover investigation on the dog meat trade in
the Philippines. Raising awareness on this issue is of utmost
importance to me; for two years, I campaigned in South Korea against
this cruel trade (See the Winter 2012 AWI Quarterly.), returning home accompanied by Lucy, one of the so-called “dong-gae” dogs commonly
raised and slaughtered for meat in South Korea. Lucy is now my
constant companion and my ambassador on behalf of South Korean dogs.
I arrived in Manila at 7 a.m. on Friday, March 15. Although utterly
exhausted (after having barely slept the past two weeks at the CITES meeting), I was ready for another fast-paced—and incredibly emotional—adventure. From the airport, I took a taxi to the hotel,
quickly showered, and then hopped in the bus with Andrew Plumbly, the executive director of Network for Animals; Frank Loftus, videographer
from the Humane Society of the United States; and Martin Usborne, a photographer from the United Kingdom.
Despite the interesting company, I soon passed out in the back seat of
the bus. Even though it was stiflingly hot, I somehow managed to sleep throughout the bumpy drive to Baguio, a city of about 320,000 people
in the northern province of Benguet and six hours (minimum) from the
bustling capital of Manila. Baguio is the center of the Philippine dog
meat trade and the location of most of the known dog meat restaurants
in the country.
The killing and selling of dogs for food is not legal in the
Philippines. It was banned in Manila in 1982. A similar ban was
enacted nationally in 1998 via the Animal Welfare Act (Republic Act
No. 8485). The Act prohibits killing dogs for food with minimum
penalties set at 1,000 pesos (equivalent to about US$22 at the time)
and not less than six months in prison. The Anti-Rabies Act (RA 9482),
passed in 2007, includes more severe penalties with minimum fines of
5,000 pesos per dog and not less than one year of imprisonment for participating in the trading of dogs for their meat. Despite the
sanctions encoded in the law, however, law enforcement officials have
done little to actually end this illicit trade.
Upon arrival in Baguio, we headed for Comiles 2, a restaurant reputed
to sell dog meat, where the waitress politely asked us if we wanted
pork, chicken, or dog. Frank documented the encounter on film and as a
result we have actual evidence, not just rumors, that the restaurant
sells dog meat. Within a few minutes, another customer—a man who
looked to be in his 40s—came into the restaurant and ordered a dish of barbequed dog meat. Martin walked over to take a picture of the
customer’s dish, and the customer became very defensive, got his food
to go, and left the restaurant noticeably upset. The owner of the
restaurant became very aggressive, denied selling dog meat, and
everyone in the room became very tense. After several minutes of
disputing, we abruptly left the restaurant, evidence in hand.
Afterward, we visited a local market and a city veterinarian, and
spoke with a man who is building a shelter in the town of Bulakan for
dogs rescued from slaughter. A few years ago, dog meat was sold in the open-air markets. On our trip, we did not see any dog meat for sale in
the markets, which hopefully is a sign that the trade here is
declining. We also stopped at a Korean restaurant to ask if they
served dog meat and were pleased to learn they did not.
Sunday, we drove to the town of San Pedro in Laguna province, where
multiple dog meat traders are reported to operate. While there, we
rescued a two-month-old puppy who was tied on a short chain—persuading
the owner to part with her for $10. She was very dehydrated and
hungry, with ticks in her flesh and parasites in her stomach. She will
stay in the Philippines for a few months until she is ready to be
adopted.
The next morning, Andrew and I met with Ferdinand Manuel from the
National Bureau of Investigation (NBI)—the equivalent of the FBI in
the United States—to work on coordinating a raid to help save other
dogs like our rescued puppy. After our meeting, two colleagues from
the Humane Society International joined us at a meeting with Rubina Cresencio, the director of the Bureau of Animal Industry (a division
of the Department of Agriculture) to discuss the best strategies for
stopping the trade.
Even though selling dog meat is illegal in the Philippines, half a
million dogs are still brutally tortured and consumed every year. Historically, dog meat was associated with celebratory events and
rituals of mourning and only affected a small number of dogs. However,
over the past quarter century or so, the dog meat trade has rapidly
expanded for commercial rather than cultural reasons.
Investigators have documented the existence of at least 25 dog meat restaurants and four slaughterhouses in Baguio, seven dog meat traders
in Laguna and Batangas provinces, and two slaughterhouses in
Pangasinan province. Unfortunately, there are also many more
underground entities involved in the industry throughout the northern provinces.
Stray dogs are rounded up off the street and transported to Benguet
and neighboring provinces under extremely inhumane conditions without
food or water. Steel cans are forced around their muzzles and their
legs are tied behind their backs. Many of the dogs are pets—some are
still wearing their collars. According to international animal
protection organizations who have engaged in extensive enforcement,
nearly half the dogs die before they reach their final destination due
to the stressful conditions of the transportation; at times of extreme
heat and overcrowding, as many as 90 percent of the dogs may die. Such startling mortality rates are of no concern to the dog meat traders,
as the dead animals are processed along with the live ones. Behind
closed doors, dogs are clubbed, throats are cut, and fur is scorched
off with a blowtorch—often while the dogs are still conscious.
Human Health Implications of the Dog Meat Trade
A regional director of the Philippines National Meat Inspection
Commission publicly stated several years ago that consumption of dog
meat is “dangerous,” as it is not inspected by the Commission.
Consuming dog meat thus puts individuals at considerable risk of
infection from harmful bacteria such as E. Coli 107 and Salmonella
(commonly found in contaminated meats), as well as at increased risk
of contracting potentially deadly diseases such as anthrax,
brucellosis, cholera, hepatitis, and leptospirosis.
Dog meat is further linked to the spread of rabies—a disease that
kills approximately 10,000 dogs and 300 people in the Philippines
annually. Evidence shows that the rabies virus can be present, and
therefore potentially transmitted to humans, throughout all stages of
the dog meat industry—sourcing, trading, slaughtering, butchering, and
meat preparation—impeding efforts toward eradicating rabies in the
region. The World Health Organization has noted that “controlling
trade in and [the] movement of dogs” along with the promotion of mass
dog vaccination campaigns is key to dog rabies control and the
disease's eventual elimination. In order to pursue this goal, the
Philippine government included a prohibition regarding the trade of
dog meat in the 2007 Rabies Act and stated a nationwide goal of
eradicating rabies by 2020—a target that cannot be achieved unless the
dog meat trade is shut down.
There are, however, developments that seem to indicate the beginning
of a positive change. The Wildlife Division of the NBI recently raided
nine restaurants. Additionally, Network for Animals took the lead on conducting a slaughterhouse raid in the town of Malasiqui, about 50
miles south of Baguio, by providing resources such as surveillance and funding for the management of the raid. On December 5, 2012, with the cooperation of local authorities, seven dog meat traders were
arrested, 22 dogs were rescued, and 49 dog carcasses were confiscated.
(As of press time, a trial date for the arrested traders has not yet
been set.) While the local police were involved in the raid,
enforcement needs to be initiated by domestic law enforcement rather
than international nonprofit organizations in order for such successes
to continue on a regular, widespread basis.
The illegal dog meat industry in the Philippines causes harm in many
ways, from the extreme physical and mental suffering of hundreds of
thousands of dogs to the significant costs to human health. In order
to successfully eradicate the trade in dogs for human consumption,
mechanisms of enforcement need to be established at the provincial, municipal, and village levels to ensure that such a cruel industry has
no ground on which to stand.
It is also crucial to work with local communities to raise awareness
of the risks that the dog meat industry poses to both human health and
animal welfare, and for local law enforcement officers to be
adequately equipped with the skills, knowledge and motivation to
enforce existing laws. The objective is to have the Philippine
Department of the Interior as well as local governments ensure that
the national ban is consistently and aggressively enforced in the dog
meat regions of the country in order to demonstrate a serious
commitment to ending this inhumane industry.
On To Thailand
After a week in the Philippines, I flew to Phuket, Thailand, to visit
Soi Dog Foundation (SDF) and meet its founder, John Dalley. The week
before I arrived, SDF conducted three raids and saved 520 dogs from unimaginable suffering. Even though the dog meat trade is illegal in Thailand, dogs are frequently rounded up off the streets—90 percent of
them estimated to be pets—and smuggled across the Mekong River into Vietnam, where the dog meat trade is rampant due to a common belief
that it has warming properties that aid in maintaining health and
recovering from illness. The main consumers of the meat are wealthy Vietnamese businessmen who can afford its high price.
The Thai Veterinary Medical Association estimated that in 2011 half a
million dogs were being smuggled into Vietnam annually to be
slaughtered. Following increasing pressure by SDF and others, the
number is currently far less than this, though many dogs are now being slaughtered locally and the meat smuggled instead. Hence, despite the national ban, the illegal trade in Thailand is worth approximately 1
billion Thai baht a year—over US$30 million. The Thai government does
not have the necessary funding to adequately protect its dog
population from the illegal meat trade. The Department of Livestock Development is charged with sheltering and providing for the dogs
rescued from the trade, yet it currently has no budget for this (since
dogs are not considered livestock animals in Thailand).
In Thailand as in other places, the dog meat trade is conducted with
callous cruelty; dogs are packed for days in small cages, and many die
before they reach their final destination from heat exhaustion or asphyxiation. In many places where dog meat is consumed, including
Thailand, there is a common belief that dog meat is more tender if it
is permeated by adrenaline just prior to slaughtering. As a result,
dogs are intentionally killed slowly so as to increase their intense
fear and stress. Dogs are boiled alive, beaten to death, hung, or
skinned alive for their meat.
Tragically, even dogs rescued from such a horrific end are not
guaranteed a life of recovery and health. Dogs in Thailand are not
routinely vaccinated. According to SDF, a full 70 percent of the
rescued dogs end up dying from disease, as well as injuries and
starvation.
In June, CNN.com prominently featured articles covering the dog meat
trade in Thailand and Vietnam. We are very glad to see this issue
finally gaining mainstream global attention. While it is important to
raise international awareness on the illegal dog meat trade in these countries, we also want this to take root as a solid, locally-based
campaign. Citizens of these countries need to put political pressure
on their governments from within in order to ensure compliance with
their own national bans on the trade.
https://postimg.cc/0r8NkFQy
Goodbye gooks!
ReplyPermalinkOn Sat, 12 Apr 2025 22:16:54 -0700, NOt Michael EjercitoI infected NO ONE with COVID.
You sure have such hostility against them.You sure deserve any hostility directed at you, gook. That's what you
GET for infecting the whole world with COVID.
Did a slant-eyed girl turns down your sexual advances?Some people find slant eyes a turn on.
Humans do not MAKE sexual advances to hideous slant eyed gook
subwomen.
See above.Or was that s slant-eyed BOY?Even less so.
Strip away the jewloving,There is nothing wrong with loving Jews.
the rabid 'pro-semitism'®™,Better than Judenhass.
the 'holocaust'®™ marketing/promotion,I defend Holocaust truth.
the depravity, the underageThere is none of those.
sibling sodomy >the daily two-fingered needledick masturbation,
theRape has victims.
denial of rape beneficiaries,
the exaggerated umbrage at being calledIt is immoral for you to call anyone a gook.
a gook,
the idolising of Jeff Kakobsteen and Jack Marshall,You idolize Adolf Hitler and David Duke.
constant "wonderfully hungry" lies,Try being wonderfully hungry.
the online porn portfoliolioliolioThere is nothing wrong wioth pictured of naked White women.
consisting entirely of WHITE women,
the failed degree in Arithmetic atI have a degree in Finance/
the California State University Long Beach,
the bizarreThere are no such weekend nights.
'homophobia'®™/'paedophobia'®™, the weekend nights at the Queen Mary Parking Lot,
the hideous gob dripping with freshly squeezed jewThere is none of that.
diarrhoea, the feasting on dogs and other domestic pets,
the delusionsI am, and always have been, an American.
of being an American,
the sheer adoration of uppity ape ChrissieChris has greatly influenced my own political views since April 26,
Morton,
the sheer terror of rapture and deportation by the ICE Five-0,They deal with immigration.
there is nothing subhuman about them.the marketing/promotion of bestiality between Humans and subhumanspecies such as gooks and jews,
and the subsequent excretion of
subhuman sub-babies, and what is left?
ReplyPermalinkOn Tue, 15 Apr 2025 05:54:03 -0700, NOT Michael EjercitoIt is NOT bestiality.
In fact, some people love Jews so much that they MAKE BABIES withThere is NOTHING 'cool' about bestiality.
them, which is pretty cool sometimes.
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