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Those
off us who care about animals are horrified that most off the worlds
fur products now comes from China. A country with no animal
welfare laws to protect animals not even from the worst kinds
of horrific cruelties. A recent investigation by Swiss
Animal Protection and Care for the Wild revealed shocking cruelties on
Chinese fur farms. The documentary concentrates on wild animals, but there is no doubt that even
the companion animals we love and share our homes with suffer the same tragic fate that wild animals are forced to
suffer on these
farms. Investigators witnessed workers attempt to stun raccoon
dogs, arctic foxes and other animals by repeatedly slamming their heads against the ground or beating
their heads with wooden clubs.
Many animals were still alive blinking and struggling desperately
when workers flipped them onto their backs or hung them up by their
legs or tails to skin them. When
workers on these farms began cutting the skin and fur from these still
living animals' legs, their free limbs kicked and writhed, leaving the
animals to suffer for as long as ten minutes after being skinned
alive--some
workers first hacked off the animal’s paws to facilitate subsequent
skinning!
An
investigator taped a skinned raccoon dog on a pile of carcasses who
had enough strength to lift his bloodied head and stare into the
camera.
The fur stripped from these poor animals - more than 85% - is sold to
overseas markets, including Europe. And Europe is the worlds biggest
consumer of fur..
“Europeans
and Americans Share the Blame”
In May 2006 a spokesman for the Chinese
Ambassador in London told the BBC: "The fur trade mostly feeds
markets in Europe and the US. Most of this fur is not for the Chinese
market. So the Europeans and Americans should accept the blame".
Whenever we buy products made with fur
from China we share the blame for the horrific cruelties on Chinese
fur farms.
Chinese authorities have acknowledged these atrocities are real.
Fuelled by the Western fashion industry’s appetite for cheap fur,
mostly as trim on everything from jackets and slippers to sweaters and
bags. The only way to be sure to avoid being involved in this horrific
industry, is never to buy Fur or Faux Fur or anything resembling
it.
The
animals have no laws to protect them, but you can help:
Write a letter to the Chinese Government urging China to pass
a national animal welfare law and to urgently
enact legislations to prohibit the live skinning and inhumane treatment
of animals in the fur industry.
Chinese
embassy addresses can be found by scrolling halfway down the
Take
Action Page
Click
on the links to watch the video footage (includes
very graphic images)
English version:
http://www.animal-protection.net/furtrade/movie.htm
German
version:
http://www.tierschutz.com/main/aktuell/pelz/movie.htm
Links
to more videos and broadcasts
exposing the barbaric Chinese fur trade.
 Sir
Paul McCartney has vowed never to perform in China and also said he
would boycott the 2008 Beijing Olympics, after viewing horrific
undercover footage of dogs and cats being killed for their fur in a
fur market in Guangzhou, southern China.
BBC news
report and video here.
Sky News shoots its own footage of fur trade
atrocities. Story and video here.
http://www.furisdead.com/feat-dogcatfur.asp
An article
about the Chinese fur industry published in the Press Gazette:
Prying eyes not welcome in China
Thursday, 12 January 2006
TV reporter Dominic Waghorn was
greeted with a less than warm welcome when he and his producer
investigated the Beijing fur industry
CHINA'S ECONOMY is booming and the
country is opening up, as we are constantly reminded in the media. So
you might think working there as a journalist should be getting
easier. Far from it.
China's growing wealth is spawning
powerful alliances between big business and local government, and they
are determined to protect their interests from prying eyes.
Sky News experienced the sharp end
of that, investigating the country's fur industry. The world is
outsourcing more and more of its fur production to China. Low labour
costs, and hardly any animal welfare legislation, make an irresistible
combination.
China's now helping drive the fur
revival on Britain's high streets. If you bought fur-trimmed boots or
coats this Christmas the chances are the fur came from China.
We neared Shangcun fur market, just
three hours outside Beijing, at dawn. The roads were thick with
tractors laden with racoons, foxes and rabbits crammed in cages. This
one market supplies 60 per cent of the country's entire fur output.
Earlier this year a Swiss animal
welfare organisation secretly filmed footage of appalling conditions
at the market and the farms that supply it.
On the internet it circulated
grisly pictures of racoon dogs and foxes being skinned alive.
It caused an international outcry,
prompting Chinese authorities to announce a clean-up.
It has not made a huge difference.
Instead of being clubbed to death, the animals are electrocuted with
home-made devices wired to tractor batteries. They struggle to escape
as one prong goes in their mouth the other in their anus, then lie
twitching and whimpering on the ground.
Often the voltage isn't strong
enough. There is no effort to check they are dead before they are
strung up on the tractor and skinned. In the back of the vehicle their
skinless bodies pile up, some clearly still alive, their hearts still
beating.
We would have liked to investigate
more, but the market's management was onto us. A group of large,
menacing men were watching us intently. Being a journalist in China
requires luck and good judgment.
Perhaps we had left it a little
late before leaving.
As we drove off, a black sedan with
tinted windows tailed us. It is best not to stop unless you have to.
After being overtaken and nearly driven off the road several times, we
had no choice.
One of the thugs we had seen at the
market told our driver we had knocked down an old lady. We hadn't of
course - it is the kind of thing you notice.
It was just a clever way of making
us stay put while they worked out what to do with us.
We never learned who the man was,
nor his more sinister companions - shadowy figures in dark suits who
swarmed round the car and refused to show their ID cards. They would
stay in the background all day - a constant reminder that in this part
of China the fur industry runs things.
Eventually the police arrived. We
had been detained, the start of a 10-hour process that would veer from
the utterly surreal to the deeply sinister.
They said they would take us to a
hotel. Normally that means you are going to the police station; in
this case they meant it. A four star joint in the county capital,
inaptly named the Hurray Hotel. We were sat in its lobby and given tea
but it was made clear we could not leave.
We sat and watched more men in dark
suits arrive through the morning. As well as the 20 or so officials,
thugs and police who had arrived with us, dozens more arrived through
the morning. They all knew each other and had all come to look at us.
And, it turned out, have lunch with us. A banquet had been laid on and
we were invited. Like trophies, we felt, so we declined.
After lunch, we were ordered to a
hotel room.
Being detained in China is always
unnerving but usually there is a pattern. You are lectured, forced to
see the error of your ways and made to write a self criticism, a
throwback to the dark days of Mao. It is long and laborious, how long
depends on how much you are prepared to go along with the ridiculous
charade.
My producer and I did as we were
told. But they wanted more, the one videotape we had handed over was
not enough. They became menacing, screaming at my producer, calling
her a liar. She was on her own, they said, and no one could help her.
We were very aware the last time a
foreign team of journalists had been picked up in the same province
they had been roughed up by police and made to undergo a strip search.
As daylight failed, more people were coming and going. Some of them
police, some officials, others thugs from the fur market.
Like most of provincial China, this
place is run by a gangster alliance, with local government, police and
big business all in it together, something like 1920s Chicago. If we
had filmed footage damaging to the town's big industry they wanted it.
Most worrying, our Chinese driver
became a lightning rod for the police, who were increasingly
frustrated with us. It must have felt like returning to the terror of
the Cultural Revolution as they took him to a separate room and
condemned him as a traitor in long loud interrogation sessions that
stopped just short of beating him up.
The British and Australian
Embassies were trying to help us all day. In the end it must have made
a difference. Risking a diplomatic incident must have worried our
captors, or perhaps they were beginning to believe we had no more
tapes. At six o'clock, 10 hours after being detained, we were
dispensed Chinese justice. They called it a "judgment", a document
drawn up by police in the hotel room next door demanding 1,000 Chinese
renmimbi.
Life here is never predictable. It
is hard to believe, but the head of police also wanted our photograph
- not a mugshot, but a souvenir snap. We were keen to leave so we
stood either side of the man who had kept us against our will for most
of the day, terrorised our driver and taken our money.
Perhaps it was relief, perhaps it
was knowing we still had the tape they wanted, but we even managed a
smile.
Dominic Waghorn is Beijing
correspondent for Sky News
Copyright © 2005-2006 Press Gazette Ltd.
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