Last month, animal welfare advocates celebrated a presumed victory: Chinese officials reportedly banned the sale of dog meat at this year’s infamous Yulin Festival, where thousands of dogs are brutally slaughtered for human consumption.
But sadly, the festival seems to be going ahead in some capacity, although less dog meat is being sold, according to Animals Asia and Humane Society International(HSI), which have both spent years working to help dogs trapped in the trade.
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Guangyuan Boai Animal Protect Group
While dog meat is sold year-round in China, the annual Yulin Festival started in 2009 to expand the consumption of dog meat, which only a minority of Chinese people currently consume. At the festival, dogs are butchered in horrible ways — often being bludgeoned to death, stabbed, hung or electrocuted.
As there are no dog farms in China, many of the victims are stray dogs taken from the streets, or even stolen pets who are still wearing their dollars.
Animals Asia
The dog meat ban at Yulin was supposed to go into effect on June 15, 2017, when a lot of dog meat begins to be sold in the lead-up to the festival. Previous reports suggested that anyone caught selling dog meat would risk a 100,000 yuan fine(nearly $15,000) and arrest.
Yet dog meat is still being sold in Yulin, Irene Feng, cat and dog welfare director for Animals Asia, told The Dodo.
HSI
“Animals Asia has spoken to sources in Yulin who have reported that dog meat traders in the city’s Dongkou market were publicly selling dog meat on June 15, as they do every day,” Feng said. “Furthermore, Yulin authorities have clarified that there is no so-called ‘dog meat ban.’ It seems likely there will not be an overt ban on dog meat sales in the city of Yulin during this year’s summer solstice.”
The news is a disappointment to animal lovers both in and out of the country — but despite that, it appears the overwhelming negative press surrounding the festival has
Animals Asia
“The authorities wanted the vendors to display no more than two dogs on their stands, according to a local vendor,” Peter Li, China policy specialist for HSI, told The Dodo. “This is the compromised concession.”
That means less dog meat is being sold — which should mean fewer dogs being killed. Li explained that about one-third less dog meat is being sold at this year’s festival, compared to other years.
Animals Asia
Members of VShine, a Chinese animal welfare organization, also report a decreased amount of dog meat being sold.
“It doesn’t look like business as usual at Dongkou market in Yulin,” a spokesperson from VShine said in a statement. “It’s disappointing to see dog meat still on sale, but nothing like the amount we’ve seen in the past. Business was slow at the market with far fewer buyers.”
AP Images for HSI
While the continuance of the Yulin Festival is certainly upsetting, Feng points out that dogs are butchered for their meat year-round in China and other parts of Asia — not just during the Yulin Festival.
“The international attention given to Yulin for one week of the year is becoming a distraction from the much larger issue of the dog meat trade’s activities every single day of the year across the country,” Feng said. “That is the real issue and it requires a consistent and holistic approach — it can’t be solved in a week.”
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While dog meat is sold year-round in China, the annual Yulin Festival started in 2009 to expand the consumption of dog meat, which only a minority of Chinese people currently consume. At the festival, dogs are butchered in horrible ways — often being bludgeoned to death, stabbed, hung or electrocuted.
As there are no dog farms in China, many of the victims are stray dogs taken from the streets, or even stolen pets who are still wearing their dollars.
The dog meat ban at Yulin was supposed to go into effect on June 15, 2017, when a lot of dog meat begins to be sold in the lead-up to the festival. Previous reports suggested that anyone caught selling dog meat would risk a 100,000 yuan fine(nearly $15,000) and arrest.
Yet dog meat is still being sold in Yulin, Irene Feng, cat and dog welfare director for Animals Asia, told The Dodo.
“Animals Asia has spoken to sources in Yulin who have reported that dog meat traders in the city’s Dongkou market were publicly selling dog meat on June 15, as they do every day,” Feng said. “Furthermore, Yulin authorities have clarified that there is no so-called ‘dog meat ban.’ It seems likely there will not be an overt ban on dog meat sales in the city of Yulin during this year’s summer solstice.”
The news is a disappointment to animal lovers both in and out of the country — but despite that, it appears the overwhelming negative press surrounding the festival has
Animals Asia
“The authorities wanted the vendors to display no more than two dogs on their stands, according to a local vendor,” Peter Li, China policy specialist for HSI, told The Dodo. “This is the compromised concession.”
That means less dog meat is being sold — which should mean fewer dogs being killed. Li explained that about one-third less dog meat is being sold at this year’s festival, compared to other years.
Members of VShine, a Chinese animal welfare organization, also report a decreased amount of dog meat being sold.
“It doesn’t look like business as usual at Dongkou market in Yulin,” a spokesperson from VShine said in a statement. “It’s disappointing to see dog meat still on sale, but nothing like the amount we’ve seen in the past. Business was slow at the market with far fewer buyers.”
While the continuance of the Yulin Festival is certainly upsetting, Feng points out that dogs are butchered for their meat year-round in China and other parts of Asia — not just during the Yulin Festival.
“The international attention given to Yulin for one week of the year is becoming a distraction from the much larger issue of the dog meat trade’s activities every single day of the year across the country,” Feng said. “That is the real issue and it requires a consistent and holistic approach — it can’t be solved in a week.”
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