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Merritt Clifton, editor, ANIMAL PEOPLE.

To:

Friday, June 29, 2001 3:48 PM

Editorial, June 2001

 

 

Help Koreans change Korea (Editorial, ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2001)

 

This June 2001 edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE is almost a month late in great part

due to complications resulting from our mid-May investigative visit to South

Korea, the most notorious of the nations in which dogs and cats are openly

sold for human consumption.

 

ANIMAL PEOPLE publisher Kim Bartlett, a 30-year veteran of humane work, was

physically ill with pneumonia for a week after our visit to the Moran market

near Seoul,the largest South Korean live market featuring dogs and cats. She

extensively documented the scene with photos, flew home with the film, and

collapsed.

 

ANIMAL PEOPLE editor Merritt Clifton meanwhile worked 40 hours straight upon

our return to summarize our findings and circulate the summary by e-mail to

more than two dozen heads of international animal protection organizations,

who were asked for comment and statements of commitment to action that were

rarely forthcoming.

 

As ANIMAL PEOPLE has often pointed out, editorially opposing the consumption

of any animals, the unique horror of dog-and-cat consumption as practiced in

Korea--and parts of China--is not that animals who are elsewhere considered

companions are eaten. Rather, it is that they may be tortured to death. Cats

are reputedly hammered, to break large bones, and are then boiled alive.

This is believed to make a tonic for female conditions of age. Dogs endure

beatings, slow hanging, and dehairing by blowtorch. Supposedly this suffuses

their flesh with adrenalin, which is passed to the aging men who do most of

the dog-eating. Yet adrenalin actually breaks down so fast under heat that

just cooking the dog meat kills any actual biochemical effect. Contemplating

or inflicting the torture itself is apparently what actually stimulates the

consumers--which makes Korean-style dog-and-cat-eating literally a commerce

in sadism.

 

We did not see dogs or cats being killed, though we did see cats in cages

with fresh head injuries apparently inflicted by hammer. Numerous cats were

dead in the cages,perhaps from the head injuries, or from dehydration and

overheating, visibly afflicting the survivors. Few outside witnesses have

seen the traditional tortures in recent years. Royal SPCA East Asia program

manager Paul Littlefair has, he told us, but after six visits to Korea in

under two years, he believes that the dogs are killed these days mainly by

electrocution, using automotive jumper cables connected to 220-volt power

outlets. We saw such devices, idle--and also saw, as our page one exposé

documents, that neglect of basic animal care and sanitation at the Moran

market may cause as much animal suffering as the deliberately cruel

slaughter.

 

Live markets are ghastly everywhere, including in the U.S., where

hypersensitivity toward minority cultures allows officials to ignore

conditions in cities like San Francisco which would not be tolerated in Hong

Kong or Singapore. But the Moran market conditions were worse--far

worse--than anything we have seen in many of the poorest parts of the world.

Amid an otherwise affluent, modern, educated, and obsessively clean society,

the Moran market squalor could not be attributed to poverty, ignorance, or

tradition. Rather, the Moran market stood out like the

feces-and-carcass-filled home of an animal hoarder in any neat U.S. suburb:

symptomatic of mental illness, overlooked by neighbors either because the

evidence is hidden, or because they choose to avoid looking and becoming

involved.

 

The average Korean neither participates in dog-and-cat-eating, nor has any

idea what goes on in the dog-and-cat markets. Dog-and-cat-eating are

culturally entrenched vices, not common practice. That must be clearly

understood.

 

Despite the public prominence of dog-eating, in particular, on the three

summer bok choi days when dog meat is sold on sidewalks all over Korea, our

miles of looking at the menus, window fare, and refuse of countless

hole-in-the-wall working class Korean restaurants in downtown Seoul found no

evidence that either dogs or cats are popular fare. If any of the

restaurants routinely served dog or cat meat, they didn't advertise it;

neither did they hang the carcasses out in plain sight with the remains of

pigs, poultry, fish, and cattle.

 

All the average Korean seems to know about dog-and-cat-eating, besides that

it occurs, is that externally directed campaigns have for 15 years called

for economic and cultural boycotts of anything and everything Korean because

of alleged atrocities that most Koreans have no more contact with than

average Americans have with fur trapping.

 

Thus it is easy for defenders of the dog and cat meat industries to tell

Koreans that the boycotts are based on racist innuendo, promoted to protect

European and American industry from economic competition, and that the

Koreans who support the boycotts are traitors.

 

American and European campaigners--and the Korea Animal Protection Society

and International Aid for Korean Animals--continue to pursue boycotts in

part because the threat of a boycott of the 1988 Olympic Games, hosted by

South Korea, felt like a success.

 

That boycott threat helped to win an unenforced and perhaps unenforceable

1991 ban on the sale of " unsightly " foods, such as dog meat. Yet that

" victory " proved to be a defeat, since the major international organizations

then backed away from Korea for a decade.

 

And so much about South Korea has changed since then that most of what

humane activists think they know about winning in Korea is not only obsolete

but self-defeating. The 1988-1991 campaign experience came almost entirely

before the emergence of strong political opposition parties and the

evolution of genuine political democracy.

 

Addressing the government of South Korea as a monolith, as was done then,

has become inappropriate and ineffective, because there is no longer any one

authority who can utter an order which must be obeyed.

 

The social dynamics of Korea have changed as well. More than 40% of the

present South Korean population were 10 years old or younger in 1991, or

were not yet born. They are growing up in an evolving political culture

affording unprecedented opportunities to give animal protection a voice.

Special interest coalitions are just beginning to emerge. Women have just

begun to gain economic clout, and recognition as voters. Public protest,

long repressed, is becoming accepted--especially " one-man demonstrations, "

in which vigils are kept by individuals with display boards. As such

protests neither block traffic nor threaten to become a riot, they meet

little official hostility, and have been lauded by Korean mass media as

indicative of a diversifying political culture. They are made-to-order for

upstart causes. A Korean edition of the SHARK " Tiger " TV truck would be a

smash hit.

 

But campaigns that target Korea as a whole, or all Korean industries, or

otherwise smack of racism will be counterproductive.

 

Koreans must be shown what goes on in the Moran market and the smaller

markets like it, scattered around the country--and then must be empowered to

act. Like Americans who in recent years have voted repeatedly to abolish

leghold trapping, which is comparably defended by reference to culture and

tradition, Koreans themselves are likely to stop the cruelty of

dog-and-cat-eating once they see it.

 

" Progress in animal welfare must come from changes in popular attitudes, "

explains Littlefair. " A change in the law [alone] will not make Koreans less

inclined to eat dogs and cats. We need to undercut demand by exposing to

Koreans the conditions under which dog and cat meat is produced. The reason

politicians defend it, " Littlefair continues, " is that attacks on dog meat

have already been labelled as 'anti-Korean,' " while the international

campaigns have inexplicably almost totally ignored the treatment of cats,

who may suffer more than the dogs.

 

" There is no political advantage to be gained in opposing the trade, "

Littlefair adds--but that could change overnight, as a new generation of

political aspirants seeks issues of appeal to young voters and women, toward

overturning the oligarchy of Korean War veterans who have led South Korea

for almost as long as World War II veterans led the U.S.

 

ANIMAL PEOPLE believes that the public traffic in dog and cat meat in Korea

can rapidly be stopped, with intelligent strategic investment. If shown the

reality of it by fellow Koreans, speaking Korean, with clear allegiance to

Korea, we believe the average Korean will find the Moran market as appalling

as we did. Some will respond to the animal suffering. More will respond to

the filth.

 

Some will demand abolition; others, just reform. But either approach will

reduce the already declining appetite for dogs and cats.

 

If, as is commonly asserted, most Koreans do not really see a difference

between eating dogs and cats and eating any other kind of animal, an

effective anti-dog-and-cat-meat campaign could also boost the small but

growing Korean vegetarian movement.

 

 

 

No time to lose

 

It is essential to start now. Should the humane cause not be firmly and

irrevocably established in South Korea before the inevitable reunification

of North and South Korea, reunification will bring an erosion of progress,

with an influx of Marxist utilitarian attitudes toward animals, marching

south with northern immigrants. Before reunification occurs, humane values

must become so well accepted in South Korea that adopting them becomes a

part of achieving upward socio-economic mobility--which will encourage North

Koreans to learn kindness toward animals as rapidly as they learn to drive

cars and use computers.

 

Especially encouraging is that the necessary campaign resources appear to be

accessible within South Korea right now, if the essential investment is made

to develop them through direct mail and advertising, using any accessible

public medium.

 

Unlike most other Asian nations, South Korea already has an established

tradition of charitable giving. For example, 38% of South Koreans are

members of evangelical Protestant churches, typically supported by direct

donation--and 11% are Roman Catholics, who support animal protection more

generously per capita in the U.S., France, and Spain than members of any

other denomination. Further, South Korea today is arguably more affluent, as

a whole, than the U.S. was just 25 years ago, when the animal rights

movement became poised for economic and political takeoff. In addition,

South Korea has a growing culture of volunteerism, especially evident in

religious activity and amateur sports.

 

South Koreans are not cruel people, for the most part. This also must be

clearly understood. Publications, videos, and toys involving themes of

cruelty and violence seem to be less prominent there than in the U.S. and

Britain. However, as elsewhere in the developing and newly developed world,

the lack of humane legislation has long left decent people with no sense of

empowerment to respond.

 

Any cruelty is practiced against animals could historically--and

presently--be practiced without restraint.

 

Effective campaigning will use positive themes and reinforcement. It will

recognize that dog-and-cat-eating are customs which have relatively low

participation and visibility, especially among the younger half of the South

Korean population, and that even if boycotts of South Korean exports caught

on, which they so far have not, they would punish the least empowered yet

most sympathetic sectors of the society (younger workers, mostly female) for

the sins of the most empowered (older men). Boycotting tourism is equally

pointless, since tourism is not a major industry in Korea to begin with, and

Koreans, like anyone else, are more likely to be influenced through personal

contact than by distant and hostile strangers.

 

It is practically a cliché to note that South Korea, due to centuries of

invasions and exploitation by neighboring nations, has a national

inferiority complex. South Korean opinion-makers have accordingly learned to

resist external criticism.

 

Yet South Koreans are very quick to adapt to change. Few societies have ever

evolved as rapidly as South Korea has in the past 50 years, and especially

in the past 15. Economic, technological, and social change have swept South

Korea not by mandate, but through the power of advertising.

 

South Korea, like the U.S. and Europe, now has an ad-driven popular

culture--and much of what works here will work there.

 

For example, " A Dog Is For Life, " the motto of the British-based National

Canine Defence League, resonates well with the traditional Korean reverence

of age. It could be used in a comparison/contrast of how pet dogs--and

cats--make people happy throughout their lives, whereas live market cruelty

is all for mere transient gratification.

 

Other slogans come quickly to mind. The Korean belief that drinking boiled

cat pureé combats osteoporosis could be attacked by citing the recent

scientific discovery that cats purr with a resonance that helps the healing

of broken bones.

 

" The K in Korea is for Kind " could develop the notion that progressive

Koreans are kind to animals.

 

" This year we plan to set up an RSPCA Chinese language website in an effort

to spread our animal welfare message to a wider audience, " Littlefield says.

" An animal welfare website in Korean would be a logical next step. This

would expose the public to a range of topics, including the treatment of

farm animals, animal testing, hunting, etc., and would enable Koreans to see

dog and cat meat as aspects of a much broader international issue. At

present they feel they have been unfairly labelled pariahs. "

 

Any approach that actively enlists Koreans, in Korea, is likely to help. Any

approach which does not is likely to be wasted effort, if not actually

counterproductive.

 

 

 

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2001

 

Dog-and-cat-eating: the shame of Korea

 

SEOUL, South Korea--The animal faces of dog-and-cat-eating, met at the Moran

market just outside the capital city of Seoul, South Korea, are as pained

and haunting as any animal defender might imagine.

 

The silence of the dehydrated and despairing animals is an unexpected part

of the shock. Most of the dogs can bark. They just rarely do. Only scattered

purebred former pets and a puppy trying to gnaw the dangling end of a nylon

cord show hope that anything could be different. Stunned cats exhibit

bleeding wounds from apparent hammer blows to the forehead. Roosters thrust

their necks between the bars of their overcrowded cages and instead of

crowing, gasp for breath.

 

The squalor of the Moran market degenerates in four short blocks from

approximately the conditions of an abusive old-fashioned dog pound, at the

end of the market closest to the major cross-street, to the worst depths of

negligence displayed by certifiably deranged animal hoarders.

 

There among cats piled three or four deep, the living among the dead in

all-fours-up rigor mortis; beside a cat in extremis from heat, dehydration,

and probable disease but still trying to comfort her kittens; amid the

stench of rabbits being gutted after jumper-cable electrocution or a whack

on the head; chickens glued inside cages by their own heaped guano; fish

belly-up in buckets of virtual cess; flayed dog carcasses atop cramped cages

of live dogs; and the steam from pots of cats who may have been boiled

alive, ANIMAL PEOPLE publisher Kim Bartlett began to weep.

 

As she did, she caught a fleeting look of sympathy from one woman whose

appalling display she had photographed.

 

The photo [above] was among 72 shots Bartlett took on May 19, 2001 during a

two-hour visit to the Moran market with ANIMAL PEOPLE editor Merritt

Clifton, International Aid for Korean Animals founder Kyenan Kum, and North

Shore Animal League animal care specialist Tammy Kirkpatrick.

 

The photo revealed a portrait of shame. Partially hidden behind a pipe

supporting an awning that did not begin to conceal anything, or keep the sun

out, the woman endured the photo with closed eyes, bent head, hair falling

across over her face, and arms crossed defensively in front of her, as if

expecting a blow.

 

" Dog butchers are considered lower than prostitutes in Korean culture, "

explained Kyenan Kum. " A parent would not want his son or daughter to enter

this business. "

 

But, once trapped in it by birth or marriage, Kum continued, a person might

feel unable to escape. " Korea, " Kum said, " as a patriarchal society,

dictates that a woman should serve her husband, even if this means working

at a job that makes her ashamed. It is almost unfathomable to think that

this woman would dare consider switching sides and betraying her family

honor, " despite whatever feelings she might have for animals who may have

been kept as quasi-pets until old enough to sell for meat.

 

There were brazen, hostile, bewildered, curious, and indifferent faces among

the Moran market vendors, too.

 

Mostly, however, there were faces turned away, whenever the notorious

dog-and-at-market bully-boys tried to disrupt the two hours of photography

and looked toward bystanders for support. The ANIMAL PEOPLE/North Shore team

were both conspicuous and outnumbered among the native Koreans, hundreds to

one. Yet the dog-and-cat-meat thugs found no obvious friends among the

vegetable, hardware, and clothing vendors whose stands fill most of the

marketplace. Even people who may have come to buy dogs or cats for dinner

were reluctant to reveal themselves. Suspected would-be customers shuffled

past slowly, over and over, with eyes averted. Hardly anyone seemed to be

buying--at least not while they knew we were looking.

 

 

 

Red light district

 

The atomosphere was red-light district, not restaurant district. And so was

the location, an isolated commercial-and-dense residential area wedged

between the Pukkan River waterfront, the Moran railway yards, and an

industrial park.

 

Just a few subway stops from the skyscrapers on the far side of the river,

the Moran neighborhood has begun going upscale. But it is still almost the

end of the subway line, and still is not a place where successful people

settle, or come to shop. Restaurant buyers visit Moran from other parts of

Seoul, a city of 10 million people.

 

The Moran market is in fact the biggest dog-and-cat-meat marketplace in

South Korea, reputedly twice the size of the next largest, one of which is

in Seoul with another in Daegu, the second largest South Korean city.

 

Yet the average South Korean no more sees the Moran market or the other

places where dog and cat meat originate than the average American sees how

chickens, pigs, and cattle are kept and slaughtered--or sees much of the

neighborhoods where the desperate seek prostitutes, pornography, and illegal

drugs.

 

Such neighborhoods exist on the fringe of every large city.

 

Much of the economic activity transacted there is technically illegal--like

the South Korean sale of dog and cat meat, banned as " unsightly " under an

enenforced and perhaps unenforceable 1991 law.

 

Despite the illegality, however, contraband commerce persists, in the U.S.,

South Korea, and almost everywhere, because there are buyers, sellers, and a

cultural tolerance in most societies for " victimless " crime--vice--if it

stays inconspicuous. Crackdowns on vice typically follow exposure of the

involvement of actual innocent victims.

 

The dog-and-cat-meat traffic in South Korea is regarded as a vice.

Recognition of animals as innocent suffering victims lags behind awareness

that dog-and-cat-eating is offensive to much of the rest of the world.

 

Attitude Yet this is not because South Koreans are hostile toward animals.

The majority may be neutral. Most just have little reason to think about

animals, with whom they rarely interact in daily life. If questioned, South

Koreans typically express utilitarian views similar to those expressed by

older and middle-aged Americans in Yale University professor Stephen

Kellert's 1977 landmark study American Attitudes Toward and Knowledge of

Animals.

 

The oldest cohort among the 3,107 Americans whom Kellert interviewed were

part of the last American generation to be raised in a predominantly rural

culture. Their offspring, coming of age during the Great Depression and

World War II, still espoused the rural view of animals as source of food and

fiber, but were also much more likely to keep and care for pets. The

youngest generation Kellert surveyed were the " Baby Boomers, " inclined to

think of pets and wildlife first when asked generally about " animals, " and

correspondingly much more likely to be concerned about individual animals.

 

Two generations ago, following the repressive Japanese occupation of

1905-1945 and the Korean War, South Korea remained predominantly rural and

desperately poor. One generation ago, South Korea had begun the transition

to the present urbanized affluence, but with fresh memories of deprivation.

A " Baby Boom " began in South Korea just as American " Boomers " reached

adulthood--and is having a corresponding transitional effect on the culture.

 

Just 6% of South Koreans now live on farms-about the same percentage as live

on farms in the U.S.-and only 28% live in rural areas, compared with 27% of

Americans.

 

As the South Korean population is heavily concentrated in urban high-rise

apartments, where pet-keeping is impractical and often forbidden, relatively

few South Koreans even see live animals these days, other than fleeting

glimpses of birds. Nor are animals commonly encountered, as yet, on

television and in advertisements.

 

The 48 million South Korean people keep just two million dogs as house pets,

a ratio of one dog per 12 people; the U.S. ratio is one dog per five people.

South Koreans keep only 10,000 cats as house pets; Americans keep half again

as many pet cats as dogs.

 

However, the number of South Korean petkeepers has begun to soar, as rising

fortunes and smaller families, begun later in life, leave more room in

hearts and apartments for an animal. Not long ago one could not find

ready-made cat food in South Korea; now several companies sell imported cat

food and kitty litter, with an eye toward developing a customer base and,

perhaps, local manufacturing capacity.

 

Just a decade ago, pet supplies entered Japanese commerce the same way. The

number of pet-keeping households in Japan has since doubled, and is now

growing at 5% per year, according to the Pet Food Manufacturers Association.

 

Commercial cat food and kitty litter were introduced in the U.S. during the

late 1940s. Circa 1960, the number of individually owned pet dogs in the

U.S. for the first time exceeded the numbers in hunting packs and greyhound

racing stables, and then surged far beyond, as the population of dogs kept

for utilitarian purposes began a slow decline.

 

A similar balance point seems to have arrived in South Korea within the past

few years the number of pet dogs and cats may have passed the number raised

for butchery--or, if this has not happened yet, present trends suggest it

will soon.

 

To be sure, many animals pass from the status of " pet " to " meat. " Some South

Koreans acquire puppies or kittens, keep them until they grow large enough

to become problematic, and then sell or trade them to meat dealers. Pets are

also reputedly often stolen for meat. But proportionate to the total canine

and feline population, the numbers are likely less than the numbers of

American pets who were dumped at shelters and sold to laboratories less than

one generation ago, when the present petkeeping ethic was just starting to

be accepted.

 

 

 

Counting victims

 

During the 1986-1991 campaign for the existing anti-dog-and-cat-meat

legislation, the International Fund for Animal Welfare issued statistics

which suggested that the numbers of dogs and cats killed for human

consumption was rapidly rising--as might have been the case, since South

Korean per capita income was and is also rapidly rising, and South Koreans

of the age brackets most likely to consume dogs and cats were among the

first beneficiaries.

 

" Reports from IFAW anti-cruelty teams in South Korea indicate that each year

a staggering one million pets are cruelly slaughtered for the dinner table, "

IFAW founder Brian Davies wrote in April 1988. " That's right, one million! "

 

By early 1991, Davies claimed that in South Korea, " More than two million

dogs and thousands of cats are killed each year for human consumption. "

 

Despite the 1991 legislation, South Koreans as of 1996 were eating three

million dogs per year, according to London Daily Mail correspondent David

Derbyshire, who did not even try to guesstimate cat consumption.

 

" According to figures released by the Korean Food and Drug Administration, "

World Society for the Protection of Animals regional representative Trevor

Wheeler told ANIMAL PEOPLE in 1999, " there are 6,464 restaurants throughout

Korea which have dog meat dishes on their menus. They sell 25 tons of the

meat per day, and 8,428 tons per year. Another 93,600 tons of dog meat is

used each year to produce 'medicinal tonics.' "

 

Wheeler's figures would project an annual toll of about 2.6 million dogs, at

40 pounds per dog.

 

Yet the total South Korean dog population was officially just 2.6 million,

pets included.

 

And according to Kyenan Kum, " Statistical research shows that today only two

to three percent of Koreans eat dog meat more often than 12 times a year. "

 

ANIMAL PEOPLE hypothesized in 1999 that the estimate of three million dogs

eaten per year in South Korea might be plausible because of imports, noting

traffic from Laos and northern Thailand. In addition, claimed Kyenan Kum,

China sells frozen dog carcasses to South Korea.

 

One purpose of the ANIMAL PEOPLE visit to the Moran market was to assess the

various estimates, and find out whether South Korean dog and cat consumption

is really going up or down.

 

The 72 photographs taken by Kim Bartlett, plus 16 by Tammy Kirkpatrick,

documented approximate totals of 1,000 dogs and 100 cats offered for sale at

the Moran market on a busy late-spring Saturday, both alive and dead.

 

About a third of them would be sold that day, Kyenan Kum projected. This

would be typical of a market day--but sales fluctuate by season.

 

" On hot summer days, " she told us, " all the dogs will be sold, plus some. On

bok choi days, vendors can sell three times as many dogs as you saw. The

dogs don't even go into cages. Butchering goes on throughout the night. In

the winter, " however, " sales are very slow, " and truckloads of dogs may

remain caged for days or even weeks.

 

The Moran market is believed to sell about half the total volume of dogs and

cats sold for meat in the Seoul area. Seoul has about 20% of the total South

Korean population. Doing the math several different ways, trying to take all

the seasonal variables into account, ANIMAL PEOPLE estimated that although

there is considerable margin for error, the actual number of dogs sold for

meat is in the vicinity of 1.1 to 1.3 million, representing a decline in

consumption over the past five to 10 years of half to two-thirds.

 

A gradual decline would be consonant with an aging consumer base. A steep

decline would indicate loss of popularity among the consumers, as well.

Though still defended, the vice may no longer be quite as socially accepted

as it was a decade back. The advent of the prescription sexual stimulant

drug Viagra may also be involved, as the apparent drop in dog-eating

parallels a four-year slide in the wholesale price of elk antlers, from

about $14 per pound circa 1996 to as little as $2 per pound as of May 2001.

 

But cat-boiling to make a health tonic used by older women continues to

increase, according to Kyenan Kum, as the numbers of older women in South

Korea have increased. The Moran market data suggests the number of cats

killed per year may be circa 100,000.

 

 

 

Disease

 

The animal care conditions at the Moran market are so bad that it is easier

to imagine it as the source of an epidemic than as a pharmacy.

 

Although Korea is not known to have been ravaged in recent years by

epidemics attributed to the sale of live animals for human consumpion, the

possibility is omnipresent.

 

Throughout Asia, live markets are rapidly losing their customer base in

economic competition with modern convenience stores and supermarkets. Public

health officials make no secret of hoping to hurry the process along. After

unsanitary disposal of human waste, a problem largely remedied in the major

cities of the Pacific Rim, live markets rank second in the level of

likelihood they pose of spreading illness.

 

Ironically, live markets persist in much of the world because of a belief

that animals sold alive are less likely to be sick--but that belief evolved

before refrigeration.

 

Two days before we visited the Moran market, Associated Press reported that,

" Eleven youngsters were hospitalized, suffering from a parasitical worm,

after eating kebabs made of dog meat, " in the Pavlodar region of Kazakhstan.

 

That article drew scant notice, however, partly because on the same day Hong

Kong officials suspended the sale of live poultry due to a resurgence of a

rare strain of avian influenza, which can pass directly from birds to people

and killed six Hong Kong residents in 1997. The Hong Kong government killed

1.4 million domestic fowl in December 1997 and January 1998 in an attempt to

eradicate the avian flu, and killed as many more birds between May 17 and

June 17, 2001.

 

As ANIMAL PEOPLE went to press, the Hong Kong Agriculture, Fisheries, and

Conservation Department was attempting to force all live markets to close

for one day per month of intensive cleaning.

 

The Duck and Goose Traders Mutual Aid Society was fighting the move, while

Environment and Food secretary Lily Yam Kwan hinted that a proposed ban on

the sale of live birds for butchery might exempt pigeons.

 

The Hong Kong live markets each day sell about 100,000 chickens, 11,750

quail, 3,900 pigeons, 1,200 ducks and geese,

 

1,200 partridges, 1,100 pheasants, and 600 guinea fowl. Rabbits, reptiles,

and sea creatures of all kinds are also common live market fare in Hong

Kong; dogs and cats are not.

 

The Hong Kong live marketers argue that government attempts to encourage the

slaughter of animals before delivery for sale, coinciding with the return of

Hong Kong to mainland Chinese rule, amount to an attempt to transfer jobs

from Hong Kong to the adjoining parts of China where most of the animals are

raised.

 

China meanwhile has been battling hoof-and-mouth disease with little evident

success since 1999, and is now also fighting international suspicion that

the remains of animals sold to restaurants by live markets have been

responsible for spreading hoof-and-mouth to Britain and Mongolia.

 

The matter " is very sensitive, a secret totally controlled by the

government, " an unnamed Chinese official reportedly told Jasper Becker of

the South China Morning Post circa June 18. Becker linked concern about

hoof-and-mouth to the decline of Chinese pork exports from 230,000 metric

tons in 1996 to 50,000 metric tons in 2000. The steepest part of the decline

came after outbreaks of

hoof-and-mouth in Taiwan in 1998 were blamed on animals illegally imported

from China.

 

The possibility that British animal feed containing bone meal might have

been responsible for spreading bovine spongiform encephalopathy to Hong Kong

suggested that disease transmission might have been a two-way street. Also

on June 18, Hong Kong ministry of Agriculture, Conservation, and Fisheries

spokespersons confirmed that a 34-year-old woman is the first known Hong

Kong victim of new-variant Creutzfeld-Jakob Disease, a terminal degenerative

brain disease which is believed to have mutated from BSE.

 

The victim was probably infected while living in Britain for 12 of the past

17 years--but what became of about 64 metric tons of potentially

BSE-contaminated meat and bone meal shipped from Britain to Hong Kong

between 1988 and 2000 was--as of June 19--still a mystery. The probable use

of the material was in fattening animals for sale in live markets. Although

the disease-carrying prions would not be in the animals long enough to

infect them, they could find their way into body parts which are commonly

eaten.

 

" In summer, when dogs are selling quickly, " Kyenan Kum said of the South

Korean dog and cat markets, " illness isn't usually an issue. It is during

the winter, when sales are slow, and the dogs remain on sale for longer. If

a dog appears sickly, " she continued, " the dog will more likely be butchered

than be sold alive. But almost all dogs who spend more than a day or two at

the market will succumb to some disease, " she asserted, " because the dogs

have not been vaccinated and because of crowded conditions. "

 

No one seemed to care if the Moran market cats looked sick, perhaps from a

belief that boiling the cats will sterilize the remains.

 

The prions associated with BSE, however, are unaffected by boiling. Cats

were among the first animals other than hooved species and people known to

be vulnerable to a form of BSE. Britain sold potentially infected meat and

bone meal to 69 other nations between 1986 and 2000, the British Ministry of

Agriculture and Fisheries disclosed in January 2001. The biggest customers

were nations with active live markets, led by Indonesia, which bought 60,000

tons of the renderings, ostensibly as chicken feed. Cats and dogs could

equally well have consumed the material.

 

 

 

Legality vs. ban

 

Fronting for the dog meat and cat meat industries, while tossing a bone to

animal advocates, South Korean lawmaker and evangelical Christian minister

Kim Hong Shin in 1999 drafted a bill with 17 co-sponsors that would legalize

the dog meat trade--under regulation--and would also require cities of at

least 500,000 residents to open dog pounds. He asserted that the bill would

simultaneously address cultural, public health, and humane concerns.

 

Elected as a member of the Grand National Party, the strongest opponent of

the ruling coalition, Kim Hong Shin fell three co-sponsors short of being

able to introduce his bill into the National Assembly. He eventually

withdrew the bill, as KAPS and IAKA threatened to boycott this year's World

Cup soccer tournament, cohosted by Korea.

 

Most observers believe, however, that a similar bill will be introduced once

the World Cup is over, and that this one will have government backing.

 

According to the proponents of legalizing dog meat, the abuses that ANIMAL

PEOPLE documented at the Moran market occur because the sale of dog meat for

human consumption is not legal, and is therefore not officially supervised.

 

However, the sale of poultry and rabbits for human consumption is quite

legal. So far as ANIMAL PEOPLE could observe, that traffic isn't effectively

supervised either.

 

Despite the evident failure of existing regulation, however, a bill to bring

dogs specifically under the regulations as the price of legalizing dog meat

may win the endorsements of the World Society for Animal Protection and the

Royal SPCA, against the views of KAPS, IAKA, and probably Animals Asia

Foundation, Asian Animal Protection Network, and IFAW.

 

" It is WSPA's belief that the first step in the battle to overcome this

cruelty is to press for amendments to legislation, " Trevor Wheeler of WSPA

stated in the December 1998 edition of the WSPA publication Animals

International. " Although this would mean accepting the slaughter of dogs

[and cats] for food at first, they would at least be treated humanely.

Through humane education, we may then we able to show the Koreans how

unnecessary the consumption of companion animals is. "

 

The Royal SPCA position is similar, except that the RSPCA does not

differentiate among animal species, according to RSPCA Asia programs manager

Paul Littlefair.

 

" The position of the RSPCA, " Littlefair told ANIMAL PEOPLE, " is that we are

not going to tell people which animals they should eat. Our position is that

we exist to advocate for how all animals should be treated. If animals are

going to be eaten, our position is that they should be raised and

slaughtered humanely. "

 

If South Korean officials insist that dogs and cats can be slaughtered

humanely in a manner which leaves the remains fit for human consumption,

Littlefield argues, the onus is then on those officials to explain how.

Current internationally accepted guidelines for humane animal killing, such

as the 1993 Report of the American Veterinary Association Panel on

Euthanasia, do not list an acceptable method for killing dogs and cats which

would be practicable in a commercial setting and would not contaminate the

meat with drugs potentially injurious to human health.

 

Responds Kyenan Kum, " Both my sister Sunnan and I are strongly opposed to

the idea of legalizing dog meat. We believe that dog-eating would increase

horrendously, and that dog meat would become more popular if legal. Many

more millions of dogs would be killed and eaten every year, and this would

be a major setback in trying to establish dogs as companion animals. "

 

KAPS, IAKA, the Animals Asia Foundation, and IFAW, the major funder of all

of them, argue that establishing a special status for dogs, cats, and other

companion animals is an essential prerequisite for building an ethic of

kindness throughout Asia.

 

Their belief takes as example the growth of the mainstream British and

American humane movements from an initial preoccupation with horses and dogs

to later advocating for cats, and--to a lesser extent--other animals.

 

Thus the major anti-dog meat activity of the Animals Asia Foundation, for

example, is the " Dr. Dog " pet therapy program underway for a decade in Hong

Kong and now emulated in Taiwan and the Philippines. The handlers of the 200

dogs participating in " Dr. Dog " rarely if ever mention dog-eating during

their visits to schools, orphanages, and convalescent homes. Rather, they

hope that people who develop a fondness for companion dogs will not wish to

eat a dog--although, in South Korea, the Kum sisters say it is not uncommon

for people to raise a dog for the table right alongside a companion dog.

 

The Animals Asia Foundation also recently donated a trained drug-sniffing

dog to the South Korean customs inspection staff at the Kimpo airport, near

Seoul.

 

" Long ago, Kyenan and I spoke about introducing 'Dr. Dog' to South Korea, "

recalls Animals Asia Foundation founder Jill Robinson. " While at the time

it was deemed inappropriate, I wonder if we are near the time to start. "

 

Both the regulatory approach and the notion of giving dogs special status

may contribute to the decline of dog-eating in South Korea, with spinoff

benefits for cats, as well, whose suffering has thus far been inexplicably

overlooked by most campaigners. The major exception is the Korean Animal

Protection Society, whose 2001 Cat Expo ANIMAL PEOPLE attended in Seoul.

Placards, petitions, and handouts distributed on behalf of cats by about two

dozen volunteers, mostly young women, drew a moderate but wholly positive

response from a city park crowd consisting mainly of men and boys who were

there to participate in a corporate track meet.

 

There is also opportunity for other approaches, which might appeal to

different sectors of the South Korean public. A broadly sweeping animal

rights perspective might appeal to youth. And, as Kyenan Kum points out,

South Korea was largely a nation of vegetarian Buddhists prior to the rise

of the Yi dynasty in 1392.

 

About 47% of all South Koreans are still Mahayana Buddhists, who eat meat

but could be reminded that vegetarianism is actually the oldest and purest

Buddhist tradition.

 

 

 

Getting involved

 

" It is absolutely essential that we separate the dog meat issue from

anti-Korean sentiment, " emphasizes Littlefair. " This is why calls for a

boycott have been so counterproductive. "

 

Littlefair believes South Koreans will better accept opposition to dog and

cat eating once they understand it as part of a general ethic of kindness

toward animals--not just as bigotry directed at them.

 

" The dog/cat meat trade is only one of several issues that I'm working on in

Korea, " Littlefair says. " We are also collaborating with groups protesting

against the laws currently being drafted on genetically modified animals,

supporting a campaign which will expose inhumane livestock slaughter in

Korea, and maintaining links with campaigns to protect wildlife and oppose

the use of animal parts in traditional Chinese medicine. The onus is on the

international organisations to proactively support the growing humane

movement in Korea, " Littlefair continues. " The RSPCA is committed long-term

to doing that. "

 

Other organizations are beginning to get involved in the dog-and-cat-eating

issue, mostly amplifying the work of the Kum sisters. For instance, the

National Canine Defence League, of Britain, is underwriting the reproduction

of Korean translations of NCDL brochures about neutering. A May 20 Fox TV

news broadcast featured the sale of dog meat and " cat juice " in the

Washington D.C. area by a Korean importer, revealed through a sting arranged

with the help of Kyenan Kum and Friends of Animals representative Bill

Dollinger. In Defense of Animals recently did a mass mailing about Korean

dog-and-cat-eating, based on information supplied by the Kum sisters.

 

" No doubt, in my 35 years of activism, the Korean dog and cat slaughter

subject is perhaps the most ghastly animal cruelty I have encountered, "

states Ark Trust founder Gretchen Wyler. " We were proud to present Mark

Jordan of the International Television Network with a Genesis Award this

year " for an expose of the Moran market, " and the audience appreciated

Kyenan Kum accompanying him to the podium. "

 

So far, though, only IFAW, WSPA, the RSPCA, World Animal Net, the North

Shore Animal League, and ANIMAL PEOPLE have actually had personnel in South

Korea to form their own impressions. Only IFAW has a long record of actively

assisting campaigns within South Korea.

 

Showing Animals Respect and Kindness founder Steve Hindi has deployed the

SHARK Tiger video display truck on behalf of South Korean dogs and cats

several times in the Los Angeles area. Aware of the favorable attention

accorded to " one-man demonstrations " within South Korea, Hindi would like to

build a Tiger to prowl the streets of Seoul and Daigu--but it would cost

$150,000 that SHARK does not have.

 

Two leading South Korean corporations, Hyundai and Samsung, make some of the

best equipment for such a project. But neither, so far, has assisted

anti-dog-and-cat-eating activism. Samsung has assisted a guide dog program,

lending light support, at least, to the concept of elevating the status of

dogs. Hyundai, formerly called Datsun, reputedly changed names long ago to

avoid any association, even subliminal, with the dog-eating controversy.

 

Worse, senior Hyundai personnel have been implicated in a series of

dog-eating scandals involving Korean restaurants in the vicinity of a

Hyundai assembly plant near Chennai, India.

 

Reported Shiranee Pereira of the Chennai branch of People for Animals, of

the latest episode, " On May 20, about 40 of us raided two Korean

restaurants. Three of us first went and ordered dog meat.

 

As soon as the restaurant staff said they would serve it, we stormed in.

Every refrigerator and freezer was opened, but we could not make out what

was what meat. Anyway, we got them groveling at our feet and left them

shaken. "

 

Although PfA has not yet campaigned much outside of India, Pereira and PFA

founder Maneka Gandhi told ANIMAL PEOPLE that they would welcome

opportunities to assist their Korean counterparts.

 

" This is an issue I could get involved in, " Mrs. Gandhi affirmed. The last

time she said that about an overseas issue, Pepsi Cola quit advertising at

bullfights.

 

Meanwhile, the major opportunities for outside involvement continue to come

through IAKA, and involve work outside South Korea--like the bok choi day

demonstrations held in major cities around the world each summer.

 

" If you would like to organize a demonstration, " Kyenan Kum tells anyone

interested, " please contact me and I will provide materials, support, and

contacts if I can. Demonstrations can be held in front of Korean embassies

and consulates, Korean-owned corporations, or Korean car dealerships. "

 

Other groups KAPS and IAKA are not the only South Korean animal protection

organizations. Also involved in sheltering is the Korean Animal Rescue and

Management Association, founded in 1994.

 

" KARMA's main focus is on wildlife rescue and rehabilitation, which

encourages more support from the government and media, and more funding,

than dog and cat work, " says Jill Robinson of the Animals Asia Foundation.

" KARMA does, however, have a facility which houses about 90 dogs and 30

cats, 30% of whom they say they rehome. They also have a classroom at their

rescue center where 120 students at a time learn that dogs are our friends,

not food. "

 

KARMA is also believed to be likely to endorse legalizing the sale of dog

meat as the price of better animal welfare regulation.

 

Other South Korean animal protection organizations include Voice for Animals

[e-mail , web ]; the Korea Animal League; Animal Freedom Korea; the Korean

Alliance to Prevent Cruelty to Animals; and the Korean Vegetarian World

Union .

 

Most of the others, however, appear to be campus-based, and preoccupied with

animal use in laboratories, which are located for the most part on

university campuses.

 

In South Korea, explains Voice for Animals founder Changkil Park, " There

does not exist any law which deals with animals used in research or as

scientific or commercial subjects. There has been grave concern about the

unhindered development of biotechnology here, and many prominent civic

groups have expressed concern that biotechnological development might

violate human rights. Therefore, the Ministry of Science and Technology set

up a temporary Korea Bioethics Advisory Commission in November 2000,

consisting of 20 experts in human rights, ethics, science, and religion. We

 

have tried to participate in the discussions, " but animal suffering has been

addressed so far only with " one symbolic and ineffective clause, " Changkil

Park says, " about giving consideration to the animals used in biotechnology

and scientific research.

 

Finally, on May 22, the animal protection groups staged a joint protest at a

Korean Bioethics Commission hearing. Five of the 35 people who were allowed

to speak from the floor spoke on behalf of animals.

 

" We caused the scientists to talk about animals. This might have been quite

new to them, " said Changkil Park.

 

" Since the public hearing, " he added, " we have been staging street protests

against genetircally modified animals. Our goal is to get the Korean

Bioethics Commission to include animal welfare in their legislative

recommendations. "

 

The allied animal protection groups protested for four consecutive days in

downtown Seoul at the beginning of June 2001.

 

" We attracted many passers-by, " Changkil Park said. " Their reactions to the

horrible pictures of suffering animals were not any different from those of

animal protection activists. We gained about

 

3,000 signatures on petitions. We will continue our street campaigning every

weekend, " Changkil Park pledged, admitting " We didn't expect this level of

interest. "

 

 

 

New hope

 

Optimism is new among Korean animal defenders.

 

" Sadly, " said Kyenan Kum a few days before the anti-biotech protests began,

" even young people who are interested in animals have a difficult time

involving themselves in animal welfare because their parents forbid them

from entering such an unworthy, unsuitable profession or hobby. "

 

Kyenan Kum, 54, and Sunnan Kum, 57, persevered, but at a high personal cost.

Kyenan, an artist, has not produced art work since 1988, when she became an

IFAW representative.

 

While Kyenan has rallied world attention to the plight of South Korean

animals, Sunnan turned her home into the first KAPS shelter, moving into an

appartment two blocks away so that the animals could have more space. This

property is now the KAPS shelter for cats, ducks, rabbits, raccoon dogs, and

one lone monkey. The monkey would be happier, and welcome, at the Primarily

Primates sanctuary near San Antonio, Texas, but because he is of an

endangered variety, the South Korean government will not give him an exit

visa.

 

Next, with IFAW help, Sunnan leased the upper two floors of the building

where she and her husband operate a small pharmacy, and turned that space

into the KAPS office, neutering clinic, quarantine, and dog kennels.

 

Eventually the need for a safe place to use in rehabilitating injured wild

birds caused Sunnan to turn much of her apartment into shelter space, as

well.

 

Sunnan's daughter Sueyoun Cho, 24, a professional video animator, has been

involved in KAPS her whole life.

 

" It's not easy, " Sueyoun Cho told ANIMAL PEOPLE. " Nearly once a day I hear,

'Let's have a dog,' 'Get ten dogs for this party,' 'Cats are good for

healing bones,' etc. Sometimes it comes from mass media, sometimes from

colleagues who want to harass me, and sometimes from strangers. Some-times I

wonder if I am hearing properly. Sometimes I mishear street vendors who sell

produce from vans on the street, and mistake gaeran, or 'egg,' for gae,

meaning dog. "

 

Choi Hui-bok, 23, of Pusan, was less able to bear the stress of being

different in her concern for animals. She tried repeatedly to dissuade her

husband Chung Hae-soo from eating dog meat. When he persisted, she hanged

herself on April 11, 1995, in approximately the same way that butchers hang

dogs.

 

" I worked as an English teacher in Korea for almost three years, " former

KAPS volunteer Michelle McNair wrote to ANIMAL PEOPLE, responding to

Internet distribution of our preliminary findings. " I went to Korea with an

open mind, ready to experience another culture and embrace its differences,

but instead I found a country rife with corruption and denial, and quite

comfortable with committing hideous atrocities toward animals. It was too

much for me. " McNair left Korea in April 2001.

 

As she left, Korean/American video producer Danny Seo, 24, visited South

Korea on business, as a guest of Samsung. Sam-sung paid Seo $100,000 for his

services. Seo immediately donated $20,000 of it to KAPS, as a third of the

cost of a rural sanctuary site, halfway between Seoul and Daegu. The balance

must be raised and paid by October.

 

Having founded the environmental action group Earth 2000 in 1989, at age 12,

which peaked at 26,000 members, Seo appreciates the difficulty of pioneering

a cause and building an organization.

 

But Seo's gift, per se, was not what most harbinged a big change in how

Koreans view animals. The change was in the extensive and overwhelmingly

favorable attention his donation got in the rather conservative Korea

Times. --Merritt Clifton

 

[iAKA, which receives donations on behalf of KAPS, may be reached at P.O.

Box 20600, Oakland, CA 94620; 510-271-6795; fax 510-451-0643; e-mail ; web

..]

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