Guest guest Posted February 6, 2002 Report Share Posted February 6, 2002 fwd from Animal Lib NSW - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - JEAN-CLAUDE VAN DAMME URGES SOUTH KOREAN PRESIDENT TO STOP CRUEL DOG AND CA T KILLINGS Action Star Joins International Campaign to Coincide With World Cup For Immediate Release: January 24, 2002 Los Angeles - The " muscles from Brussels " has picked a new fight -- this ti me with Asian lawmakers -- because he is fed up with Korea's appetite for c ats and dogs. Jean-Claude Van Damme is asking Korean officials to prohibit the beating, hanging, burning, electrocution, and boiling alive of dogs and cats before they are slaughtered and eaten and has sent South Korean Presi dent Kim Dae-jung a petition organized by American-based animal rights grou p PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals). All eyes are on Korea as the World Cup draws near. Although South Korean law technically prohibits such cruelty, these statute s are mere facades with absolutely no enforcement. Before dogs are eaten, t hey are often strung up and beaten, and the stress, pain, and fear resultin g from this torture causes an adrenaline flow that flesh-peddlers claim inc reases male virility. Then the dogs are burned about their bodies, purporte dly to improve the flavor of the meat. Cats are often tossed alive into boi ling water to extract a " juice " for use in tonics. " The cries of tortured animals will drown out the cheers at the World Cup, " says PETA investigator Cem Akin. Joseph S. Blatter, the president of FIFA (F=E9d=E9ration Internationale de Football Association), the international organization coordinating the 2002 World Cup cohosted by South Korea, has made an appeal to the Korean govern ment to take " immediate and decisive measures to put an end to this cruelty .. " http://www.peta.com/news/NewsItem.asp?id=623 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - KABUL'S BRAVE OLD LION DIES PEACEFULLY AT ZOO BELOVED BEAST: Marjan the lion survived 23 years of war. - Reuters January 27, 2002 =A0-- KABUL, Afghanistan - Marjan the lion, who reigned re gally at the Kabul Zoo during 23 years of war and cruelty, knew only a few weeks of peace and kindness before being found dead in his cage yesterday m orning. He lost an eye to a grenade and lost weight in the deprivation of the war y ears, but never lost his aura of dignity. His death tore at people for whom he had come to symbolize Afghanistan's sufferings and aspirations. " I consider myself a pretty rough guy . . . but I cried, " said John Walsh, who helps lead an international drive to bring aid to the wrecked zoo's rem aining animals. Marjan, whose name refers to a precious stone beloved by Afghans, was 25 to 29 years old, Walsh said. The cause of death apparently was kidney and liv er failure connected with old age. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - BOYFRIEND CUT OFF PUPPY'S HEAD (Thu 31/1) Daily Telegraph:(Australia) When Christopher Bunning got angry at his girlfriend he took it out on her three-day old puppy. An enraged Bunning dragged the mixed breed puppy from its cardboard box filled with blankets, squeezed it until it cried and then used a kitchen knife to cut off its head. Bunning, 28, unemployed, who now lives in Ulladulla, threw the body at his distressed girlfriend Heather Bell before she ran to a neighbour's house in Kingswood screaming for help. Bunning pleaded guilty yesterday in Penrith Local Court to a charge of comm itting an act of aggravated cruelty upon an animal. For his alcohol-fuelled crime on October 22 last year, Bunning was placed o n an 18-month good behaviour bond and sent to court-ordered anger management counselling. Magistrate Paula Russell said Bunning's crime was a " disturbing series of facts " and it was an inability to control his anger that led him to behave the way he did. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10 MILLION ANIMALS WERE SLAUGHTERED IN FOOT AND MOUTH CULL By Robert Uhlig Farming Correspondent Telegraph (UK) (Filed: 23/01/2002) THE number of animals slaughtered in the foot and mouth outbreak could be a s high as 10 million - more than twice as high as official Government figur es. On the day that Britain was officially declared free of the disease by the world animal health organisation, so opening the way for exports to resume, the Meat and Livestock Commission said that more than six million beasts h ad not been included in the official slaughter toll. The Government said that 4,068,000 animals were culled between the first ca se on Feb 20 and the 2,030th and last case detected on Sept 30. But the com mission says that the true total is 10,849,000. The official figures do not include two million animals slaughtered for wel fare reasons such as dwindling feed and space. The National Farmers' Union included these in its estimates. But according to Jane Connor, economic forecaster at the Meat and Livestock Commission, many more animals were overlooked because they were either kil led with their mothers - and counted as only one animal - or because they w ere killed after foot and mouth had closed the market for them, in which ca se they were not counted at all. " We will never know exactly how many were culled but it was many more than the official figure, " Mrs Connor said. According to her calculations, at least 1.2 lambs " at foot " were killed wit h each breeding sheep - amounting to four million lambs slaughtered but not counted. And the official toll of 595,000 cattle did not include 100,000 calves and 50,000 calves close to birth that were killed with them, the commission sai d. About 500,000 lambs were killed in the light lamb disposal plan because they were considered unsellable. Last night, the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs conf irmed the commission's figures as accurate but concentrated on the resumpti on of exports. Lord Whitty, the food and farming minister, said: " This is a very encouragi ng step but we must not lower our guard; there is a great deal of work stil l to do. " Exports had resumed within minutes of the International Epizootic Office in Paris giving its approval, which had not been expected until May. Ben Gill, president of the NFU, said: " It's great news that this has happen ed so quickly and is a testament to everyone who has worked hard to achieve this, including Government, vets and scientists. " http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/01/23/nfarm123. xml & sSheet=/news/2002/01/23/ixhome.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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