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dog eating in Korea

 

This article is from thestar.com.my

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2002/4/8/features/dogmeat & sec=fe\

atures

 

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Monday, April 8, 2002

What’s hounding South Korea

By DAMIEN MCELROY

 

AN INTERNATIONAL campaign led by Brigitte Bardot to use this year’s football

World Cup to stop the eating of dogs in South Korea has provoked outrage in that

country.

 

Bardot, the French actress turned animal rights activist, has led condemnation

of Korean dog-eating, calling it “barbaric’’. Sepp Blatter, the head of

football’s governing body, Fifa, which fears that the row could harm its

showpiece competition, entered the fray when he urged South Korea to be

sensitive to foreign feelings.

 

 

 

Keith Cooper, Fifa’s director of communications, said Blatter had only raised

the matter after the organisation received thousands of calls and letters

condemning the treatment of dogs in South Korea. “South Korea’s subsequent

response is entirely their own business,’’ he said.

 

Kim Hong-shin, an opposition parliamentarian, said: “Foreign criticism of dog

meat reflects lack of understanding of our nation’s ancient culture. It is

blasphemy, not criticism.’’

 

Support, not surprisingly, was strongest among patrons of the 6,000 restaurants

that thrive on a mixture of dog stews, soups and satays washed down with

alcoholic drinks flavoured with pulverised cat.

 

The stench and the yelps of caged dogs may be stomach churning, but Lee Wha-jin

happily slaps down dishes of dog-meat stew on the white plastic tabletops of his

restaurant in the notorious Moran night market in Seoul.

 

 

 

At the rear of shop after shop, eight-month-old puppies – considered to be the

prime age for eating – are packed into tiny cages welded together in rows three

or four high. Customers choose which of the live animals they want. The dog is

then taken to the back of the shop where a flimsy curtain or a swinging door

obscures the sight, but not the sound, of a hideous death.

 

The sale and consumption of dog meat, third behind beef and pork in South Korea,

is technically illegal but the authorities turn a blind eye to an industry that

aficionados claim has been a part of Korean culture for more than 3,000 years.

 

To many South Koreans, the criticisms of outsiders smack of racism. “We have

built our food culture through thousands of years,’’ said Kim, a member of

parliament for the opposition Grand National Party. “Criticising us as

‘barbarians’ for our food culture is tantamount to criticising our culture

itself.’’

 

A pro-dog meat lobby group accused “self-righteous’’ Europeans of hypocrisy in

singling out dog-eating for opprobrium. “We in (South) Korea do not understand

the snail-eating, horse meat-eating Westerners,’’ said the group in a statement.

“None the less, we neither criticise those who enjoy such an unusual diet nor do

we demand that they stop eating it.’’

 

When the World Cup opens in South Korea on May 31, foreign football fans who

find themselves in Moran and other parts of Seoul will be offered a variety of

dog dishes, including poshintang, the nation’s favourite soup (which literally

translates as “body preservation stew’’), soo yuck (dog slices) and jin-guk (dog

casserole).

 

 

 

A pound of dog meat can cost up to £3 (RM16) in Seoul, making it one of the most

expensive foods on the local market.

 

Before arriving in the grim array of cages behind restaurants, most dogs have

had to endure the misery of a South Korean canine farm hidden in the hills of

the countryside. It is not unusual for puppies to grow up 10 to a cage, covered

in sores and lice. It is estimated that more than 50,000 dogs – mostly crosses

of the Korean Huang-ju breed but increasingly pedigrees – are killed for

commercial purposes each year.

 

The dogs’ deaths are as inhumane as their rearing. The majority are beaten to

death, as it is thought to stimulate the production of adrenaline that Korean

men believe will bolster their virility. Once dead, or nearly dead, the dogs are

dropped into boiling water, skinned and hung by the jaw from a meat hook. Many

cooks then use a blow torch to glaze the carcass.

 

South Korean dog eaters, like their counterparts in China and Vietnam, where the

dishes are also extremely popular, believe that the meat contains medicinal

properties.

 

A curb on restaurants serving dog meat, such as the one that preceded the 1988

Seoul Olympic Games, would bring forth protests from many Koreans against a

“national capitulation’’. Lee said: “As long as dog meat makes people healthy,

the government should not try to ban it to pacify Westerners.’’

 

Bardot has threatened to distribute pictures showing horrific treatment of dogs

bred for food during the World Cup. Outraged South Koreans have responded with

thousands of abusive telephone and e-mail messages to her foundation and by

bombarding French companies in Seoul with angry calls. – © Telegraph Group Ltd,

London

 

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