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Korean Dogs and Cats on World Animal Day

 

Oct. 1, 2002

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Contact:

 

International Aid for Korean Animals/Korea Animal

Protection Society

510-271-6795 (Phone)

510-451-0643 (Fax)

iaka

 

WORLD ANIMAL DAY JUST ANOTHER DEADLY DAY FOR DOGS,

CATS TORTURED, KILLED IN KOREA

 

More than 2 million dogs brutally beaten, hanged,

electrocuted to death every year; cats thrown

screaming into cauldrons of boiling water suffer slow,

agonizing death

 

OAKLAND, Calif. – October 4 has been designated World

Animal Day, because it’s the feast day of the Patron

Saint of all animals – Saint Francis of Assisi. St.

Francis, born in 1182, in Assisi, Italy, loved all

God's creatures and called animals his brothers and

sisters. This love and respect is celebrated on his

Feast Day, and World Animal Day is intended to

commemorate that, and call attention to the plight of

animals all over the world.

 

Different countries and cities honor World Animal Day

in different ways. In Rome, stray dogs are temporarily

spared from the city's dogcatchers and offered free

bones from the meat shop. In Beijing, more than 100

volunteer animal protectors are organizing events to

encourage people to adopt dogs and cats. In Australia,

World Animal Day has been set aside to recognize the

important role that pets play in people’s everyday

lives.

 

But in Korea, World Animal Day will pass just like any

other dreadful day for the thousands of dogs and cats

that will be tortured and slaughtered for food – all

because of mythical “health” claims made by the

dog-meat industry. Against all scientific evidence,

many Koreans continue to believe that dog-meat stew

(boshintang) enhances male sexual potency and that cat

juice (goyangi soju) alleviates rheumatoid arthritis

and neuralgia.

 

To achieve these nonexistent health claims, dog and

butchers go to extraordinarily cruel lengths. Raised

in rural farms or urban backyards, dogs spend their

entire lives in cramped wire cages, where they suffer

from dehydration and hunger, exposure, filthy

conditions, and abuse. Then they are tortured to death

– by hanging, being bludgeoned with iron pipes or

hammers, or getting electrocuted. A blowtorch then is

used to burn off the dog’s hair and brown the skin,

sometimes when the dog is still alive.

 

Dog butchers believe these violent methods of killing

tenderize the flesh and improve its aphrodisiacal

quality by stimulating the release of adrenaline in

the tissues. The more the dog suffers, the more

flavorful and beneficial the meat is thought to be.

Similarly horrendous methods are used to kill cats.

Many feral cats are trapped in wire cages, thrown into

sacks, and smashed repeatedly on the ground until they

die. Domesticated cats are often dropped, alive, into

a cauldron of boiling water and slowly boiled to

death.

 

Dog-meat stew is not a thousand-year-old Korean

tradition, as dog-meat dealers claim. The sudden

commercial trade of dogs for consumption began in

1980, when a boom in the Korean economy made the

once-scarce “livestock” meats suddenly affordable. At

the time, the dog-meat trade consisted of only a

handful of dealers, who, fearing loss of business,

quickly marketed the myth that dog-meat stew is a

traditional “cure-all” health food.

 

International Aid for Korean Animals is a registered

501 © (3) charity in the U.S. that raises

international funds for Korean Animal Protection

Society. As sister organizations (literally – the two

charities are run by sisters Kyenan Kum (IAKA) and

Sunnan Kum (KAPS), IAKA raises funds and promotes

awareness within the international community, while

KAPS provides animal rescue and welfare services and

lobbies for legislation to end the torturing,

slaughter, and consumption of dogs and cats in Korea.

They are the only two groups that focus exclusively on

the plight of companion animals in Korea, and neither

receives any support from the Korean government.

 

KAPS conducts educational drives urging Koreans to

have compassion for and learn how to properly care for

animals; works to advance legislation that respects

the well-being of animals; engages in community

outreach efforts that teach children a humane ethos

through ongoing humane education programs; and,

through the shelter, provides unwanted, abused

companion animals with a safe, caring environment.

IAKA has mounted an international campaign to pressure

the Korean government to enforce current animal

protection laws, and to enact and enforce stronger

legislation, which would outlaw the cruelty and

consumption of dogs and cats in Korea.

 

To learn more about the plight of Korean animals,

please contact IAKA founder Kyenan Kum, at

510-271-6795 (phone), 510-451-0643 (fax), or

iaka , or visit our website

www.koreananimals.org

 

Kyenan Kum

International Aid for Korean Animals

Korea Animal Protection Society

P.O. Box 20600, Oakland, 94620-0600, USA

www.koreananimals.org

iaka

(Tel.) 510-271-6795

(Fax) 510-451-0643

 

 

 

 

New DSL Internet Access from SBC &

http://sbc.

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