Guest guest Posted May 6, 2005 Report Share Posted May 6, 2005 > Hey everyone, there is a fundraiser on May 7th in Berkeley to benefit this > group...They are amazing--I hope you can join me! > > aliciarobb > Front page story in San Francisco Chronicle, Monday 25/4/05 > > Dear Friends of Animals Asia, > > Exciting news! Here is a front page story in the Monday, April 25, San > Francisco Chronicle headed, " Freeing China's caged bile bears Animal > activists aim to curtail trade in traditional remedy. " > > The newspaper has also printed images, such as the one of a bear that > arrived at our Rescue Centre in January 2005 - stuffed into a metal cage, > the size of her body, which you can view on line at: > http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article? f=/c/a/2005/04/25/MNGFECEIVO1.DTL & o=0 > OR http://tinyurl.com/7e9ld > > Best wishes, > Annie > Annie Mather > Executive Director, Head of Media > Animals Asia Foundation > Hong Kong > > ANIMALS ASIA HAS A BRAND NEW WEBSITE! > Find out more about the " China Bear Rescue " and " Friends....or Food? " > http://www.animalsasia.org > > > http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi? file=/c/a/2005/04/25/BEARBILE.TMP > > Freeing China's caged bile bears > Animal activists aim to curtail trade in traditional remedy > > Kathleen E. McLaughlin, Chronicle Foreign Service > > Monday, April 25, 2005 > > Chengdu, China -- Jill Robinson's life was forever changed when she stole > away from her tour group on a Chinese bear bile farm and descended a > flight of stairs to a dark basement, where she saw the dim outlines of > cages. > > " I actually didn't understand what I was seeing at first, " Robinson says. > " Then it made me sick to my stomach. " > > Dozens of bears, kept alive only for their bile, were trapped in cages so > small they couldn't move, their bellies spiked with crude, dirty, > often-infected devices to allow the farmers to " milk " their bile twice a > day and sell the fluid secreted by the liver as medicine. > > Suddenly, one of the bears reached a paw out of its cage. Unaware that > moon bears, an endangered Asian black bear species named for the yellow > crescent on its chest, are among the most aggressive of bears, Robinson > spontaneously grabbed the animal's paw and held it. She marvels that she > still has her arm. > > " In years later, it has shaken me and made me really believe there was a > message there, " she says. > > Now the soft-spoken Briton, who went on to found Animals Asia Foundation, > based in Hong Kong, is pressing the Chinese government to ban bear farming > outright before the 2008 Olympics in Beijing and close down the farms > where, according to the World Society for the Protection of Animals, 7,000 > caged bears are being milked for their bile. > > It is not an easy battle to win. Bear bile has been used in Chinese > medicine for centuries to treat a variety of ailments, from inflammation > and heart disease to impotence, Parkinson's disease and liver ailments. > > Still, Robinson has had some success in her crusade to save the captive > bears. > > A Moon Bear Rescue center she started in Chengdu, Sichuan province, has > grown steadily, particularly since the foundation signed an agreement with > local government officials to help shut down the worst of China's bear > farms. So far, she has saved 185 bears. > > The animals arrive at the 25-acre refuge, after being purchased from > farmers for a price Robinson will not disclose, in crude devices such as > " crush cages " with brackets used to force the bear's body down so it > cannot move while its bile is being extracted. Full metal jackets, > encasing a bear's entire torso, prevent it from ripping out the painful > tube in its gall bladder, the organ in which bile from the liver is > stored. > > The rescued bears carry their own peculiar scars. Truncated paws, where > farmers have cut off entire toes rather than declawing the bears. Missing > and broken teeth from chewing on the metal bars of their cages. Patchy > hair from malnutrition. Head wounds from " cage rage " -- repeatedly banging > their heads on the metal bars of their tiny cells. > > Veterinary surgeon Dr. Kati Loeffler tries to save the damaged bears. In > one recent surgery, she operated on a bear named Minnie who carried a > crude catheter wired into place, buried under two pounds of scar tissue. > > " This can never be a humane industry, " Robinson says. > > The central government did not respond to requests for comment, but > recently Beijing has allowed state-run media to carry a number of > high-profile television and newspaper reports exposing cruel practices on > the farms, an indication that forces in Beijing are beginning to lean > against the practice. > > In February, Vietnam signed an agreement with the society to phase out its > bile farms, where an estimated 3,000 bears are held, a move that could put > pressure on China and Korea to close bear farms on their soil. > > Meanwhile, however, the steady stream of bile from farms is creating a > burgeoning market for the product, not only in Asia but around the world, > experts say. > > A 2000 report by the society found bear gall bladders and bear bile > medicines for sale in several U.S. cities, including in San Francisco's > Chinatown, even though sale of the product is illegal in California. > > The farms now produce an estimated 141,000 ounces of bear bile each year, > outstripping even the growing consumer demand. In response, drug companies > have started using excess bile in alternative products like shampoo, wine > and health teas. > > " We've reached the state now where we are incredibly frustrated with the > inaction, " Robinson says. " We are appealing, just begging the government > to do something about this. " > > The farms have few outspoken advocates, but among them is Dr. Fan Zhiyong, > head the fauna division of China's office of the Convention on > International Trade in Endangered Species, better known as CITES. Last > year, Fan called for new rules to allow China to export bear-bile > products. > > " China has a large market demand for bear bile, " Fan wrote in a widely > distributed paper in 2003. " If it were not satisfied with bile powder from > bear farms, this demand would attract poachers to kill wild bears, which > would really endanger the survival of bears in China, and even of bears in > other countries. " > > Indeed, China's bear farms sprang up after China outlawed the killing of > native bears -- all listed as endangered species -- in the 1980s. > > However, bear farm opponents argue that synthetic bear bile -- > ursodeoxycholic acid, or UDCA -- is cheaper and just as effective. > Professor Liu Cheng Cai, a medical instructor at Chengdu Military > Hospital, one of China's top traditional medicine centers, says herbs and > other medications negate the need for the animals' bile. > > At one major pharmacy in Beijing, bear bile powder -- golden flecks > packaged in small glass vials -- sells for nearly $100 for two grams. In a > sign that the campaign to substitute herbal remedies for bear bile may be > gaining ground, the pharmacist said it works especially well on liver > diseases but is not very popular these days because of the availability of > cheaper alternatives. > > Meanwhile, word of Robinson's crusade is spreading. Visitors to the > organization's Web site, www.animalsasia.org, are signing up to support > the sanctuary with donations ranging from $5 for a pot of honey to $3,500 > for a bear den. Superstar Hong Kong actress and singer Karen Mok has > signed on as spokeswoman for the foundation, and crocodile hunter Steve > Irwin filmed a segment in February on veterinary surgery at the sanctuary. > > Although rescued bears cannot be released to the wild, having long since > lost their survival skills, they are freer at the sanctuary than they have > been in years. > > At the center, which costs $80,000 a month to operate, more than 100 roam > between indoor stalls and outdoor play areas, hanging in basket beds and > climbing on timber toys. > > New arrivals await surgery to remove catheters and repair wounds, pacing > about in cages substantially larger than the ones they had been confined > in, getting used to being able to move around. They work on simple puzzles > -- such as finding fruit hidden in small logs -- to challenge brains and > muscles atrophied by years of confinement. > > Some of the animals, ranging in size from the stunted 50-pound Franzi to > the 7-foot-tall, 300-plus pound male named Emma, even eat fruit from > workers' hands. > > " When you think they were consistently enduring all those pain sensations > all their lives ... " says Robinson, her voice trailing off. " We wouldn't > be so forgiving as a species. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.