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PETA Condemns China’s ‘Pandemic Petri Dishes’ as Yulin Dog Meat Festival Begins

AP Images for Humane Society International
AP Images for Humane Society International
7:20

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) condemned the Yulin Lychee and Dog Meat Festival – and the open-air slaughter of animals for food – in a statement to Breitbart News on Monday as “pandemic petri dishes” that perpetuate animal suffering and spread disease.

The notorious Yulin festival, believed to have begun in 2009, occurs every year in the eponymous Chinese city on Summer Solstice, which this year fell on Monday. It typically lasts for ten days and features a host of outdoor butchers offering live dogs for the slaughter, cooked and feasted on in a variety of ways. Lychees, a tropical Asian fruit, serves as a counterweight to the dog flesh to cool down in the summer heat. Animal rights groups have, with varying degrees of success, organized annual campaigns to condemn and outlaw the festival, resulting in the Chinese Communist Party distancing itself from the event, but few concrete measures to actually prevent it from happening.

The Yulin festival received renewed scrutiny last year in the face of the Chinese coronavirus pandemic, which began in late 2019 in the central city of Wuhan, China. Chinese officials initially blamed an outdoor meat and vegetable market in Wuhan – commonly known as “wet markets” due to the water, blood, and other liquids soaking the ground there – for the initial coronavirus outbreak. A study released in June concluded that as many as 50,000 live animals were available to buy for consumption at the market in question at the initial onset of Wuhan’s coronavirus outbreak.

Beijing has since dropped that theory and claimed, without evidence, that the pandemic is the product of a safety failure at a U.S. Army laboratory, but the global scientific community nonetheless largely agrees that wet markets create ideal venues for the spread of infectious disease.

The World Health Organization (W.H.O.)’s official stance, as stated in a 120-page report published after investigators visited Wuhan, is that the likeliest scenario in which the Chinese coronavirus first spread to humans is through human interaction with an “intermediary” animal species first infected by the virus from its original host. The W.H.O. approved the reopening of wet markets in China in April 2020.

PETA confirmed to Breitbart News on Monday that, despite diminished discussion of the Yulin Dog Meat Festival on Chinese social media platforms, local sources say the event is indeed occurring.

“PETA wishes government pronouncements could always be relied on, but the regulations and the reality often don’t match. Locals have confirmed that the shameful Yulin festival will proceed this year,” PETA Asia Vice President Jason Baker confirmed, just as filthy ‘wet markets’ remain up and running and slaughterhouses continue their bloody business as usual, all because of consumer demand.”

“Only if people stop supporting such places will animals stop being killed in awful ways. We urge everyone to shun all these pandemic petri dishes and not to pay for profound animal suffering,” Baker said. “Dogs suffer beyond imagination in these markets, but we must never forget the pigs, chickens, cows, ducks and other individuals who also experience pain and fear just as we do.”

Sources within communist China have largely remained silent about the festival this year, but media from neighboring Hong Kong have confirmed PETA’s information regarding the continued existence of the event. Am730, a Cantonese-language Hong Kong newspaper, reported Monday the event is proceeding “as usual” but that prices for dog meat were slightly elevated. News18, an Indian media outlet, reported locals had documented at least eight live dog meat stands operating in the heart of the neighborhood hosting the festival, and another wet market with at least 18 live dog stands.

“Some netizens went to rural dog farms to directly attack the live dog trading situation, saying that on the eve of the dog meat festival, ‘business is booming, and the price of local dogs has been rising,'” Am370 reported, conceding that “there is much less news about the Yulin Dog Meat Festival on social platforms such as Weibo and WeChat in China than in previous years.”

Another Hong Kong newspaper, the pro-democracy publication Apple Dailyreported Monday that local Communist Party officials had suspended train service to the neighborhood typically hosting the festival in an attempt to prevent animal rights activists from engaging in what has become an annual tradition of intercepting illicit shipments of dogs and rescuing them from the slaughter.

“Unlike in previous years, animal rights activists from other parts of the country may find it difficult to flood in to rescue dogs, since train service to Yulin was recently halted, local residents said,” Apple Daily reported. “Officials reportedly gave no reason for halting the trains.”

Chinese government reports denied that the regime had suspended train service. Usage of mass transit in China relies on the Party’s “social credit” system, however – which awards scores to every citizen based on loyalty to the party – meaning that known animal rights activists may simply have their scores dropped too low to have the ability to purchase train tickets.

Animal rights groups have documented at least one successful rescue this year. Humane Society International confirmed the interception this week of 68 dogs on a truck heading into Yulin by local Chinese activists.

“Activists flagged down a truck packed with dogs on the way to Yulin’s slaughterhouses and convinced the driver to hand over the dogs. When the truck halted, the activists found 68 panting and exhausted dogs crammed tightly in rusty cages, suffering from extreme heat and without food or water,” the organization noted. ” As rescuers approached, the otherwise lethargic dogs began to show signs of typical household pets, such as reaching out their paws to shake hands. Most of them looked like dogs who were stolen from their families.”

China nominally banned the breeding of dogs as livestock last year by publishing a list of designated legal species to breed for food and excluding dogs. At the time, PETA explained in a statement to Breitbart News that the legality of eating dog meat remained “unclear” because “the government official making the announcement explicitly stated that the livestock list will not affect the dog-meat trade.”

The technical outlawing of dog breeding for food also appears to have fueled the mass theft of dogs from their families in homes where they were kept as pets. The Humane Society noted that the dogs rescued this week exhibited behaviors, like handing out a paw to humans, that indicated they were house pets and not strays. Apple Daily reported on Tuesday of the arrest of at least one individual in Sichuan province, that had suspicious meat in his freezer and live dogs at home, apparently to sell at the festival. At least one of those dogs was wearing a collar, a sign he or she was stolen from their family. The man, identified as Zhang Jiu, was reportedly suspected of preparing to sell the dogs as meat at the Yulin festival. Zhang reportedly had 56 dogs on his property at the time of his arrest.

Follow Frances Martel on Facebook and Twitter.

The Two Chinas

One wants to kill democracy and freedom.

  37 comments

It’s a little-known fact that there are two Chinas.

One China unleashed a pandemic on the world that killed close to 4 million people and has the World Health Organization in its back pocket. The other isn’t even allowed to join WHO.

One China is a destabilizing force, poised to start World War III. The other wants only peaceful relations with its neighbors and the rest of the world.

One China is ruled by a totalitarian regime that crushes dissent, suppresses religious and ethnic minorities and even tries to regulate births. The other is a thriving democracy where civil liberties are protected.

One China spies on us, arms rogue states like Iran, and threatens our security. The other was our ally in World War II, Korea and Vietnam.

One is the hilariously misnamed People’s Republic of China, where the only role the people play is as hostages. The other is the Republic of China on Taiwan, the official name of the nation of 23 million, on the other side of the Taiwan Straits, that the PRC claims as its own.

Beijing calls Taiwan a breakaway province. That’s rich. Since the end of the First Sino-Japanese War (1895), Taiwan has been ruled by the mainland for at most half a dozen years – never by the Chinese Communist Party. One might as well say that America is a breakaway province from Britain.

It’s difficult to describe the systematic brutality and massive human rights violations that go on every day in the Peoples Detention Camp of China.

Since 2014, Beijing has systemically suppressed the Muslim Uyghurs. It’s estimated that more than a million are held in camps where torture, rape and forced sterilization are commonplace. The treatment of the Uyghurs been described as the largest, most systematic imprisonment of ethnic and religious minorities since World War II.

Last week, security forces raided the offices of the Apple Daily newspaper in Hong Kong, arresting five journalists and executives for telling the truth. (The official charge is “collusion with a foreign country or with external elements to endanger national security.”)

This is only the latest violation of the commitments made to Britain when the city was handed over to China in 1997. Under “one country, two systems,” Hong Kong was promised a “high degree of autonomy, rights and freedom for 50 years.”

Since then, the PRC has moved rapidly to give the residents of Hong Kong the same degree of freedom as the rest of China.  One country, one system.

Following massive pro-democracy protests, in 2020, a national security law was promulgated to give Hong Kong’s puppet government new powers to suppress and punish dissent. Communists who lie? Fancy that.

Now, guess which China we have diplomatic relations with, and which we do not? Aw, come on, someone told you. Only 14 nations have official relations with Taipei. The rest have given in to Beijing’s bullying.

With the 23rd highest nominal GDP in the world, countries should be falling all over each other to have diplomatic ties to Taiwan. But when Beijing says jump, the world politely inquires as to the altitude.

Communist China’s actions toward Taiwan are psychotic. In a 72-hour period earlier this month, 36 Chinese military planes flew over Taiwan’s air space, the most ever.

It’s just the latest aggressive move to signal to the Taiwanese and the rest of the world, that Beijing intends to incorporate the island into its evil empire sooner or later. 

China builds its military, including its blue water navy, with singlemindedness. We are turning ours into a woke laboratory, where a majority of the population is taught to hate itself.

It’s not enough for the international community to send signals, like the recent communique by the G7 leaders that stressed the “importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.” Translation: “It would be really cool if China didn’t start a war in pursuit of its territorial ambitions.”

Talk is cheap. Everything shows Beijing that it can get away with anything – the Wuhan lab leak, genocide against the Uyghurs, Gestapo tactics in Hong Kong and ongoing espionage. (FBI Director Christopher Wray says the Bureau opens a new investigation every 10 hours into illegal activities by the Peoples Republic in the United States.)

It’s reminiscent of the prelude to World War II in Europe. The Rhineland was remilitarized, and nothing happened. The Anschluss took place – and nothing happened. Kristallnacht (a dress rehearsal for the Holocaust) occurred – same thing. The surrender of the Sudetenland – the West colluded in that one.  The world pays a terrible price for the betrayal of little countries.

Like sleepwalkers, we stumbled into a World War that left an estimated 75 million dead. Then we said never again. Did a slogan ever have more of a hollow ring?

Now, it’s still not too late. Nothing is the most dangerous thing we can do.

The 7th Fleet can become more assertive. The U.S. and its allies can push for Taiwan’s inclusion in international bodies. More delegations can visit the island, like the three members of the U.S. Senate who were there in early June.

The more we can do to create a diplomatic iron dome over Taiwan, the less likely Beijing will do something we’ll all regret. 

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