Butchers in China Accused of Boiling Cats Alive to Make Purses and Shoes

Butchers in China Accused of Boiling Cats Alive to Make Purses and ShoesButchers in China Accused of Boiling Cats Alive to Make Purses and Shoes
Carl Samson
December 3, 2019
A market for cat meat and fur continues to thrive in China, according to a group of grassroots activists hoping to put an end to the “perverted” trade.
On Dec. 1, the Fur-Free Society, a group of worldwide volunteers campaigning against the use of animal fur, shed light on the persistent sale of cat meat and fur in China, where there are currently no laws against animal cruelty.
Image via China Daily
According to the nonprofit, most cats caught in the trade are strays that have neither been spayed nor neutered, consequently reproducing at “alarming” rates.
Additionally, some allegedly snatch pet cats, leaving owners in a hopeless search that occasionally ends in the miserable discovery of their slaughter.
Image via acidcow.com
“They are sold to butchers who boil them alive to save their skin to become shoes, gloves, purses, etc. sold at our stores as leather goods,” the Fur-Free Society, also known as the Anti-Fur Society, claimed in a Facebook post.
Cat and dog fur are illegal in the U.S. and EU countries, but “their leather comes in without any specs,” the group added.
Image via acidcow.com
The post, which was published on Sunday, has since gone viral with over 83,000 shares, 77,000 reactions and 19,000 comments.
“This has broken my heart into a million pieces. I’m in tears,” a Facebook user commented.
Another questioned, “How can anyone do that?”
While it is legal to eat cats and dogs in China, their consumption is a minority activity distant from mainstream culture.
In 2017, Chinese social media reacted with alarm when a man was caught transporting around 500 cats — some being stolen pets — in tiny cages, which he hoped to sell to restaurants.
A local survey in the same year found that 13% of residents in Yulin — the site of China’s infamous annual dog festival — never eat dogs, while a further 59% consume it rarely.
“The truth is that eating dog and cat is not part of China’s mainstream culinary practice even in Yulin, the home of the dog meat festival,” Peter Li, a China policy specialist for Humane Society International, told the Washington Post. “Far from being vital to the Yulin economy or way of life, the dog meat festival is a national disgrace that tarnished the name of the city around the world. Now is the time to end it.”
The Anti-Fur Society is currently seeking donations to sterilize 100 community cats in Nanjing, which would cost at least $5,000. So far, the nonprofit managed to collect $1,137 and partnered with 10 vet clinics that have agreed to reduce costs.
Save cats in China by donating here.
Feature Images via Anti-Fur Society (Left) and acidcow.com (Right)
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