Global Times

China mulls excluding dogs from livestock list, prompting speculatio­n

- By Liu Caiyu

China is mulling the exclusion of dogs from the official livestock and poultry management list, prompting many to speculate that the consumptio­n of dog meat may cease being legal soon and it may spell doom for the Yulin annual dog meat festival in South China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.

Dogs are companions, not livestock and poultry, the country’s Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs said in a document introducin­g the new draft of the National Catalogue of Livestock and Poultry Genetic Resources, which was published on April 8 to solicit public opinions until May 8.

The catalogue by the ministry lists a total of 31 animals as livestock and poultry.

Although the ministry told media that the draft has nothing to do with consumptio­n of dog meat, many analysts and netizens still take it as a major step toward putting an end to dog consumptio­n in China.

Guo Peng, an expert from Shandong University, hailed the move, saying the draft may bring an end to the interest chains of dog markets, as the dog meat industry is largely based on the illegal trade of dogs.

But the draft has triggered opposition from dog-related business owners in China, especially in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, where thousands of people make a living from it.

A dog business owner from Guangxi told the Global Times that the draft should take local living conditions into considerat­ion, as thousands of people from the region make a living from the dog meat industry, and the costs of asking them to change profession would be huge.

Some observers said the draft may spell doom for the annual traditiona­l dog meat festival in Yulin, a city in Guangxi, where local stores slaughter dogs and locals taste dog meat to celebrate. Recent years have seen the festival surrounded by controvers­y, with animal lovers and activists protesting against it.

According to local customs and traditiona­l Chinese medicine theory, dog meat is nutritious and helps protect people from diseases that are common in summer. The festival is traditiona­lly held on the Summer Solstice, which falls on June 21 this year.

Amid the COVID-19 outbreak, Shenzhen, South China’s Guangdong Province, has become the first Chinese city to ban the sale and consumptio­n of dog and cat meat. The city-level legislatio­n will take effect in May.

Experts expect more provinces and cities to learn from Shenzhen and legally ban cat and dog meat.

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