Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Killing dogs for meat illegal: S Korea court

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A South Korean court has ruled the killing of dogs for meat is illegal, in a landmark decision that animal rights activists said Thursday could pave the way to outlawing eating canines.

The meat has long been a part of South Korean cuisine, with about one million dogs believed to be eaten annually.

But consumptio­n has declined as South Koreans increasing­ly embrace the idea of dogs as man’s best friend rather than livestock, with the practice now something of a taboo among younger generation­s and pressure from activists mounting.

Even so it remains a legal grey area. Despite no specific ban, authoritie­s have invoked hygiene regulation­s or animal protection laws that ban cruel slaughter methods to crack down on dog farms and restaurant­s ahead of internatio­nal events such as the Pyeongchan­g Olympics.

Animal rights group Care last year filed complaints against a dog farm operator in Bucheon, accusing him of “killing animals without proper reasons” and violating building and hygiene regulation­s, and prosecutor­s later charged him.

Care lawyer Kim Kyung-eun welcomed the ruling — made in April but with details only released this week — telling AFP: “It is very significan­t in that it is the first court decision that killing dogs for dog meat is illegal itself.” The precedent “paved the way for outlawing dog meat consumptio­n entirely”, she added.

But some South Koreans object to what they describe as cultural double standards. AFP

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