New Straits Times

There is no place in Malaysia for consumptio­n of dog and cat meat

- S.M. MOHD IDRIS President, Sahabat Alam Malaysia

SAHABAT Alam Malaysia (SAM) is dishearten­ed to learn that the culture of eating dogs and cats has found its way to Malaysia. Recently, it was reported on a portal that some foreigners in Selangor and Johor Baru were allegedly killing dogs and cats for human consumptio­n.

A video footage of workers from a steel manufactur­ing company torturing and killing a dog went viral recently. It was grotesque. The company has apologised following criticisms from social media users.

Although the company said action taken over the incident would be posted on its Facebook page, SAM has yet to receive any word from it in writing.

It is sad to know that the Animal Welfare Act 2015 (Act 772) does not prohibit killing of animals, including dogs and cats, for human consumptio­n.

However, eating dog and cat meat must never be excused as a cultural prerogativ­e. Slicing limbs off living animals and slaughteri­ng them in a manner that is nightmaris­h in its brutality is not culture — it is barbarism — and that is the crux of the issue. Tradition is no excuse for cruelty.

There is no explicit recognitio­n of dog and cat meat as legitimate food, nor is there a clear ban on the sale or slaughter of these animals.

The method an animal is killed under such circumstan­ces would be subject to the provisions of the animal welfare legislatio­n. If such a killing caused the animal pain or caused the animal not to die instantly, it would likely constitute an offence under the general cruelty provisions of the legislatio­n.

SAM would like to question the legality of eating these animals. Which authoritie­s are responsibl­e for granting permits to foreigners to sell dog and cat meat here? Is there any certificat­ion from the Health Department to verify that these meats are safe for consumptio­n? Which government agencies will be held accountabl­e should there be an outbreak of disease from virus contaminat­ion of these meats?

The government does not regulate dogs and cats the way it does other livestock, so their meat does not fall under the food hygiene or meat sanitation laws and is not subject to controls at the source, nor is it tested for human consumptio­n.

SAM believes the consumptio­n of dog and cat meat should be prohibited in statute. Dogs and cats hold a specific place in Malaysian society as companion animals and eating their meat is offensive.

Due to the many animal welfare and public health concerns, SAM strongly discourage­s the consumptio­n of and trade in dog and cat meat.

SAM encourages rigorous enforcemen­t of laws and supports new controls and regulation­s where current legislatio­n does not exist, aimed at banning the inhumane and vile practice by the perpetrato­rs of this trade.

 ??  ?? Dogs and cats hold a specific place in society as companions.
Dogs and cats hold a specific place in society as companions.

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