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Activists use virus in fight to ban dog meat

It’s an uphill battle, but swaying Chinese public gains traction

- By Amy Qin The New York Times

For years, animal rights activists in China have lobbied policymake­rs, organized education drives and staged protests to persuade the government and the public to support banning the eating of dogs and cats. They scored few concrete wins.

The coronaviru­s, which spread from a food market in China, changed everything.

After the national government suspended the sale of wildlife in February, the southern Chinese cities of Shenzhen and Zhuhai became the first in the country to ban the consumptio­n of cats and dogs. Last month, the Ministry of Agricultur­e, in a major step, removed dogs from its list of approved domesticat­ed livestock, referring to dogs for the first time as “companion animals.”

Even in the southern Chinese city of Yulin, a dog meat festival that has long courted controvers­y opened this week to less fanfare than in past years, as fears of the virus kept revelers away.

“We have been working on this issue for years, but the government kept passing the buck,” said Cynthia Zhang, a Guangzhou-based animal welfare activist. “So we are using the epidemic as an opportunit­y to try to push through as much legislatio­n as possible.”

It is long-fought validation for a loose but fast growing network of local animal welfare activists.

While China’s practice of eating dog meat has received global attention from celebritie­s including British comedian Ricky Gervais and American reality television star Lisa Vanderpump, an often overlooked group of animal activists and pet lovers has been the on-theground force for change in communitie­s and cities across the country. They have succeeded despite growing pushback from nationalis­tic critics who say that eating dog meat is a Chinese tradition, no different than the American love of turkey.

The animal activists have managed to carve out a space for their work in a country where advocacy and dissent have rapidly shriveled under China’s leader Xi Jinping. While human rights lawyers and women’s rights activists are regularly targeted by the Communist Party, animal protection is seen as a relatively fringe issue and less menacing to the party — giving activists more room to maneuver.

Over the years, they have petitioned lawmakers and set up animal shelters. Some of the more zealous players have intercepte­d trucks carrying dogs for slaughter and lobbied on the steps of government agencies. At least a few hundred formal and informal groups across the country are estimated to be working on animal protection issues.

It remains to be seen how the new guidelines will be enforced. China still lacks national laws banning animal cruelty and the consumptio­n of dogs and cats — all of which activists say are crucial to fully eliminatin­g the practice.

But their efforts have received tacit backing from the fast-growing number of pet owners in China, drawn mostly from the country’s booming middle class. One recent survey conducted by local animal associatio­ns found that there were 55 million pet dogs in China last year, up 8% from the year before. As their legions have grown, so too has support for banning dog meat consumptio­n.

“The younger generation of Chinese is more internatio­nal, they have more universal values,” said Qin Xiaona, founder of Beijing’s Capital Animal Welfare Associatio­n. “The officials are getting younger, too.”

One activist, Qi Qi, 37, started pressing the issue in 2014 when she answered a call for help on social media from volunteers who had intercepte­d a truck with hundreds of dogs on the outskirts of Beijing. Over two days, Qi helped care for the dogs as the volunteers negotiated with police and the driver to hand over the animals. Qi went on to participat­e in about 20 truck rescues, though not all were as successful.

Recently, Qi and her husband have shifted their focus to raising awareness. The couple recently opened a cafe in a trendy Beijing shopping mall where they host talks about animal protection and donate a portion of their proceeds to local trap-neuter-release efforts.

Earlier this month, when a truck full of dogs was intercepte­d in northeaste­rn China, Qi stood with a group of volunteers outside the Ministry of Agricultur­e every day for a week to urge officials to intervene by putting pressure on local authoritie­s to release the dogs.

“We don’t say it’s to protect dogs, but rather to enforce the law and safeguard public health,” Qi said. “In China, if you say you are doing this because you are a dog lover, a lot of people will be turned off, so we try to circle around it.”

Zhang, the Guangzhoub­ased activist, said that for years, she and a group of volunteers had taken a more combative stance, staging protests at local government offices and going head-to-head with dog meat vendors.

“The space for doing our work has shrunk,” Zhang said. She noted that authoritie­s had shut down several active animal protection group discussion­s on the popular social messaging app WeChat after some members had criticized the government.

“There is still room to get our message out there,” she said. “As long as you don’t criticize the government.”

Several years ago, Zhang said, they changed tactics to take a more “positive” approach, focusing their efforts on reaching out to national policymake­rs instead.

Zhang figures that her group has sent out thousands of letters to delegates to China’s top legislativ­e bodies in recent years informing them about the dismal conditions of the dog meat trade, which is largely unregulate­d in China.

But it wasn’t until the unexpected emergence of the coronaviru­s — and the renewed scrutiny over the wildlife trade in China — that some of the policies long under discussion gained traction.

“China has been in a civil war between animal lovers and people who support dog meat consumptio­n, and the animal lovers are gaining the upper hand,” said Peter J. Li, a China policy adviser with Humane Society Internatio­nal. “The Chinese government sees this.”

Convincing the public can still be an uphill battle.

The practice of eating dog meat is limited to a few areas of China and most people do not eat it regularly. Instead, defenders often subscribe to a belief that “while I may not eat dog meat, I support your right to do so.”

Xu Zhe, 22, a recent college graduate from the northeaste­rn city of Dalian, said he eats dog meat once a year during the Chinese New Year and had no qualms about it even though he grew up with a dog at home.

“I have a deep connection with my dog, but not with the dog I’m eating,” Xu said.

 ?? NOEL CELIS/GETTY-AFP ?? A worker gives treats to rescued dogs Monday at a shelter on the outskirts of Beijing amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.
NOEL CELIS/GETTY-AFP A worker gives treats to rescued dogs Monday at a shelter on the outskirts of Beijing amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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