| 03/07/2007
Chinese Snub EU Cat and Dog Fur Ban
Chinese Government won't promise to stop barbaric fur
trade despite EU ban.
China has sneered at the EU cat and dog fur ban approved unanimously
at the European Parliament in Strasbourg recently, according to
Conservative MEP for Wales Jonathan Evans.
Millions of people across Europe disgusted by reports of the horrific
slaughter of these animals signed petitions, sent emails and wrote
letters during an eight year campaign, supported tirelessly by Mr
Evans and his colleagues.
The ban on cat and dog fur imports, exports and trade will become
law in all 27 Member States by the end of next year and is predicted
to save the lives of more than two million cats and dogs every year
in China.
Animal welfare charities said the EU ban sent a clear message to
the Chinese government, but Vice Director-General of the State Forestry
Administration Department in China, Mr Wang Wei, stated that the
decision to close the EU's borders to these products was Europe's
business and he could not guarantee the trade could stop in China.
Despite earlier reassurances that China abhorred the practice and
looked forward to Europe introducing a comprehensive ban, he stated
that existing laws allow the captive breeding of animals, that China
is different from other countries as wildlife products are used
in traditional Chinese medicines and that they have moved from using
wildlife to captive resources for this purpose.
It was also stated that skinning animals alive is not a common
practice in China. Mr Evans said:
"These remarks are unhelpful and unsatisfactory. Clearly we
have touched a raw nerve with the Chinese Government on this issue
and despite the successful implementation of our EU ban, there remains
much work to do to convince the Chinese to put a stop to this horrific
business once and for all.
"Slaughter of these animals is barbaric, with cats strangled
outside their cages as other cats look on and dogs noosed with metal
wires are slashed across the groin until they bleed to death as
the wire noose cuts into their throat."
Pelts used from these tortured creatures have appeared in EU stores
as full-length coats, homeopathic arthritis aids, hair bows for
children, toy cat figurines and linings for boots and gloves.
Notes to Editors:
1.Jonathan Evans has campaigned over the last eight years
to halt the import, export and trade in cat and dog fur in the EU.
2. In 2003 Humane Society International and Conservative
MEPs revealed video evidence showing that the trade in cat skins
is flourishing underground in Belgium. Further testing of some of
these products revealed the dangerous toxic levels of chromium contained
in novelty cat & dog figurines and toys. In December 2003,
346 MEPs – an actual majority - backed a Declaration in the
European Parliament supporting a ban. The President of the
European Parliament then instructed the Commission to draft legislation
outlawing the practice, to reflect the will of the Parliament.
3. In March 2005, Heather Mills McCartney, landmine activist
and charity campaigner, and Rick Wakeman, lead musician from the
rock group 'Yes', attended a press conference in the European Parliament
in Brussels to voice their support for a ban across the European
Union of cat and dog fur.
5. In a TV interview last year, Sir Paul McCartney called
for a boycott on Chinese fur products and on the Beijing Olympics
until China bans this evil trade of skinning animals alive.
6. It is estimated that more than two million animals are
brutally slaughtered each year in China alone to supply the main
markets in Europe and Russia. The furs and skins are made
into coats, fur trim for gloves, boot-linings, cat and dog figurines
and used in countless other ways. There is clearly a fraudulent
and illegal aspect to this trade as consumers are duped into buying
what they believe to be faux fur or fur from wild animals, as merchants
make up mythical names on labels, or dye the fur to make it look
like faux-fur.
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