Literature
Indian film celebs raise voice against Yulin Dog Meat Festival
Mumbai, June 20
Indian film fraternity members
like Sonakshi Sinha, Kunal Khemmu, Anushka Sharma and Alia Bhatt have
come forward to urge their fans to sign a petition asking the President
of the People's Republic of China to ban the Yulin Dog Meat Eating
Festival.
Just like their Hollywood counterparts, Bollywood
celebrities have come out in support of the petition on Change.org,
which has requested that "the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region
government must cancel the 'Dog Meat Festival' that is held on June 22
in Yulin".
"As foreigners who have great respect for the Chinese
people and Chinese civilization, we are saddened to learn that the Yulin
'Dog Meat Festival' still exists in a modern civilised society. We
believe that this event has no place in the 21st century," the petition
reads.
Indian celebrities have taken to social networking
platforms to raise their voices against the festival, which involves
beating, boiling and burning dogs alive.
"This has GOT to STOP!! Share, RT, create awareness and sign the petition. #StopYuLin2015," Sonakshi tweeted.
Anushka
Sharma shared: "Animals don't have a voice. YOU do! HELP end this
CRUELTY . Sign d petition #StopYuLin2015", while singer Anushka
Manchanda tweeted: "Please sign & share this petition to stop the
inhumane killing of dogs for this dog meat festival #StopYuLin2015."
As per reports, over 10,000 dogs are killed at this festival for human consumption annually.
PETA
(People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), a global non-profit
corporation animal rights group, that undertook an Asia undercover
investigation to reveal the gruesome reality of the Yulin 'fest' to the
world, is appreciative of celebrity support to the cause of stopping the
practice.
"From Bollywood to Hollywood, celebrities are speaking
out against the butchering of dogs in China, leading to widespread
awareness and international condemnation of this atrocity, thereby
adding immense pressure on China to spare the animals' lives and to
relegate this cruel festival to the history books," Poorva Joshipura,
CEO, PETA India, told IANS.
"PETA is also asking consumers to
help by choosing not to buy leather as Chinese dogs are also used to
make belts, gloves and other products sold on to unsuspecting consumers
around the world," Joshipura added.
Their investigation revealed
"deeply disturbing" facts about how dogs are bludgeoned to death in
China so that their skin can be turned into leather gloves, belts,
jacket collar trim, cat toys and other items. At the slaughterhouse, one
employee told the investigator that the facility bludgeons and skins
100 to 200 dogs a day, read a description of a video on the official
PETA website.