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Anti-dog meat protestors slammed in China
Beijing, June 23
A mob in an open market in
China's Guangxi province hit out at a group of animal rights activists
who were protesting against an annual dog meat festival, CNN reported on
Tuesday.
"Don't you eat beef? If you stop eating beef, then
we'll stop eating dog meat," a man yelled at the activists in the Dong
Kou open market.
The Yulin dog meat festival, held in June,
originated in Guangxi Zhuang region's Yulin prefecture. Nearly 10,000
dogs are killed for human consumption during the festival.
A local person, when asked about the tradition of the festival, said eating the meat was a hard habit to break.
Another man at the market blamed the media attention for rise in the price of dog meat.
"This
is our tradition and we are used to eating dog. It's our culture and
we won't change ... It's tasty. But we won't kill our pet," a shop owner
said.
Signs around the market adorned with pictures of
labradors and golden retrievers advertise raw dog meat for sale, despite
new government regulations that restrict this practice.
However, there are signs that dog meat is losing its popularity at some places.
Du
Yufeng, a 58-year-old animal rights activist, has made it her mission
to stop dog meat consumption across China. Her protest in 2011
successfully ended the dog meat festival in Jinhua, in Zhejiang
province.
In Guangzhou, a restaurant that had been serving dog meat for over 51 years was recently closed.
Apart from dozens of journalists, filmmakers and celebrities have called for it to be stopped.