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China Dog Rescue: Hundreds Of Animals Rescued From Slaughter By Activist Road Blockade (VIDEO)

China Animals

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 04/20/11 11:51 AM ET Updated: 06/20/11 06:12 AM ET

BEIJING (AP) -- After spotting a truck packed with hundreds of whimpering dogs on a Beijing highway, a man put out a call on a microblogging site, begging fellow animal lovers to help him force the driver to release the animals.

Around 200 people responded, blockading the truck at a toll booth for 15 hours until they finally negotiated the dogs' release for $17,000, saving them from being slaughtered and served as food. Many of the animals were dehydrated, injured and suffering from a potentially deadly virus; at least 68 have been hospitalized.

Video footage taken at the site and provided to The Associated Press on Tuesday showed the animals hunched over or lying down in cramped metal crates in the back of the truck, many of them barking and whining.

(Scroll down for video)

"They were squeezing and pressing on each other and some were biting and fighting, and I saw some were injured or sick," according to Li Wei, who is the manager of Capital Animal Welfare Association and one of the people who participated in the rescue. Li said at least one dog had died in the truck.

The rescue was a rare successful case of social activism in China, where authorities are currently waging a brutal crackdown on dissent, locking up dozens of activists amid fears pro-democracy protests in the Middle East could catch on.

But the blockade may be more remarkable for what it shows about changes in Chinese society over the past decade as fantastic economic growth has bred a middle class with new sensibilities.

Pet ownership was once rare because the Communist Party condemned it as bourgeois and most people couldn't afford to own cats or dogs. Both animals were typically eaten, and Friday night's rescue has set off a debate that underscores the clash between those age-old traditions and the country's growing animal rights movement.

One example of that tension is the police response to the rescue. They told the animal lovers that they were breaking the law by blocking traffic and said there was no legal reason to hold the truck because the shipment's paperwork was in order.

Li said many in the group – including the man who put out the call on Sina Weibo, a popular Twitter-like microblogging site – suspected the dogs were stolen or otherwise illegally obtained. China has no animal protection laws, except for wild animals. The truck's driver himself told the Global Times newspaper: "I transported dogs as (I would) pigs, cows and sheep. The country does not ban the consumption of dog meat."

At one point, it looked as if the truck would be allowed to proceed. "We felt very helpless but we were not willing to let them go," Li said.

That's when the dogs – about 580 in all – were bought off the driver for 115,000 yuan ($17,606), mostly contributed by a pet company and an animal protection foundation, Li said.

Now dozens of volunteers have flocked to the Dongxing Animal Hospital in Beijing where they are helping to clean cages, mop floors and disinfect visitors.

On Tuesday, 68 dogs filled every room of the hospital, with a few lying in cages in the corridors. Many had bandaged legs and were hooked up to intravenous drips.

Most were severely dehydrated and some had parvovirus, a potentially deadly virus that infects the intestine, said hospital director Zhu Mingke. Almost all of them suffered external injuries, he said.

The rest of the dogs have been taken to a property on the northern outskirts of Beijing where Li's group is caring for them.

"When I saw the poor dogs on Twitter, I cried and cried, but I thought there was no way they could stop the truck. So I was very surprised when they did it and I wanted to help," said Chen Yang, 30, a woman in tight jeans who tended to a dog that had given birth to four puppies just after the rescue.

The volunteer response indicates a growing awareness for animal rights that shows that social attitudes have shifted with growing affluence, said Lu Yunfeng, a sociology professor at Peking University.

"Dogs were historically on the food list in China and South Korea, while they were loved in Western countries," Lu said.

But in China, "as people became well-off, they had money to raise dogs, and while raising these dogs, they developed feelings for dogs," he said.

China still has a shoddy record on animal rights: There is little animal welfare legislation, many zoos are poorly run and animal parts are traded for use in traditional medicine.

But in recent years, activists have criticized government-ordered mass killing of dogs during rabies outbreaks, protested outside government offices against the slaughter of cats for food, and urged China to phase out bear farms where bile is harvested for traditional medicine.

Still, there was some criticism of the rescue. An editorial in the Legal Daily newspaper accused activists of breaking the law and putting animals' rights over people's.

WATCH:

___

Associated Press researcher Yu Bing contributed to this report.

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BEIJING (AP) -- After spotting a truck packed with hundreds of whimpering dogs on a Beijing highway, a man put out a call on a microblogging site, begging fellow animal lovers to help him force the dr...
BEIJING (AP) -- After spotting a truck packed with hundreds of whimpering dogs on a Beijing highway, a man put out a call on a microblogging site, begging fellow animal lovers to help him force the dr...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
02:17 PM on 05/11/2011
Tthe average traditional chinese person cares nothing for animals; they see them as merely a commodity for food. Anything that moves can be eaten! Very primitive culture. We hope that with better education and money, they will improve their views and laws on animals rights issues....they still hold many terrible superstitions which reasult in the death of many endangered species for use in bogus medicinal cures . Rhino horns, sea horses, tiger parts, bear bile, just to name a few, etc...
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Pod-gers
Jeremy Lin = Game Change
02:36 PM on 05/16/2011
Flagged for racist, stereotyping and all out hate spewing.

"Very primitive culture?"

SHAME ON YOU! You call yourself progressive? heaven help us all.
01:37 PM on 05/09/2011
Why do the Chinese skin a poor dog alive....that's a horror..what's the stupid reasoning behind that one outside of causing extreme unimaginable pain..no matter what their reason that still is no excuse..an eye for a eye..it should be done to them that that do that twicefold
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FlaviaDeLuce
books rule
01:28 PM on 04/26/2011
Good!! Animals parent anyone's slaves ...
09:14 AM on 04/30/2011
Actually, they kind of are.
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FlaviaDeLuce
books rule
10:53 AM on 05/02/2011
which is wrong to begin with
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dclintn648
Better a pro than a con
02:32 AM on 04/23/2011
To all of those wonderful people, and especially the hero who put out the call, I thank you from the bottom of my heart. You give me hope for the world. May your good deed be rewarded a thousandfold!
10:13 PM on 04/22/2011
Why are humans so cruel? While I commend these pioneers in animal rights in China, we have are own problems here. Puppy mills. Slaughter houses. Inhuman corporate farms.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
02:19 PM on 05/11/2011
thats true, much to be done here as well, starting with the torture of farm factories which are like concentration camps for animals!
05:08 PM on 04/22/2011
Seriously, the only issue with this incident is how the dogs were transported. The Chinese EAT the dogs, big deal. It's food, not some stupid fad or object of vanity.

Can someone please come up with the answer of what the substitute would be if ALL dogs in China were taken off the market? It would be beef, most probably, something that uses a lot more food and energy to be served as meat.

China indulges in plenty of wildlife endangering activities like encouraging the killing of tigers and rhinos and deservedly gets criticized for them. But for this practice, they should be left alone. As long as they treat the dogs like well looked after cattle, there really isn't much to complain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dclintn648
Better a pro than a con
02:34 AM on 04/23/2011
As though cattle are treated humanely... Are you really that naive, or is it just easier for you to deny the reality so you can do what you want without any guilt?
12:12 PM on 04/23/2011
Are you deficient in the command of the English language? Do you not understand the literal meaning of "well looked after"? There are many farms here which do indeed look after cattle humanely, and find customers willing to pay the premium for meat from this cattle.

Perhaps you missed my point entirely.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wutzurbeef
Whats in YOUR taco?
08:18 PM on 04/23/2011
"Seriously, the only issue with this incident is how the dogs were transporte­d. The Chinese EAT the dogs, big deal. It's food, not some stupid fad or object of vanity"...

Shantanum, the dogs were sick with Parvo Virus... I don't think many would knowingly eat an animal that was SICK before it was slaughtered. How many would eat a cow with Mad Cow Disease?

If they were raising the dogs for food, which may be their custom, there should still be humane treatment dealing with how the dogs are quartered and fed, and also how they are mercifully and quickly dispatched for food purposes. This obviously was NOT the case here.

I applaud those who took a step forward towards animal rights in China.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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02:41 PM on 04/22/2011
Absolutely heartbreaking... The extreme cruelty and lack of compassion that human beings can exhibit never ceases to amaze me. Luckily this story had a happy ending for many of the dogs in this case. Unfortunately, that's the rarity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
02:41 PM on 05/11/2011
they may have to put down the very sick ones humanely and find homes for the ones that are healthy enough to be adopted and cared for. I hope they can and I thank them for their bravery and determination to save those poor animals!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Rathe
02:21 AM on 04/22/2011
Bravo and much love to the brave men and women who put themselves in harm's way to save these doggies.
11:32 PM on 04/21/2011
Yay for Chinese activists - a 15 hr standoff - that's dedication.
10:47 PM on 04/21/2011
This rescue was actually organized by a pet dealer in Beijing.They got wind of the truck "packed with stolen dogs of expensive breeds", and mobilized 200 activists to make a raid.

Normally no one would call the police if he stole something and was looted then. But they were disappointed by the fact that most of the dogs were bought from local farmers, certainly, of common breeds.

Just a failed ancient Chinese wisdom.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
krayonc
Travel is fatal to prejudice & bigotry.
09:32 PM on 04/21/2011
Heroes...

Thanks to all who responded & are helping with the dogs. Excellent story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Querent
I just had to say that.
08:03 PM on 04/21/2011
Yay! One for the good guys!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
07:12 PM on 04/21/2011
Reading the comments below -- basically, everyone is arguing about where to draw the line for a nation of carnivores -- and given my respect for ALL life, especially sentient beings, I'm wondering what keeps me from becoming completely vegetarian. I suppose my being in denial about my diet and the responsibility for my part in the karma of the greater community of sentient beings, has been providing me with a false sense of comfort. And isn't my denial a part of the bigger picture of the destruction of the environment? We have not been very good stewards but we can hope that we can transcend this selfishness to a higher nature.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stephen G Ford
Not sure WHAT this is for
08:03 PM on 04/21/2011
I've been thinking about this a lot myself (Why I don't just go vegetarian)... I tell myself that it would be a LOT MORE healthy... but buying veggies and KEEPING VEGGIES is a REAL pain! They spoil SO QUICKLY! I am a BIG TIME animal freak... I would rather deal with animals in most cases than most of the people I know... (Thank you for getting me thinking about this again) *GRIN*
10:17 PM on 04/22/2011
What did it for me, raised on a dairy farm, was seeing video of downed cows being picked up by a front end loader and literally tossed. The bellowing of the cows was like something I'd never heard before. I finally decided that if the cattle couldn't even be treated humanely I wouldn't support the slaughter houses by eating meat. Besides if I had to kill my own food, I would be a vegetarian. I finally made the move from vegetarian to vegan after reading The China Study.
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FlaviaDeLuce
books rule
01:32 PM on 04/26/2011
bravo!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ipanemagirl
progressive
08:27 PM on 05/11/2011
good for you! I feel the same way you do,,,when one sees how these poor animals suffer, one cannot stand to eat meat like before. This needsto change, but repulblicans are always supporting big corporations and hiding their dirty little secrets so noone can see what is really going on in those factories!
05:43 PM on 04/21/2011
Americans can help this problem by not buying any fur trimmed coats made in China. Often the hair is taken from dogs who are skinned alive. There is video of this horror on you tube.
12:31 PM on 04/21/2011
"said Chen Yang, 30, a woman in tight jeans who tended to a dog "
why was the description of her jeans necessary?
01:35 PM on 04/21/2011
Why not?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Kim0330
Purr, and the world purrs with you...
04:24 PM on 04/21/2011
I was wondering the same thing myself.