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Animal Rights In China Get Boost From Celebrity Activists And Shifting Attitudes

First Posted: 02/21/2012 7:02 am Updated: 02/21/2012 5:57 pm

BEIJING (AP) — Celebrities like basketball star Yao Ming have helped energize China's animal rights movement by speaking out against shark fin soup and bear bile tonics, an animal welfare group said Tuesday.

Jill Robinson, who established the Hong Kong-based Animals Asia Foundation in 1998, said she's seen interest in animal rights snowball in China over the last few years, spurred by support from celebrities and shifting attitudes among ordinary people.

Robinson spoke at an event in Beijing calling for an end to bear bile farming, the practice of extracting bile from the gall bladders of living bears. The animals are caged and milked of bile through catheters, which animal rights groups contend is cruel.

On Saturday, Yao visited one of Robinson's bear sanctuaries in Sichuan province. The 7-foot-6 (2.29-meter) former NBA center clipped the nails of an anesthetized bear and shook its paw, then strolled around the facility with his wife, looking at the bear enclosures and a bear graveyard.

Yao has also campaigned against the weekly slaughter of an estimated 1.5 million sharks to make shark fin soup. The practice is taking some of the species close to extinction.

The English-born Robinson said a Chinese government official encouraged her years ago to "start the debate" about animal rights in China.

"I've never forgotten that and that's always been our motive, our incentive and finally it's coming home to roost, finally it's working," she said. "It's almost at the point now where we can step back, as people within the (Chinese) community, within the public, and within the media really take the reins."

The change reflects both a growing environmental awareness and the increasing affluence of ordinary Chinese, who keep pets, travel overseas and are changing attitudes toward traditions they may not have questioned in the past.

Last week, Chinese voiced outrage when a pharmaceutical company that sells tonics made with bear bile announced plans for a public listing. Dozens of Chinese entertainers, writers and other celebrities signed a petition to the China Securities Regulatory Commission urging it to withhold approval for the initial public offering by Guizhentang, a Chinese medicines maker.

Hundreds of thousands of comments on Weibo, a Chinese microblog, blasted the company for extracting bile from bears.

"In China, it's a very, very exciting time," said Animal Asia's senior veterinarian Monica Bando. "There are more animal protection groups than there have ever been and there are more local groups taking the initiative to rescue dogs from dog meat markets and blogging about various other animals rights issues."

Chinese activists have staged mass releases of cats and dogs caged for shipment to restaurants and markets, where they are slaughtered for dishes considered to be delicacies or especially nourishing.

Robinson said it's been gratifying to see a vibrant, homegrown movement taking shape. She recalled a recent phone call from an activist in Shanghai who told her: "You can step back now. This is our fight now."

"It was just great to hear that," she said. "It's something that I've been waiting to hear for a long, long time."

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BEIJING (AP) — Celebrities like basketball star Yao Ming have helped energize China's animal rights movement by speaking out against shark fin soup and bear bile tonics, an animal welfare group said...
BEIJING (AP) — Celebrities like basketball star Yao Ming have helped energize China's animal rights movement by speaking out against shark fin soup and bear bile tonics, an animal welfare group said...
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09:28 PM on 02/22/2012
This article is misleading. McDonald's plans to open a new restaurant daily in China. Yum Brands is opening hundreds of KFCs and Pizza Huts. This is not a step forward for animals. Stopping the killing of sharks yet snowballing the exploitation and murder of animals for fast food is not a win at all. I am very proud of the people stopping the dog and cat killing, but I wonder what they eat when the go home? Chicken, pig, fish, cow? There is no difference. There are groups doing vegan outreach, and that is a very positive sign, but I would hardly say adopting Western values is a step forward for animal rights.
~Dave Bemel, Action for Animals
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dispagi
All comments certified organic, non-GMO
09:17 PM on 02/22/2012
Now if we can only get Japan to stop killing those dolphins.
02:55 AM on 02/22/2012
This is mostly a fabulous movement whose time is long overdue in Asia, but I find
"Chinese activists have staged mass releases of cats and dogs..." more than a little worrisome. A little clarification is in order. (note to self - must do research)
08:57 PM on 02/21/2012
Thank you Ya for doing your work to prevent cruelt treatment of animals. I can't stand to see any animal mistreated. God please save them all from harm by humans.
04:20 PM on 02/21/2012
For those who don't know what Bear Bile Farming is, please do a search and read about it. I don't like comparative suffering, but it is perhaps the most brutal and cruel treatment of an animal by humans - in all history. The Asiatic Black Bear (aka The Moon Bear) is the recipient of this horrifying brutality, and although I won't go into details here let me say this: For these bears, hell is not an abstract concept. Their lives (sometimes 30 years in cages so small they can't move) is truly hell on earth.

Please read up on it and please get involved. Support the organizations that are fighting to stop this barbarism, write emails, join campaigns, tell others about it. It's great that this is finally getting some traction in China, but we in the west need to step up the pressure.
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04:16 PM on 02/21/2012
Never was much of a fan of Yao Ming's play on the court - but i am deeply impressed by his use of his celebrity in support of animal rights. Awesome. (and all too uncommon) Good on Yao.
03:52 PM on 02/21/2012
It's about time we stop allowing "ancient traditions" (snake oil sales, more like) to be an excuse for this horrible treatment of these animals. It's time for the torture to end.
03:04 PM on 02/21/2012
what is wrong with Asians...bear bile ...come on
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Hugatreetoday
Do or do not, there is no try.
03:38 PM on 02/21/2012
Ever seen tiger farms? Sad, sad, sad and despicable. People actually believe eating a particular animal part will make them virile. Stupid, stupid homosapiens.
03:03 PM on 02/21/2012
Bear bile tonic ...REALLY !
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Talk2PassiveActionVital
99% sure democracy is the answer.
02:57 PM on 02/21/2012
The truth about bear bile "farms", for those of you who think it's "inappropriate" for celebrities and other concerned individuals to push for an end to this hideous practice:

http://www.greenmuze.com/animals/wild/768-bear-bile-farming.html

http://www.piaberrend.org/bear-bile-is-not-only-very-cruel-but-can-also-cause-liver-and-kidney-damages-and-even-death/

The good news is, we can all do something about it:

http://www.thedailyactivist.com/animal-rights-vile-bile/

http://www.endbearfarming.org/en/

Fortunately for the bears, human beings who respond smugly or with indifference when told about bear bile farming are in the rapidly shrinking minority. Most people respond with shock, which then becomes a determination to help in any way they can.
02:55 PM on 02/21/2012
It's 2012 China, time to get with the program...crazy commies.
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LINY01
Kind Thoughts lead to Kind Words
02:54 PM on 02/21/2012
Every time I see an animal story like this it really saddens me. The accompanying picture is usually that of an animal that looks terrified.

So sad what we humans do to other life forms.
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Hugatreetoday
Do or do not, there is no try.
03:39 PM on 02/21/2012
When we can't even treat each other well it's no shock what we do to those beautiful life forms we share this planet with. :(
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Talk2PassiveActionVital
99% sure democracy is the answer.
02:37 PM on 02/21/2012
It's a start. A very welcome, if hideously overdue, start.

Here's some challenging information about the suffering Chinese Moon bears endure in bear bile collection "farms", for those of you with the stomach to learn the truth and the gumption to do something about it:

The truth:

http://www.greenmuze.com/animals/wild/768-bear-bile-farming.html

More that you can do about it:

http://www.thedailyactivist.com/animal-rights-vile-bile/

http://www.endbearfarming.org/en/take-action.html

Note: there are also bear bile farms in Korea. Also note: consuming bear bile has led to horrendous health problems for people taking it as a "remedy".

http://www.animalsasia.org/index.php?UID=7QWRDIAB021
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ashabot
Environmentalists are the true Conservatives.
02:30 PM on 02/21/2012
The Chinese people are quite capable of understanding on their own that, as Gandhi puts it, “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated”.
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averagezoe
Don't breed or buy while homeless animals die!
07:56 PM on 02/21/2012
One of my favorite quotes and printed on several of my T-shirts. I have to fan you just for knowing it.
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ashabot
Environmentalists are the true Conservatives.
08:47 PM on 02/21/2012
And I fan you back for the same reason. :)
jaslyn
why can't we all just get along?
02:30 PM on 02/21/2012
this is a good start. Awareness is a very slow process since practices and attitudes are cultural and take a long time to develop. We have to look no further than our own factory farming practices and it's acceptance here to see that awareness is a very slow occurence. People will take a very strong stance to maintain their food attitudes, and they turn away from all evidence that shows the cruelty involved and even if it makes them sick to maintain their chosen foods. The human brain is primitive on many levels.