This ridiculous event featured such abusive situations “…as boxing matches between kangaroos and their keepers, bears fighting and riding bicycles, and an elephant tug-of-war.”
More about this ridiculous event can be seen at
http://geari.blogspot.com/2006/10/
cruel-china-at-it-again-opens-annual.html
Article:
Shanghai cancels "Animal Olympics" after cruelty complaints
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/11/21/asia
/AS_GEN_China_Animal_Show.php
The Associated Press
Published: November 21, 2006
SHANGHAI, China: A Shanghai zoo said Tuesday it had canceled a show dubbed the "Animal Olympics" following accusations of cruelty from animal welfare groups.
The show was scrapped "out of consideration for the safety of our visitors," said a woman who answered the phone at the Shanghai Wild Animal Park's publicity department.
The woman declined to give her name and said official spokesmen were unavailable. She refused to answer questions about the cruelty accusations or give other details.
However, the Shanghai Daily newspaper quoted a park official, Su Feilong, as saying that a negative public response had prompted the cancellation.
"The games never caused any trouble before, but we received complaints this year, so we stopped them," Su was quoted as saying.
The show had featured animals in athletic-type situations, such as boxing matches between kangaroos and their keepers, bears fighting and riding bicycles, and an elephant tug-of-war.
Animal rights groups documented the acts, spread news about them on the Internet and organized letter-writing campaigns to the central government's tourism authority and Shanghai officials.
"This is degrading for the animals, insulting to our intelligence and a disaster for any possible chance of increasing respect for the wild animals we share the world with," Daniel Turner, senior program officer for Born Free's Zoocheck program, said in a statement on the British-based group's Web site.
The cancellation indicated heightened sensitivity to negative publicity about animal welfare in China, where such shows are common at zoos and animal parks and rarely draw complaints from the Chinese public. But growing concern is evident and is often linked to personal freedoms such as the right to own a pet, which used to be banned by the communist regime.
Earlier this year, mass slaughters of dogs in an effort to control rabies sparked criticism even from state-controlled media. A campaign in Beijing to enforce strict rules on dog ownership, including limiting ownership to one dog, also prompted a rare public protest earlier this month by about 500 demonstrators outside a city zoo.
"Chinese law only seeks to protect rare wild animals and there is little that can be done to publicize the importance of animal protection in general," said Tao Rongfang, of the Shanghai Small Animal Protection Association, a private voluntary group that is one of China's oldest animal welfare organizations.
"It's good to see that some of our citizens realize this problem and ... object against this," Tao said.
GEARI (the Group for the Education of Animal - Related Issues) is a non-profit educational group dedicated to assisting you in your search for information on animal rights-related issues, the environment and human health. Your reference source for animal rights information. Visit us at our web site at http://www.geari.org. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter, or Syndicate us via RSS.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search for More Content
Custom Search
Past Articles
-
▼
2006
(726)
-
▼
November
(46)
- Ugandan Wildlife Education Centre Only Near Haven ...
- Site Showcases Vegan Fashion Options by Stella Mcc...
- Group Attempting to Raise $25,000 to Remove Seven ...
- POM Juice Continues Ridiculous Animal Testing: Ca...
- Groups Call for Cancellation of Black Bear Hunt in...
- Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act Signed Into Law: B...
- Ruling Allows Group to Build First Museum Depictin...
- To Circumvent Animal Welfare Laws, Pharmaceutical ...
- Rare Abyssinian Lion Cubs Poisoned At Ethiopian Zo...
- The Party for Animals, a Dutch Animal Rights Polit...
- Despite Knowledge of the Unbelievable Cruelty, Rec...
- Groundbreaking Think tank - The World's First Dedi...
- Liberation Award Winners: Youth Pick Top Companie...
- Attorneys in Australia Form Group to Provide Pro-B...
- Tofurky (Vegetarian Alternative To Turkey) And The...
- Full List of the Most Vegetarian-Friendly Colleges...
- European Union Calls for a Ban on the Trade In Cat...
- Butterball Truth: The Life of the Thanksgiving Tur...
- Undercover Footage Shows Reality of Turkey Hatcher...
- New Jersey State Commissioner Called Off 2006 Bear...
- China Cancels Ridiculous and Cruel "Animal Olympics"
- The Dutch Party For Animals Poised for Historic Wi...
- Iceland Kills Endangered Fin Whale: First Illegal ...
- Coalition of Marine Scientists Has Launched a Camp...
- Australia Live Animal Exports Again Cause of Signi...
- Orangutans May Soon Be Extinct Due to Slash-And-Bu...
- List of the Most Vegetarian-Friendly College or Un...
- Unseasonably Warm Weather in Russia has Affected B...
- Wisconsin Humane Society Joins Group in Calling fo...
- Groups Sue New York State Seeking To Ban the Produ...
- Activists Hold First Ever Animal Rights Demonstrat...
- To Attend to Slander and Falsehoods Put Out by Bus...
- Secret Wild Goat Cull Goes On In Snowdonia in Nort...
- Deer Killing Begins on Land of Catholic seminary i...
- House Passes Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (HR 4...
- The National Park Service Is Seeking Anyone with I...
- Group Loses Bid to Stop the Use of Low Powered Rif...
- Groups Schedule UCLA Press Conference to Focus on ...
- Stop US House from Passing Federal Animal Enterpri...
- European Countries Continue Extermination of Alpin...
- Despite Government Assurances That Animal Testing ...
- New York University (NYU) School Of Medicine Expan...
- Santa Monica Police and FBI Raid Homes in Probe of...
- After Retirement, What Happens To New York City Po...
- Wisconsin 6th Congressional District Democratic Ca...
- Hollywood Star Julia Roberts Goes Against Advice o...
-
▼
November
(46)
No comments:
Post a Comment