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 Posted by Jim N on 08/23/06 09:30 
HELP - Calls for China fur ban as animal cruelty exposed .  See the 
video proof as animals are skinned alive. - GRAPHIC WARNING!!  NOT FOR 
CHILDREN!! 
 
 
 The full HORRIFIC video can be seen here. Please use ADULT CAUTION in 
the presence of children. 
 
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 
 
http://www.peta2.com/takecharge/swf/fur_farm.swf 
 
 
----------------------------------------------------------- 
Full report by 
Dennis Chong 
 
 
Animal rights groups have called for an embargo on fur produced on the 
mainland in light of an investigation that exposed the daily 
operations of Chinese fur farms - with video footage showing animals 
skinned alive. 
 
Shocked local and international activists say the findings provide new 
evidence that people of conscience should not wear fur, and that the 
legitimacy of the fur trade in Hong Kong - one of the mainland's major 
partners re-exporting 80 percent of its fur - should be reviewed. 
 
The calls came after the 2005 Hong Kong International Fur and Fashion 
Fair ended on Monday, which local fur dealers heralded as evidence of 
strong growth in demand for Hong Kong fur products. 
 
A total of 172 exhibitors, including 72 from 13 countries, 
participated in the four-day event. 
 
But the video footage - which shows batteries of animals trapped in 
cage rows and a raccoon dog, hung on its hind legs, being skinned - is 
fast gaining attention with digitalized video clips being circulated 
rapidly over the Internet. 
 
The investigation's findings re-freshed the decade-long battle between 
activists and the multibillion-dollar business, with local dealers 
rebuffing the probe as over-generalizing the situation and one that 
``will not help to improve animal welfare.'' 
 
Swiss Animal Protection, Britain's Care for the Wild and East 
International jointly conducted a probe into the mainland fur farming 
business last year and recently released a 15-page report. 
 
The investigation, for which undercover activists visited several 
farms in the northeastern Hebei province, holding from 50 to 6,000 
animals, found ``animals were universally handled roughly and confined 
to rows of inappropriate, small wire cages.'' 
 
``Animals are stunned with repeated blows to the head or swung against 
the ground,'' the report says. 
 
``Starting from the hind legs, workers then wrench the animals' skin 
from their suspended bodies, until it comes off over the head ... a 
significant number of animals remain fully conscious during this 
process.'' 
 
Calling the findings ``horrendous,'' the three groups called on the 
mainland to immediately outlaw inhumane slaughtering methods and the 
European Parliament to ban the import of products made of mainland 
fur. 
 
The report also states Hong Kong is the biggest exporter of mainland 
fur, taking 80 percent of the trade. 
 
``I am at a loss to explain what goes through the mind of those people 
who do not care if they have killed an animal or just rendered it 
unconscious. How can you justify skinning an animal while it is still 
conscious?'' asked Mark Rissi, a Swiss Animal Protection campaigner 
and an author of the report. 
 
 
He said the findings have spurred outrage in Switzerland with three 
department store chains stopping the sale of textiles with fur 
trimmings originating from China. 
 
Cynthia Su, director of London-based East International, declined to 
say how the investigators entered the farms, only saying it was made 
possible through ``international efforts'' and that the videos were 
shot inside the farms. 
 
Hong Kong Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals' deputy 
director, Fiona Woodhouse, said ``a large amount of the world's fur 
productions have effectively relocated to China where cheap labor and 
lack of regulations have allowed production to become more 
cost-effective.'' 
 
 
About 85 percent of the world's fur items originate from farms. While 
Scandinavian and Eastern European farms have taken the brunt of 
accusations, the burgeoning mainland sector is receiving growing 
attention as it starts to dominate the world's market. 
 
``Sensationalized campaigns are not the solution,'' the Hong Kong Fur 
Federation said in response to the report. 
 
While a growing number of mainland fur farmers are introducing 
``Western standards,'' it said, the report's conclusion provides a 
``sweeping generalization'' about the situation in China. 
 
The federation also refutes the claim that the majority of fur 
produced in Chinese farms is exported overseas, saying the vast 
majority of exported fur products are made of European or North 
American skins, and that items produced locally are for domestic use. 
 
It says the key to improving animal welfare is to allow access of 
local fur products to the international market and improve the 
livelihood of fur farmers. 
 
Despite several approaches by The Standard, the federation refused to 
elaborate on its statement and clarify Hong Kong's role in handling 
mainland fur - given pelts undergo a number of processes, often in 
various countries, before reaching consumers. 
 
 
According to mainland Customs, which was quoted in the report, the net 
volume of fur imports and exports in China hit US$997.6 million 
(HK$7.8 billion) in 2003, up 42.5 percent from the previous year. 
 
While more than 95 percent of the fur clothing is sold overseas, 80 
percent of the trade is handled by the SAR, the report says. Hong Kong 
exports in the sector hit HK$3 billion last year, a growth of 31 
percent from 2003. 
 
 
http://www.careforthewild.com/files/Furbriefingdoc206_paginated.pdf 
 
Swiss Animal Protection SAP 
http://www.animal-protection.net/furtrade/report_fur_china.pdf 
 
Photographs 
See some of more then  500 photos from inside Chinas fur farms. 
http://www.animal-protection.net/ 
 
HSUS 
http://tinyurl.com/8xc58 
 
Fir is dead. 
http://www.furisdead.com/feat/ChineseFurFarms/
 
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