Film spotlights Taiji dolphin killing

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2009:

 

TAIJI, Japan–The Cove has not stopped the annual Taiji
dolphin massacres– not yet, anyhow. But the award-winning film did
appear to slow down the killing at the start of the 2009 “drive
fishery” season, and–even before release in Japan–is bringing the
massacres to the attention of the often shocked Japanese public as
nothing before ever has.
“Moviegoers who have seen The Cove, directed by Louie
Psihoyos, said they were stunned by the cruelty of the killings,
captured by concealed cameras. Many newspapers have blasted the
traditional coastal whaling practice in Taiji, Wakayama Prefecture,
which is not subject to the International Whaling Commission’s ban on
commercial whaling,” summarized Toshihiro Yamanaka for Asahi
Shimbun. The second largest newspaper in Japan, Asahi Shimbun
reaches about 8.2 million readers daily.
“When I found out, I cried,” Osaka resident Keiko Hirao
told John M. Glionna of the Los Angeles Times.
Director Louis Psihoyos, a former National Geographic
photographer, has pledged to keep the spotlight on Taiji by making
The Cove available in Japan as a free download, if he fails to
secure a commercial distributor. The Cove has won more than a dozen
awards, including the audience award at the 25th annual Sundance
Film Festival in Park City, Utah, and has aired widely in other
parts of the world, but despite much media notice in Japan, has not
yet been screened there.

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China completes draft animal welfare legislation

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2009:
BEIJING, MOSCOW– China on July 7, 2009 announced the
completion of a draft national animal welfare law. To be published
for public comment in August 2009, “The proposed draft clearly
delineates how animals should be raised, transported, and
slaughtered,” reported China Central Television, the state
broadcasting company. “It also calls for penalties and criminal
punishment for animal abuse. The draft law covers wildlife, farm
and companion animals.”
“Severe violators could be sent to prison, while lighter
punishments would include fines and detention of fewer than 15 days,”
elaborated a report in the English-language Global Times.

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Animal Birth Control gains speed

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2009:
CHENNAI, DELHI, MUMBAI –Indian minister of state for
environment and forests Jairam Ramesh served notice in July and
August 2009 speaking appearances that he means to put wheels under
the Indian national Animal Birth Control program.
Now Chinny Krishna, who engin-eered the ABC program, needs
to put new wheels under the Blue Cross of India surgical team to keep
up with increasing demands for service. “We have been inundated with
requests from municipalities asking us to undertake ABC,” Krishna
told ANIMAL PEOPLE. “In addition to the cost of doing more
operations, we are handicapped for want of enough vehicles, since
all these new areas are some distance from Chennai,” where the Blue
Cross of India is based.

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Castaway dogs trouble Malaysian conscience

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2009:
PULAU KETAM, Malaysia– Striving to rescue more than 150
dogs who survived being deliberately marooned on a remote swampy
island in the Straits of Malacca, the Malaysian animal charities
Furry Friends Farm, Selangor SPCA, and Save A Stray had among them
caught just a few dozen in a month of effort as ANIMAL PEOPLE went to
press–but they had stimulated awareness of surgically sterilizing
dogs wherever television, radio, and online media reach in the
Malay language, including Singa-pore and Indonesia as well as
Malaysia.
The Pulau Ketam dog rescue showed promise of expanding into
the beginnings of a regional Animal Birth Control program, modeled
after ABC successes in India. Malaysian Department of Veterinary
Services director general Abd Aziz Jamaluddin told Lestor Kong of The
Star that the department will send 10 veterinarians to Palau Ketam to
sterilize dogs on June 27-28.

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Border fighting over elephants & tigers

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2009:
KATHMANDU, Nepal; Jalpaiguri, India–For the second time
in two years elephant incursions across the Nepalese/Indian border
have inflamed tensions in Jhapa, a Nepalese district north of West
Bengal.
“With the Brahmaputra plains in India’s Assam state flooded
by the monsoons, the elephants began migrating,” said the
Indo-Asian News Service. Nepalese police wounded six elephants who
forded the Mechi river to enter Nepal circa June 11, 2009, and
allegedly also shot at Indian forest guards who followed the
elephants into Nepal and tried to stop the shooting.

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Vietnamese cholera outbreak from dog meat

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2009:
HANOI–The National Institute of Hygiene & Epidemiology on
May 18, 2009 temporarily closed at least a dozen dog slaughterhouses.
“Samples of dog meat, both cooked and uncooked, from the Ha
Dong district of Hanoi tested positive for the cholera bacterium,”
The Youth newspaper reported. Nine northern Vietnamese provinces
have had recent cholera outbreaks. Bureau of Preventive Health chief
Nguyen Huy Nga warned on May 15 that up to 70% of the patients became
ill after eating dog meat.
The cholera outbreaks came two months after two Hanoi-based
national health institutes linked a pair of human rabies deaths to
eating dogs.

Kerala capital to obey Indian dog law?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2009:
THIRUVANATHAPURAM–Three years of defiance of the Indian
national dog policy may be at an end in Thiruvanathapuram, the
capital city of Kerala state.
Both The Hindu and the Indian Express on April 25, 2009
reported that mayor C. Jayan Babu on April 3 reluctantly suspended
killing street dogs after receiving notice from the Animal Welfare
Board of India that the program violates a December 2008 ruling by
the Supreme Court of India.
From the ruling until obliged to stop, the Indian Express
said, the Babu administration paid 18 dogcatchers two and a half
times the previous rate per dog caught.

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Rabies risk is medically identified from eating dogs & cats

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2009:

HANOI–People who prepare dog and cat meat for human
consumption are at risk of contracting rabies, warned medical
researcher Heiman Wertheim, M.D. in the March 18, 2009 edition of
PLoS Medicine
PLoS Medicine is a peer-reviewed open-accesss online
scientific journal published by the Public Library of Science. With
offices in San Francisco and Cambridge, England, PLoS Medicine
“gives the highest priority to papers on the conditions and risk
factors that cause the greatest losses in years of healthy life
worldwide,” state the editors.
Wertheim and colleagues from the National Institute of
Infectious & Tropical Diseases and the National Institute of Hygiene
& Epidemiology in Hanoi, Vietnam, researched the association of dog
meat with rabies after encountering two cases.

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India balks at EU mention of animal welfare in trade pact

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2009:
BRUSSELS, NEW DELHI–The government of
Indian prime minister Man-mohan Singh reportedly
objects to the inclusion of the phrase “animal
welfare” in the provisional edition of a recently
formalized protocol for negotiating a free trade
agreement between India and the European Union.
The European Parliament approved the
draft protocol for completing the EU-India Free
Trade Agreement on March 26, 2009, more than
five years after negotiations began with India in
November 2003.
The text that reportedly offends the
Singh government is scarcely provocative. Listed
tenth among 62 enumerated “General Issues,” the
sentence in question “Considers it important that
the Free Trade Agreement confirms the provisions
of the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade
and the Sanitary and Phytosanitary Agreement;
calls on the Commission in this regard to address
outstanding issues such as animal welfare.”
This would appear to be consistent with
Article 51-A[g] of the Constitution of India,
authored by Jawaharal Nehru, the first prime
minister of India, which states that “It shall
be the fundamental duty of every citizen of India
to protect and improve the Natural Environment
including forests, lakes, rivers and wildlife,
and to have compassion for all living creatures.”
However, reported the Financial Express
from New Delhi on April 15, 2009, “India has
opposed a reported move by the European Union to
include animal welfare issues in the World Trade
Organisation negotiations. Reacting to reports
of EU pitching for the inclusion of animal rights
in the WTO talks, official sources said these
were attempts by developed countries to block
exports from developing countries using these
standards.”
An unnamed Indian official told the
Financial Express, “These are non-tariff
barriers to curb exports,” which the official
projected would “throw many people out of jobs in
developing countries.”
Of most apparent concern to the Singh
cabinet are movement within the European
Parliament to strengthen standards for animal use
in laboratories and for livestock transport and
slaughter.
The European Parliament Agriculture
Committee on March 31, 2009 approved amended
rules governing animal experimentation which,
while much weaker than animal advocates had hoped
for, will be much stronger than a new Indian
regulatory regime introduced by the Singh
administration on March 5, 2009.
Explained online commentator Smita Joshi,
listed as information contact for Vivada
Chemicals PLtd., of Mumbai, “A proposal from
the department of pharmaceuticals now being
considered by Manmohan Singh seeks to make
comprehensive changes in the laws governing
research funding, drug discovery, clinical
trials, and approvals at different stages, so
that Indian drug makers can re-orient themselves
from being successful copiers of costly
multinational brands to owners of scientific
breakthroughs.

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