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Vice health minister denounces dog purges

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Agence France-Presse Thursday August 10, 2006 8:30 AM ET

 

China's dog slaughter not necessary

 

A controversial mass slaughter of dogs in China may not be necessary with

recent incidents of rabies no cause for alarm.

 

" Rabies is not on the rise overall, " vice health minister Jiang Zuojun said

when asked about recent orders in two provinces to kill over half a million

dogs.

 

" In such a big country, it's normal for a few cases to occur, " a health

official said Thursday.

 

Jiang said the rabies cases were mostly in the countryside, an area where

pet dogs were not widely vaccinated against the disease.

 

He recommended vaccinating dogs rather than mass killings when asked about

how to deal with the recent rabies cases.

 

News last week of plans by authorities in the eastern province of Shandong

to kill up to half a million dogs, following the death of 16 people from

rabies in the past eight months, made headlines worldwide.

 

The deaths occurred in 16 villages in Jining prefecture, where 500,000 dogs

were kept as pets or guard dogs, state press reported last week.

 

Local epidemic prevention authorities had ordered the killing of all dogs

within a five-kilometer (3.1-mile) radius of each village, state press said.

 

A county in southwest China's Yunnan province a week earlier ordered 50,546

dogs killed after rabies led to the deaths of three people.

 

Owners have been ordered to kill their pets or face having teams of local

police club the dogs to death in front of them.

 

Some owners have used methods including hanging their dogs, electrocuting

them and clubbing them to death, while others used drugs, according to state

press reports.

 

The canine slaughter ignited massive opposition from animal rights activists

and others on Internet chatrooms and Chinese media.

 

" If local officials had raised awareness and done a good job of vaccinating

dogs... they could have completely prevented this large scale slaughter of

dogs, even when discovering cases of rabies, " said Beijing-based activist

Liu Di, who runs a shelter for abandoned animals.

 

People writing online said Chinese villagers were too poor to vaccinate

their dogs and that was the core reason for the persistent rabies problem in

China despite the existence of good vaccines.

 

Liu was quoted by state media as saying she will appeal to the national

legislature to stop such dog culls and to require the use of more humane and

painless methods if dogs have to be put to death.

 

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