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China's animal lovers fight illegal cat meat trade

SUZHOU: When Han Jiali’s beloved cat Dabai was taken from her Shanghai home last year, she embarked on a hunt for her pet that took her deep into the bowels of China’s underground feline meat trade.

Most people in China do not eat cat meat, but an estimated four million furry friends are slaughtered for food each year in an illegal market that includes areas of Guangdong province, neighbouring Guangxi and beyond, according to Humane Society International.

Han, who has spent thousands of dollars and weeks at a time tracking cat meat traders through China, has uncovered a supply chain preying on urban strays and outdoor pets in the region surrounding Shanghai.

Her quest to find Dabai led her to grimy processing plants in Guangdong, where she saw skinned cat carcasses piled in crates and sacks of fur.

She found village restaurants that openly advertised cat meat and unscrupulous sellers who passed it off as mutton or rabbit.

“I had to admit then that my cat was gone,” an emotional Han told AFP.

“She had been eaten.”

Now she is determined to save other cats from the same fate and has spent the past year filing police reports, tracking down thieves and sending petitions to the Guangdong government.

It’s a dangerous mission that she says has resulted in death threats from cat meat traders and an incident in December where a man deliberately drove into her car at a highway rest stop.

“I’ve gotten scared and thought about turning away and pretending I never saw all this,” she said.

“But if I disappear, and stay silent, who will save (the cats) from this miserable situation?”

CAT ISLAND

There the animals were taken in by Mengtaiqi Cat and Dog Manor, a small family-run shelter in a marshy area popular with anglers.

Gu Ming, a 45-year-old former pharmaceutical industry professional who lives at the shelter with his wife, told AFP that many of the cats rescued in Zhangjiagang had their limbs crushed under the weight of hundreds of animals.

Dozens have died so far from injuries and viral infections that spread rapidly among the closely packed, distressed animals, he said.

Volunteers at the shelter isolated sick animals in makeshift quarantine cages and called in vets to vaccinate and sterilise the healthier cats.

Eventually, after weeks of treatment and isolation, the first batch of rescues was moved to a large outdoor enclosure with trees and rows of blanket-lined beds.

Gu covers the shelter’s expenses out of his own pocket and only accepts non-cash donations such as equipment and kibble, seeking to avoid the public distrust that fundraisers often attract in China.

He plans to move all the cats onto a small island near a local temple, which is currently dotted with tiny huts and home to a few dozen felines previously rescued by the shelter.

The island’s four-legged residents flocked to greet Gu this month as he crossed the gated bridge that keeps the cats in.

At midday, the animals lolled on the grass and napped under trees – an idyllic existence a far cry from the cramped meat truck crates.

Gu said he was moved by the many animal lovers who had offered help after seeing state media reports about the Zhangjiagang cats.

But still, he said: “We have to push for national legislation, because depending on individuals or a few groups is not realistic”.

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