日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

Home / Government / Central Government News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Ministry Denies Animal Cruelty
Adjust font size:

A spokesman for the forestry administration yesterday defended the country's efforts to improve the welfare of wild animals in response to what he said were unfair foreign media reports.

Cao Qingyao, a spokesman for the State Forestry Administration (SFA), said the country has taken effective measures to better regulate the raising of wild animals and made obvious achievements in protecting them.

"There have been huge improvements in wild animal welfare in China," he told a press conference yesterday.

He was speaking in response to reports by some foreign media that said it is "inhumane" to extract bile from the gallbladders of farmed bears.

Calling the reports "unfair and incomplete", Cao said they failed to give a full picture of the country's efforts to improve animal welfare.

He said the artificial cultivation of wildlife had played an important role in wildlife conservation.

Wildlife welfare

And, as the government body in charge of wildlife conservation, the SFA has taken a series of measures to improve captive wildlife welfare, he said.

For example, standards had been introduced to improve such things as sanitation and feeding at wildlife cultivation centers, Cao said.

In addition, 16 wildlife first-aid stations have been established and more than 300 medical centers have been set up by local people to care for sick and injured animals and help them return to the wild.

Previously tolerated, the feeding of small animals to predators in zoos has been banned, Cao said, while circus operators have been given strict guidelines on the treatment of animals.

The SFA has also cracked down on the illegal trade in cultivated wildlife, especially monkeys bred for use in experiments.

At the end of 2005, just 23 laboratories nationwide were licensed to trade in monkeys and these had to pass an annual examination, Cao said.

Chinese scientists began experimenting with the extraction of bile from farmed bears in the mid-1980s as a way to stop the endangered animals being hunted for it.

The bile is considered an essential ingredient in traditional Chinese medicine by its proponents and its efficacy is unmatched by any substitute, they say.

Early bile-extraction technology involved implanting metal or plastic tubes into the bears, which caused them tremendous pain.

However, since the enactment of the Wildlife Protection Law in 1988, improved methods have been adopted, such as the use of tubes made of bear tissue, to make the process painless.

"Although the technology of extracting bile from live bears has been improved, it is still hard to say how much impact it has on their health," an animal expert who asked not to be named, told China Daily.

(China Daily September 13, 2007)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Joint Efforts to Protect China's Ecology
- Tender Care Save Dying Monkey
- Shanghai Looks to Save Amphibians
- Siberian Tiger Cub Gets Foster-Parents
- Beijing to Give Home to Its Stray Pets
Most Viewed >>
Questions and Answers More
Q: What kind of law is there in place to protect pandas?
A: In order to put the protection of giant pandas and other wildlife under the law, the Chinese government put the protection of rare animals and plants into the Constitution.
Useful Info
- Who's Who in China's Leadership
- State Structure
- China's Political System
- China's Legislative System
- China's Judicial System
- Mapping out 11th Five-Year Guidelines
Links
- Chinese Embassies
- International Department, Central Committee of CPC
- State Organs Work Committee of CPC
- United Front Work Department, Central Committee of CPC
主站蜘蛛池模板: 徐闻县| 台东市| 许昌县| 开化县| 平顶山市| 济源市| 盐源县| 诸城市| 肇庆市| 互助| 社会| 四平市| 和平县| 师宗县| 阳春市| 吉水县| 怀宁县| 乾安县| 乐至县| 西平县| 新平| 和政县| 合肥市| 柯坪县| 深圳市| 天峻县| 大庆市| 灌云县| 江安县| 华池县| 敦化市| 中牟县| 津南区| 巍山| 澄江县| 荆门市| 辛集市| 阳朔县| 晋中市| 新泰市| 天长市|