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Dog meat could be thing of the past as ban considered

Dog meat could finally disappear from restaurant menus in South Korea after the government appointed a taskforce to look at banning eating the animals.

The move comes after Moon Jae-in, the president and a known animal-lover, suggested that the time had come to ban the sale and consumption of dog meat.

Eating dog has been part of Korean culture for centuries, although its popularity has plummeted in recent years. There were fewer than 100 dog meat restaurants in Seoul in 2019, and the last major dog meat market closed earlier this year.

Lee Won Bok, head of the Korea Association for Animal Protection, said: ‘‘South Korea is the only developed country where people eat dogs, an act that is undermining our international image.

‘‘Even if the K-pop band BTS and the (Korean drama) Squid Game are ranked No. 1 in the world, foreigners are still associating South Korea with dog meat and the Korean War.’’

Dogs are consumed as food in North Korea, China and Vietnam as well as in South Korea.

Younger people in general find dog meat a less appetising dining option and, meanwhile, pets are growing in popularity.

A poll conducted last year by Humane Society International/ Korea showed that 84 per cent of Koreans do not or will not eat dog and 60 per cent saying they support a legal ban on the trade. But the plans will face opposition from older generations of Koreans who insist the meat is a traditional part of the nation’s cuisine that supposedly provides stamina and increases male virility.

The government said that ‘‘public awareness of their basic rights and animal rights issues are tangled in a complicated manner’’ when it comes to dog meat consumption.

Kim boo-Kyum, the prime minister, said: ‘‘The controversy over dog meat consumption is not new and has persisted for over 30 years, since the 1988 Seoul Olympics.’’

‘‘With the sharp increase in the number of households with pets and growing public interest in animal rights and animal welfare, we are witnessing increasing calls against viewing meat consumption as part of our old food culture,’’ Yonhap News quoted Kim as saying.

The dog meat industry is also expected to resist any legal ban.

Currently, dog meat is neither legal nor explicitly banned in South Korea.

Animal rights campaigners and pet-owners, however, welcomed the news yesterday.

‘‘As someone who has witnessed the cruelty first-hand, for me it’s the suffering of the dogs that motivates me to achieve a ban,’’ Nara Kim, who leads the organisation’s End Dog Meat campaign, said.

World

en-nz

2021-11-27T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-11-27T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://stuff.pressreader.com/article/281822877069239

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