China drafts laws to safeguard animal welfare
4/11/2005 11:38
China is pressing on with drafting and revising laws to safeguard the welfare
of poultry and livestock and to ensure food security and public health as the
bird flu problem has aroused the worldwide attention. A new law on stock
farming is being drafted and the existing law on animal epidemic prevention is
being revised, said Assistant Minister of Commerce Huang Hai on
Thursday. But, he did not give more details about the drafting of the new law
and the revision of the existing law. "Animal welfare is closely connected
with food security and public health," Huang told an international forum on
animal welfare and meat product security held in Beijing. Currently,
incessant bird flu cases have triggered great concern around the world. "The
bird flu that happened in some provinces in China last week has been brought
under control and no cases of human infection have been reported," said Chen
Xianyi, director of the Emergency Office under China's Ministry of
Health. Some European experts asserted that bird flu was connected with the
improper breeding of birds and poultry. "The swine streptococosis endemic, a
pig-borne disease, which took place in southwest China's Sichuan Province this
July was found to have direct links with the foul environment for raising pigs,"
Huang said. A total of 204 human infection cases were reported in the
pig-borne epidemic, leaving about 40 people dead. "To safeguard animal
welfare is not only a demonstration of progress of human civilization and
humanitarian spirit, but also closely linked with the health of the human
beings," he said. It is universally acknowledged that such things are basic
for safeguarding animal welfare as offering a favorable living environment and
breeding condition for animals, satisfying their physiological and instinct
demands, and avoiding making them feel pain and fright when transporting and
slaughtering them. Animal welfare is by no means exclusive to the western
countries - the idea has long been existed in traditional Chinese culture, said
Donald Broom, chairman of the Council of Europe Farm Animal Protection
Committee. "No matter the idea of benevolence held by the Confucianism or the
tradition of protecting living things in Buddhism, they all show the concerns
about the little creatures," said Broom, also a professor at Cambridge
University. As modern animal husbandry provides rich food varieties for
humans, the public is becoming increasingly fearful about food
security. Earlier, mad cow triggered more than US$8 billion of trade loss in
Britain. Foot-and-mouth disease occurred in Europe from 2001 to 2003 and caused
the killing of nearly 1 million heads of livestock and also, billions of dollars
of economic loss. The bird flu outbreaks since 2004 have brought disaster to
16 countries and regions. According to incomplete figures, at least 384,000
birds or poultry have been infected, nearly 463,000 have died, and more than 140
million have been slaughtered. The resultant economic and social losses are
complex and yet to be calculated. "A little bit of carelessness could bring
about a deadly strike by a certain animal disease on the animal husbandry of a
certain region, and the ensuing food security issues will then threaten public
health," said Li Yuanping, director of the Imports and Exports Food Security
Department with the State Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and
Quarantine. Statistics show that China reported 600 million pigs, 300 million
sheep, 50 million cattle and 1.2 billion poultry in 2004, and in the global meat
production, China's pork and mutton production ranked No.1 in the world; poultry
meat, No.2; and beef, No. 3. To a large country of livestock and poultry and
a large country that slaughters and processes like China, it has unusual meaning
to heed the issue of animal welfare, said Joyce D'silva, chief executive officer
of the Compassion in World farming. "As society progresses and becomes more
civilized, animal welfare has become an important criterion for testing the
level of a nation's civilization as well as an important condition for carrying
out international trade," said Song Wei, director of the teaching research
office of the Business School of the University of Science and Technology of
China.
Xinhua news
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