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Following Yesterdays Exclusive, The Daily Mirror H..

 


Following yesterday’s exclusive, the Daily Mirror has published a second article exposing the cat meat trade in Vietnam.

❗️ Please click here to read and share it: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/vile-cat-thief-who-stolen-30506723

In the article, Nada Farhoud interviews a notorious cat thief who has trapped and sold close to 1,500 innocent felines into the trade.

“My children hate what I do and feel guilty,” he says. “They’ve asked me to stop but I’ve told them I have no choice.”

Though upsetting to read, the article provides a glimmer of hope. Public opinion is shifting, particularly among the younger generation. An increasing number of Vietnamese citizens are turning against the trade, and the government is listening.

“We don’t support these activities. We hate the cruelty,” says the deputy head of the Department of Animal Health in Dong Thap, where Soi Dog recently saw the closure of a large-scale cat slaughterhouse. “The main reason we don’t do more is because of the [lack of a] law.”

Please continue to stand with us as we push, at the highest levels of government, for such laws to be introduced to protect companion animals in Vietnam.



Following yesterday’s exclusive, the Daily Mirror has published a second article exposing the cat meat trade in Vietnam.

❗️ Please click here to read and share it: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/vile-cat-thief-who-stolen-30506723

In the article, Nada Farhoud interviews a notorious cat thief who has trapped and sold close to 1,500 innocent felines into the trade.

“My children hate what I do and feel guilty,” he says. “They’ve asked me to stop but I’ve told them I have no choice.”

Though upsetting to read, the article provides a glimmer of hope. Public opinion is shifting, particularly among the younger generation. An increasing number of Vietnamese citizens are turning against the trade, and the government is listening.

“We don’t support these activities. We hate the cruelty,” says the deputy head of the Department of Animal Health in Dong Thap, where Soi Dog recently saw the closure of a large-scale cat slaughterhouse. “The main reason we don’t do more is because of the [lack of a] law.”

Please continue to stand with us as we push, at the highest levels of government, for such laws to be introduced to protect companion animals in Vietnam.

Source: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=683726223785217&set=..



 

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Soi Dog Foundation

Established in 2003 in Phuket, Thailand, Soi Dog is Southeast Asia's largest organisation helping stray animals. The Gill Dalley sanctuary in Phuket is home to over 1,600 animals. Soi Dog also has a treatment facility in Bangkok and responds to crisis situations throughout Thailand. The organisation is dedicated to implementing effective, sustainable solutions that reduce the suffering of dogs and cats in Asia, runs entirely on donations and works efficiently so all donations are used to help animals as effectively as possible.

The foundation is a registered not-for-profit organisation in Thailand, the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, Switzerland, France and Holland. It has a maximum 4-star rating with Charity Navigator, the largest and most-utilised independent non-profit evaluator in the United States, a platinum seal of transparency from Candid, the world’s largest source of non-profit information, a Top Rated award from Greatnonprofits and the Travelers’ Choice award from Tripadvisor.

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