A restaurant specializing cat meat in Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province, was forced to close
Saturday after the protest of some 40 activists that drew a large
crowd including children.
Isobel, founder of a cat-protection website based in Shenzhen
and organizer of the protest, and other activists started the
protest at 4 PM with a white rose on the chest in memory of
the slaughtered cats, holding banners and handing out handbills to
denounce eating cats and dogs.
Isobel in her 30s told Xinhua over telephone on Sunday that they
chose the restaurant Fangji Cat Meatball because it slaughtered
cats in the street and "it is very bad for the students from nearby
schools".
One of the banner read "cats and dogs are friends of human
being. Have respect for lives by stopping eating them please!"
In many parts of China especially the southern regions, people
take cat meat as their favorite diet. Previous reports said that in
Guangzhou alone the citizens ate 10,000 cats every day in the
winter season.
The activists, mostly women, poured into the restaurant
demanding its owner to set free the cats. They burst into tears
upon finding a skinned one in a fridge.
There were no live cats in the restaurant as the owner,
according to an eyewitness, relocated them to other places on
Friday night.
"I cannot go on with my business, and I will not sell cat meat
any more,” the restaurant owner said after removing his shop sign
from the wall. However, he persisted in Guangdong there is a
tradition in eating cats.
"We will continue to protest if this restaurant still sells cat
meat," Isobel said.
To her satisfaction, many students on the spot told Isobel that
they would keep a close watch on the restaurant and report to her
if anything happens to cats.
Eating cats and dogs is often seen in Guangdong, but "you cannot
keep eating only because it is a tradition," Isobel argued.
Miss Shenzhen for the year of 2005 Gao Haiyun also went to the
restaurant to protest, calling passengers to "stop eating cats and
dogs and become civilized".
(Xinhua News Agency June 18, 2006)