The Dual Significance of Hong Kong’s New Pigeon Feeding Ban

Government authorities have unveiled a plan commencing in August to prohibit the feeding of feral pigeons in Hong Kong. The chief rationale provided is that such activities threaten the survival and wellbeing of pigeons due to an increased risk of disease and parasite transmission. The move will extend existing provisions under section 17C of the Wild Animals Protection Ordinance (Cap.170), which already forbids the feeding of monkeys, boars, and tree sparrows, to encompass pigeons.

Violators will face a maximum penalty of a HK$10,000 fine and one year of imprisonment upon conviction (per section 18). Additionally, offenders could be handed an immediate on-site fixed fine of HK$5,000.

Courtesy of Saskia Sinha

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Kim McCoy
Alarming Cat Abuse Cases: A Global Crisis In Feline Welfare

Recent reports of cat abuse have shed light on a distressing rend in Singapore and South Korea, where innocent felines have become the victims of cruelty and neglect. These incidents have sparked outrage among animal welfare advocates and raised concerns about the need for stricter laws and increased public awareness. Unfortunately, the same rings true in Hong Kong, further highlighting the urgent need for collective action to protect these vulnerable animals.

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Kim McCoy
New licence conditions and code of practice implemented for Hong Kong cat traders.

The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) has implemented the Licence Conditions and Code of Practice for cat trading since April 1, to ensure that cats put up for sale by animal traders should be obtained from approved sources and microchipped.

The newly introduced Licence Conditions and Code of Practice were aimed at tightening the control of cats offered for sale by animal traders, to safeguard public health and animal welfare.

Although a positive step forward to protect cats in Hong Kong, there will undoubtably be those who look for loopholes in the law in order to make money, often at the expense of animals. But what should we be looking out for and what can we do?

Courtesy of Eufrosina Liu

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Kim McCoy
Hong Kong father and son arrested for suspected abuse of over 40 cats and dogs.

A Hong Kong father and son have been arrested for suspected animal cruelty after police at the weekend discovered 39 dogs and two cats held in “extremely poor” conditions in a flat.

The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) said on Sunday it was looking after more than half of the animals and the rest were being cared for by the Agricultural, Fisheries, and Conservation Department.

The SPCA said 24 of the recovered animals were taken to the group’s Tsing Yi centre, where a veterinary team carried out check-ups and provided care overnight. The other 17 animals are being cared for by the department, which said on Sunday night they were now in stable condition, pending further examination.

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Kim McCoy
Pacific, Māori leaders seek legal personhood for whales.

Māori and Pacific leaders have signed a declaration seeking to grant tohorā, or whales, legal personhood.

He Whakaputanga Moana, signed by Kiingi Tuheitia and Tou Travel Ariki, head of House Ariki in the Cook Islands, aims to give tohorā more robust protections that are recognised internationally.

The declaration also seeks to protect the rights of tohorā to migrate freely, conserve and grow dwindling populations, establish marine protected areas, and use mātauranga Māori alongside science for better protections and set-up a dedicated fund for whale conservation.

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Kim McCoy
Red panda found in luggage of smuggling suspects at Thailand airport

Thai customs officials have arrested six Indian nationals for attempting to smuggle dozens of wild animals, including a red panda and cotton-top tamarin monkey, out of the country.

Officers found 87 animals, including monitor lizards, birds and snakes, packaged inside the suspects’ checked luggage at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi airport. They were trying to fly to Mumbai.

Thailand is one of the world’s major hubs for illegal wildlife smuggling, a multibillion-dollar transnational trade, due to its rich biodiversity, location and infrastructure. Smugglers use Thailand to transit animals to be sold in China and Vietnam, and recent years have seen an increase in trafficking to India.

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Kim McCoy
Man who smuggled 440kg of pangolin scales sentenced to 4 years' imprisonment in Hong Kong.

An unemployed man has been sentenced to four years in jail after he was found guilty of smuggling 440kg (970lbs) of scales from endangered pangolins into Hong Kong.

District Court Judge Clement Lee Hing-nin on Wednesday sentenced Hong Endian, 52, after convicting him of two counts of conspiring to import and possess specimens of an endangered species, in violation of the Protection of Endangered Species of Animals and Plants Ordinance.

The Judge said the court was obliged to send a message to the public that Hong Kong had zero tolerance for smuggling or conspirators complicit in the chain of illegal imports and exports.

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Kim McCoy
Octopus Farming Ban Introduced in California

Assembly member Steve Bennett (D-38) introduced A.B. 3162, the California Oppose Cruelty to Octopuses, or OCTO, Act, to prohibit octopus farming on land or water and ban the import of farmed octopus in California.

The bill, cosponsored by Animal Legal Defense Fund and Social Compassion in Legislation, positions California as a humane leader on this developing issue, preempting the controversial and cruel industry before it has an opportunity to develop in the state.

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Kim McCoy
Cracking Down on Contraband: The Enduring Challenge of Wildlife Trafficking in Hong Kong

In August 2021, Hong Kong took a significant step in strengthening its stance against the trafficking of animal specimens. The statutory basis of the prohibition, found in Parts 2 and 3 of the Protection of Endangered Species of Animals and Plants Ordinance (Cap.586), was further concretised by the extension of Schedule 1 of the Organised and Serious Crimes Ordinance (Cap.455) to include animal smuggling offences. However, despite legal reinforcements, the spectre of this lucrative trade still looms large. Headlines in Hong Kong’s leading newspapers routinely feature images showcasing the latest million-dollar seizures by customs authorities, underscoring the pervasiveness of the issue.

The following article examines the root causes and existing legal framework governing wildlife trafficking in Hong Kong to explain the overall sense of stagnation in this field. It will also analyse the broader repercussions of the black-market industry on animal welfare. To close, strategies and reforms aimed at fortifying Hong Kong’s defences against this illicit trade will be proposed, drawing on methodologies implemented by other jurisdictions similarly targeted by international smuggling syndicates.

Courtesy of Saskia Sinha

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Kim McCoy
South Korean Aquariums Banned from Acquiring New Whales and Dolphins.

According to the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries of South Korea, from 15th December 2023, it became unlawful for public aquariums in the country to purchase new cetaceans for display, as the country revised the law about the management of zoos and aquariums.

In addition to prohibiting local aquariums from acquiring new whales and dolphins for display, these facilities will now be illegal to allow visitors to ride, touch, or feed these marine mammals.

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Kim McCoy
British Columbia Family Law Act Changes to Include Pet Custody Provisions.

The way Courts in British Columbia decide who gets to keep a family pet after a separation or divorce is changing, as amendments to the province's Family Law Act come into effect. Until now the question of so-called pet custody was settled as part of the division of property. But a new section of the legislation on "companion animals" changes that.

The legislation now provides a list of factors that must be considered when deciding the fate of a family pet.

Those factors are, according to the legislation:

  • the circumstances in which the companion animal was acquired;

  • the extent to which each spouse cared for the companion animal;

  • any history of family violence;

  • the risk of family violence;

  • a spouse's cruelty, or threat of cruelty, toward an animal;

  • the relationship that a child has with the companion animal;

  • the willingness and ability of each spouse to care for the basic needs of the companion animal.

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Kim McCoy
Hong Kong and Animal Cruelty: An Everlasting Toxic Relationship?

After what seems to be a lifetime of advocating for change, it seems the Hong Kong Government is finally prepared to do so. The Hong Kong Government has introduced an amendment bill to the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Ordinance (Cap.169) in this year's legislative programme.

Proposed amendments include introducing a positive “duty of care” on persons responsible for animals to provide their welfare needs; enhancing the provisions for prevention of animal cruelty, including the increase in the penalties and the introduction of an indictable offence; and enhancing enforcement powers to prevent animal cruelty and protect animals from suffering.

This introduction is welcomed warmly by animal advocates in Hong Kong, especially as we continue to see a spate of animal cruelty cases filling our social media and our news.

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Kim McCoy
Pawning Pandas for Politics: Not All Black and White

The Ocean Park Conservation Foundation has signed off on an agreement to expand its collection of resident red pandas in the Hong Kong theme park. In addition, the contract extended the loan period for the park’s current three red pandas for a further twenty years.

The Chinese government has a long-established history of sending pandas to other countries on loan; starting for ‘panda diplomacy’ purposes around 1950.

But the terms and conditions of such arrangements, and the policy considerations which drive them, reveal that Mainland China’s furry agenda is not as black and white as it seems.

Courtesy of Saskia Sinha

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Kim McCoy
Man convicted of beating parrot to death has sentence appeal dismissed.

A drunk man was found guilty of strangling his live-in girlfriend's parrot and was sentenced to three months and two weeks in prison after pleading guilty to cruelty to animals in the Magistrates' Court.

He believed the sentence was too harsh and applied for bail to appeal against the sentence in the High Court. He told the High Court earlier that he suffered from anxiety attacks afterwards, and his girlfriend broke up with him, hoping to change his sentence to a non-custodial sentence.

The High Court judge rejected his appeal saying that the drunken man strangled the parrot to death, and the process must be extreme and excessive. Due to the use of force, the sentence imposed by the lower Court was only at the lower-middle level.

The appeal was dismissed and he was ordered to serve his sentence immediately.

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Kim McCoy
Animals to be recognised as sentient beings under proposed Victorian cruelty laws

The Victorian government will follow the Australian Capital Territory and could become the first Australian state to recognise that animals are sentient beings, under a draft overhaul of cruelty laws to be released in the coming weeks.

A long-awaited draft of the animal care and protection act will be released for public consultation next month, before a final bill is tabled in parliament in 2024. The new protections are expected to cover more species, including octopuses, squid, cuttlefish, lobsters, crabs and crayfish.

This came six years after the government announced a review of the existing Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, with a view to replace it “with a modern animal welfare act in 2019”. A 2019 parliamentary inquiry also recommended the government modernise the act “as a matter of priority”.

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Kim McCoy
Beyond the Pill: Unraveling the Perilous AMR Link Between Animal and Human Health

The World Health Organisation (WHO) warns that antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has become “one of the top 10 […] public health threats facing humanity.” And while the World Health Assembly launched a global action plan in 2015 to tackle the issue among human populations, equivalent high-level reports examining antibiotic overuse and misuse among animals, particularly domesticated species, are less prolific.

The agriculture industry is a known facilitator of AMR and is generally monitored accordingly, but administration of antibiotics on a smaller scale, such as in backyard farming and pet stores are routinely dismissed as insignificant contributors to the problem. However, it has been shown that pockets within the domestic sector still act as reservoirs for the development of AMR, therefore comprehensive surveillance programmes and frequent inspections are necessary.

Education is undoubtedly at the core of reform. Helping individuals understand how antibiotic overuse and misuse can affect their personal health, public health, and that of animals, and teaching responsible animal husbandry practices, will elicit a shift in attitude. Moreover, tighter regulations must be implemented by national governments regarding access to, and the disposal of, antibiotic medicines. Only through a concerted and consistent international effort can we hope to preserve the efficacy of antibiotics and safeguard the health of both humans and animals.

Courtesy of Saskia Sinha

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Kim McCoy
Hong Kong to raise penalty for feeding wild pigeons.

Hong Kong is seeking to change the city’s wild animal protection laws to raise the maximum penalty for illegal feral pigeon feeding to HK$100,000 and imprisonment for one year. The proposed penalty would take effect next August, subject to approval by the legislature.

The Hong Kong Government published the Wild Animals Protection (Amendment) Bill 2023 , which intends to enhance the deterrence against illegal feeding activities, protect wild animals and improve environmental hygiene.

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Kim McCoy
South Korea plans to ban eating dog meat by 2027.

South Korea is planning to introduce a ban on dog meat consumption by the end of this year, Seoul authorities said.

Eating dog meat is neither explicitly prohibited nor legalized in South Korea, and successive governments have failed to make progress on pledges to stop the practice.

Public and political momentum to outlaw dog meat has been growing in the country as the centuries-old practice has fallen out of favour with most young Koreans. It has also attracted international criticism from international rights activists.

According to a government study last year, South Korea has about 1,150 dog farms and over half a million dogs raised for meat, a significantly smaller figure than decades ago. The declining demand for dog meat reflects a shift in public perception along with growing pet ownership in South Korea.

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Kim McCoy
Hong Kong authorities probe suspected sale of dog meat.

Hong Kong authorities have opened an investigation into an online trader suspected of selling dog meat, after internet users raised concerns over one of the business’ adverts on social media.

Authorities took on the case after social media users flagged an advert on the Facebook page of a vendor that offered “fresh and delicious” and “high quality” dog meat for HK$328 (US$42) per kilogram.

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Kim McCoy