Glue traps for rats to be curtailed in Hong Kong.

Glue traps for rats will only be placed at spots with serious rodent infestations such as wet markets and refuse collection points, the Environment and Ecology Bureau said, as Kadoorie Farm has called on the government to stop using glue boards after it found that at least 25 wild animals have been hurt by the traps.

The farm hoped people will stop using glue boards as it called on the government to ban the use of such traps, citing that countries like Ireland and New Zealand have already prohibited its use.

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Kim McCoy
France Bans Collars that Cause Pain to Companion Animals

On 16th January 2023, the French Parliament banned the use of dog and cat collars that cut into, electrify or otherwise “strangle” the animal for training purposes.

The collars could be electrified devices designed to stop barking or escaping, or collars that slightly dig into the animal’s neck to dissuade them from pulling or running. Anyone in breach of the ban could pay a fine between €750 and €3,750.

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Kim McCoy
Chinese woman faces Court after dumping 12.5 tonnes of catfish into lake for good luck.

A Chinese woman spent more than 90,000 yuan (US$13,000) buying 12.5 tonnes of exotic catfish and released them into a lake for a Buddhist ritual to bring herself good luck, then left them to die.

The case, which is being heard at a court in Changzhou city, has put a spotlight on the 2000-year-old ritual of life release, the freeing of captive animals into the wild to create good karma but which often leads to animal cruelty and poses environmental risks.

Hoping to improve the luck of her family and friends, Xu bought 12.5 tonnes of Clarias, a genus of catfish, from a fish retailer, surnamed Liu, and then covertly released them into a major lake in the city in December 2021, local prosecutors said.

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Kim McCoy
HK scientists excited by thriving rare leopard cats in Kadoorie Farm reforested area.

Hong Kong conservationists who were thrilled to discover a group of rare leopard cats in the Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden have said their presence is testimony to decades of reforestation efforts there.

A year-long survey found nine cats, including two juveniles, in the 148-hectare conservation area next to Lam Kam Road, which connects Tai Po in the New Territories East and Yuen Long district in the west.

The leopard cat is the only feline species native to Hong Kong surviving in the wild, following the extinction of tigers and leopards over the past century. People are not allowed to keep leopard cats in Hong Kong, and face a penalty of up to HK$1 million (US$128,050) and seven years in jail if found possessing a cat without permission.

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Kim McCoyComment
HK welcomes back hamsters a year after ban and mass culling over Covid fears.

Hong Kong is lifting an import ban on hamsters around mid-January, nearly one year after more than 2,000 of the small mammals were culled in an attempt to contain animal-to-human transmission of the coronavirus.

More than 2,300 hamsters, including over 100 surrendered by pet owners, had been culled since last January as a precaution against animal-to-human transmission of the coronavirus, according to the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department.

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Kim McCoy
Kurdistan Parliament passes first-ever Animal Protection Law

Kurdistan Region, for the first time, now has a law that legally protects both wild and domesticated animals from abuse.

Kurdish lawmakers have recently passed a bill, which was presented by a number of members of parliament to protect the rights of animals in Iraq’s Kurdish region that previously lacked such legislation.

Among other “forbidden practices,” all forms of animal fighting are outlawed, per the legislation.

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Kim McCoy
New York Bans Pet Stores From Selling Dogs, Cats and Rabbits

Pet stores in New York State will soon be prohibited from selling dogs, cats and rabbits under a legislative ban meant to stem the sale of animals from breeding facilities that animal rights groups say subject pets to inhumane conditions.

By forbidding the sale of animals at New York’s shrinking collection of about 80 or so pet stores, officials are hoping to stop the pipeline of animals from commercial breeders that opponents argue raise animals that are often abused or ill, and then sold to consumers, saddling them with unforeseen veterinary bills.

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Kim McCoyComment
US Senate Passes Big Cat Public Safety Act To Close Out Abuse.

A decade after it was first introduced, the U.S. Senate has passed the Big Cat Public Safety Act, sending it to President Joe Biden's desk for a signature.

The act, once in place, prohibits private individuals from possessing lions, tigers, leopards, cheetahs, jaguars, cougars or any hybrid of these species.

This prohibition applies to big cats being kept as pets — sanctuaries, universities and zoos would be exempt. Current big cat owners would be grandfathered in but will be required to register their animals.

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Kim McCoy
Musk’s Neuralink faces federal inquiry after killing 1,500 animals in testing

Elon Musk’s Neuralink, a medical device company, is under federal investigation for potential animal-welfare violations amid internal staff complaints that its animal testing is being rushed, causing needless suffering and deaths, according to sources familiar with the investigation and company operations.

In all, the company has killed about 1,500 animals, including more than 280 sheep, pigs and monkeys, following experiments since 2018. Current and former Neuralink employees say the number of animal deaths is higher than it needs to be for reasons related to Musk’s demands to speed research.

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Kim McCoy
Alleged macaque smuggling ring exposed as USA indicts Cambodian officials.

Eight people, including two Cambodian Forestry Administration officials and members of a Hong Kong business, have been charged by U.S. federal prosecutors for their alleged involvement in an international monkey smuggling ring.

One of the officials charged, Kry Masphal, was arrested at New York City’s John F. Kennedy International Airport, en route to Panama, where he was to have represented Cambodia at the CITES CoP19 international conference on the global wildlife trade.

Also charged were James Man Sang Lau, founder and owner of both Hong Kong-headquartered Vanny Resources Holdings and Vanny Bio Research’s Cambodian operation and other Hong Kong employees.

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Kim McCoy
Hong Kong Woman Who Trapped Cat In Washing Machine Wins Appeal

A Hong Kong woman sentenced to community service for trapping her cat in a washing machine has won an appeal against her conviction on the grounds the trial magistrate misapplied the law in disregarding her exculpatory evidence.

But the High Court’s ruling may not mean insurance agent Yuki Wong Yee-ting is in the clear, with prosecutors highlighting the prospect of a retrial.

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Kim McCoy
Supreme Court Stays Order By Bombay High Court On Feeding Stray Dogs

The Supreme Court stayed the Bombay High Court's observation about those interested in the protection and welfare of stray dogs, including feeding them, in Nagpur must adopt or put them up in dog shelter homes and bear expenses for their maintenance.

The top court directed the Nagpur Municipal Corporation to take steps for the general public to feed stray dogs at appropriate locations, demarcated and identified by them.

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Kim McCoy
Chinese man arrested for illegally killing 1000 birds and eating them in hotpot.

A man who illegally caught 1,000 protected birds and killed them in inhumane ways to eat in a hotpot has been arrested in eastern China.

The 39-year-old man, surnamed Wu, was arrested in Zhejiang province earlier this month after local police received tip-offs, the City Express reported.

Wu told the police he caught and killed the birds to cook in his hotpot. He said he had caught 948 sparrows and 13 other birds believed to be babbling thrushes, also known as babbler.

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Kim McCoy
Countries vote for landmark regulations on global shark fin trade

More than 50 species of sharks are to be given protection from over-exploitation in what's being seen as a milestone for shark conservation. Nearly 200 countries have voted to add a raft of sharks to the list of species protected under global trade rules.

The measures apply to the requiem shark family which includes tiger sharks, as well as to six small hammerhead sharks. The sharks are being pushed to the edge of extinction by the trade in fins to make shark fin soup.

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Kim McCoy
Hong Kong's City University opens dairy farm to train veterinary students.

Hong Kong’s first new dairy farm in two decades will be a teaching and learning facility for local veterinary students and expects to produce its own milk and ice cream next year after opening on Wednesday.

The Tai Po farm is operated by City University (CityU) and houses 24 Jersey cows, a British Channel Islands breed of small dairy cattle flown in from Australia in September.

Undergraduate veterinary students will attend compulsory courses involving the farm during their six years of studies where they will learn basic animal handling, conducting clinical examinations, disease diagnosis and treatments for cattle, as well as animal welfare, farm management and food production and safety.

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Kim McCoy
Wild animal feeding ban to be expanded in Hong Kong from December 31.

Hong Kong Authorities have said that a planned territory-wide ban on feeding wild animals is to come into effect on December 31.

Currently, the Wild Animals Protection Ordinance only outlaws feeding animals at Lion Rock Country Park, Kam Shan Country Park, Shing Mun Country Park and parts of Tai Mo Shan Country Park and Tai Po Kau Nature Reserve.

But concerns about wild boars roaming around urban areas have prompted officials to expand the ban to the whole of Hong Kong.

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Kim McCoy