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Unsealing the deal
By Wang Ru
Dec 6 2011 9:16
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Provided to China Daily
Canadian sealers drag slaughtered seals across ice floes.

As industries that allegedly practice animal cruelty have tried prying open the Chinese market, while they meet resistance in other countries, Chinese consumers are pushing back.

On Nov 19, Chinese conservationists and animal rights groups staged an awards ceremony for a poster-design competition oriented around protesting seal products. NGO representatives, professors and celebrities attended.

China Animal Protection Media Saloon founder Zhang Dan points to sales of seal products and the introduction of the United States rodeo as representatives of cruel to animal industries trying to expand in China.

"It's a trend that industries involved in animal cruelty look toward China's massive market potential as their sales slump elsewhere," Zhang says.

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      The Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail quotes seal-oil supplement manufacturer DPA Industries' chairman Wayne MacKinnon as saying, "The Chinese eat anything. And they simply don't understand why you would put one animal above another."

      Other foreign reports say the Chinese have no regard for animal welfare and no relevant legislation.

      "Because of prejudice, they believe most Chinese don't care about animals and eat anything," Zhang says.

      "But they're perfectly wrong."

      The Chinese government announced in 2010 the suspension for further review of a trade deal to import Canadian seal products.

      Pressure from animal rights groups led to the indefinite postponement of the rodeo scheduled for Oct 1 at Beijing's Bird's Nest.

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