Are you contributing to Chinese animal torture?
Some of the information below has been previously posted in this venue.
When you purchase a Chinese garment, there is no indication of the origin of the animal. Is it a cat, a dog or....?
None of these animals are treated humanely because China has no protection.
Please don't support animal torture with your purchases!
Think twice....
A Look Inside the Angora Rabbit Fur Industry
After watching this video, you'll never buy angora again.The undercover footage, shot by PETA Asia, found horrific routine cruelty to angora rabbits, whose long, soft fur is often used in sweaters and accessories. The investigator filmed workers who were violently ripping the fur from the animals' sensitive skin as they screamed at the top of their lungs in pain. After this terrifying and barbaric ordeal, which the rabbits endure every three months, many of them appeared to go into shock, lying motionless inside their tiny, filthy cages, with no solid flooring or bedding, and without the vital companionship of other rabbits. After two to five years, those who have survived are hung upside down, their throats are slit, and their bodies are sold.
Rabbits who have their fur cut or sheared also suffer: During the cutting process, their front and back legs are tightly tethered—a terrifying experience for any prey animal—and the sharp cutting tools inevitably wound them as they struggle desperately to escape.
Ninety percent of angora fur comes from China, where there are no penalties for abuse of animals on farms and no standards to regulate the treatment of the animals. When you buy a sweater, hat, or other product that contains angora, the angora fur most likely originated in China, even if the finished product was assembled elsewhere.
Rabbits are gentle, socially complex, and intelligent animals with individual personalities, just like dogs and cats. In their natural habitat, rabbits live in scrupulously clean burrows and spend their time foraging for fresh, leafy food and interacting with members of their warren.
How You Can Help Rabbits
Rabbits are gentle, socially complex, and intelligent animals with individual personalities, just like dogs and cats. In their natural habitat, rabbits live in scrupulously clean burrows and spend their time foraging for fresh, leafy food and interacting with members of their warren.
How You Can Help Rabbits
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Please consider adding your name to the petition to Zara by clicking on this link:
**Update: Due to our pressure, major UK retailers Topshop and Asos have committed to stop selling Angora. Now let's get global clothing company Zara to join them!**
Great news! Huge clothing retailer, H&M, ceased production of all its angora products last week, in response to horrific video footage released by PETA that shows rabbits screaming in pain as their fur is torn off at angora farms in China, and to 77,000-strong SumOfUs petition.
Sadly, Zara is refusing to do the same -- at the time of writing, there are still 60 angora items for sale on the Zara website.
Workers in China were secretly filmed by PETA, plucking angora rabbits of all their long, soft fur while they scream. Plucking a rabbit without causing harm takes up to two weeks of gently removing the loosened hair, but here it takes only a few, violent minutes. After this tortuous experience, which the rabbits endure every three months, many of them appeared to go into shock, lying motionless inside their tiny, filthy cages.
H&M has taken responsibility for this barbaric practice, Zara should too.
Tell Zara to stop production of its angora products immediately, and save the bunnies!
Ninety percent of angora fur comes from China, where there are no penalties for abuse of animals on farms and no standards to regulate the treatment of the animals. The reason for this cruelty comes down to profit, pure and simple. Angora has a trade value of £22 to £28 per kilogram, but the longer hair that comes from plucking, as opposed to shearing, can sell for more than double that.
The big retailers have a responsibility to tell their suppliers that they won’t accept this brutal treatment of angora rabbits. H&M have acted, saying in a statement that it will step up inspections of its sub-suppliers before selling angora again. In the meantime, customers can take back their H&M angora products for a full refund. H&M isn’t the only one -- it joins Topshop, New Look, Esprit, Asos, and C&A.
If they can act, Zara can too. But right now, its website is full of angora sweaters, gloves, hats, and scarfs. Zara thinks we don’t care where our clothes from, or how they are made. We need to prove it wrong.
Tell Zara we don’t want to see angora on its shelves. Cease production of angora products!
Topshop and Asos’ decision to stop the production of angora was a direct response to our pressure -- SumOfUs members kept the pressure up by commenting on the Topshop and Asos Facebook pages, tweeting, making campaign graphics, and writing personal letters -- all leading to a huge victory for both consumers and bunnies! Let’s do it again.
PETA releases video of angora rabbit investigation in China
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals released graphic video Tuesday from its undercover investigation into angora
farms in China.
Over the course of four months the organization went to nine different
farms.
In the video, the rabbits' high-pitched screams can be heard as farmers rip
out their wool until the animal is bald. The rabbits are then thrown back into
their cage and appear to be stunned and in shock.
PETA says the farmers repeat this process every 70-75 days and about 60
percent of rabbits that are tormented this way die after one to two years.
"This angora fur is highly prized. And the farmers rip it out this way
because they can get a higher price by selling the entire length of the fur
rather than just sheering it," said Kathy Guillermo, Senior Vice President of
PETA.
In the United States, American angora breeders said they disagree with the
methods these farmers use."It makes me want to go vomit. I mean that was pretty
rough," said Melissa Deitrich after watching PETA's video.
Deitrich is an angora breeder and member of the National
Angora Rabbit Breeders Club (NARBC). She says she uses the gentle and
painless methods of plucking, sheering and cutting her rabbits.
Even though breeders like Deitrich use humane practices for gather her
rabbit's wool, the United States angora production is incredibly small compared
to China.
PETA says around 90 percent of the world's angora comes from China, which
makes it the largest producer.
According to the International
Wool Textile Organization (IWTO), in 2012, 4,700 tons of unwashed angora
wool was produced around the world.
"If shoppers are out looking for sweaters, hats or scarves this holiday
shopping season and they see an angora item, chances are that angora fur came
from China," said Guillermo.
The soft fiber is used as an element in sweaters and other knitwear found
at stores all over America.
CBSNews.com reached out to several retail companies that carry angora, but
none commented.
Some companies like H&M have policies stating they will only use angora from humane
sources.
There are no animal rights laws in China that protect these rabbits in this
virtually under-investigated world.
PETA wants consumers to look beyond the clothing.
"[Angora clothing] began as a living being on a farm in China most likely.
And I don't think any consumers, most of whom are compassionate I believe, would
like to have any part of that," said Guillermo.
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