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Early this week, two young bears escaped from their cramped cages at a breeding farm in Yongin, south of Seoul. One was shot and killed hours after the escape, while the other is still on the loose.
Similar incidents have occurred in the past in a country where bears ― mostly moon bears, or Asiatic Black Bears, on the endangered species list ― are kept captive for life for their bile and other body parts that are used in alternative medicinal treatments.
The owner of the farm, according to environmental advocacy group the Korean Animal Association, operates one more farm in the nearby city of Yeoju and keeps a total of 100 bears in tiny cages in inhumane conditions.
The group reported the farm’s owner to police in June last year for illegal breeding, extraction of bile and butchering bears for meat. The owner was later given a four-month prison sentence, suspended for a year.
“The farm shows the glaring reality of the country’s bear farming industry, a breeding ground for illegal activities. No action was taken to improve the living conditions (for the bears) despite repeated cases in which the animals escaped from farms,” Green Korea United, another advocacy group, said in a statement.
The group criticized the government for its disregard for animal welfare and insufficient inspection and oversight of the industry.
South Korea is one of a few countries in the world that still allow bear bile farming.
The country started to encourage breeding and exporting bears in 1981 as a way to help increase income for poor farmers. But a year later, moon bears became endangered species designated under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).
In 1985, the country caved into international pressure and banned the export of moon bears, and decided to fully comply with the CITES in 1993.
Facing strong opposition from bear farmers, however, the government legalized the killings of caged bears at age 10 or older for bile extraction. The decision continued the lifelong suffering of the animals.
In order to reduce the number of captive bears, the Ministry of Environment financially supported farmers to have their bears sterilized. From 2014 to 2017, 967 bears were sterilized and the number of the captive bears here has fallen to around 400, from approximately 1,400 in mid-2020, according to the groups.
But animal welfare advocates say that illegal breeding is continuing, as there is a demand for bile, and so the government should take a more active role in ending this.
They suggest the government build sanctuaries ― as Vietnam and Cambodia have ― to keep the bears in a safe place until they meet a natural death.
The general public support this idea. According to a survey of 1,500 adults in 2019, nearly 86 percent of respondents agreed with the need to end the plight of the caged bears and build a sanctuary for them. More than 79 percent said the government should play a crucial role in improving their welfare.
A step to improve the lives of abused bears has been taken, albeit slowly.
In February, the environment ministry announced it will build a 24,000-square-meter sanctuary in Gurye, a county in South Jeolla Province, by 2024.
The move is “a step closer to the protection of captive bears that activists have been calling for over the past decade,” the Korea Animal Rights Advocates said in March.
“But there are still concerns about the welfare of the 407 caged bears left in neglect and indifference,” the group said, calling on the ministry to come up with measures to free from their cages and to openly discuss future plans with activists. (Yonhap)
Escaped bears expose problems of inhumane bile farming in Korea
Source: Buhay Kapa PH


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