Overview
Across Asia, millions of dogs and cats are subjected to brutal capture and killing for the meat trade. HSI campaigns year-round in South Korea, Indonesia, China, Viet Nam and India to end this cruelty.
30M & 10M
Dogs and cats, respectively, killed annually for human consumption across Asia
1,000+
Terrified dogs crammed onto a single trader’s truck
1,000s
Dog meat farms in South Korea
The Issue
Dogs and cats are snatched from the streets, while pets are stolen from their homes to supply the trade. Many are crammed onto trucks and transported for days without food, water or rest, arriving at slaughterhouses terrified, injured and weak. They face horrific deaths through methods such as bludgeoning, torching or drowning, In South Korea, dogs are bred in barren cages on factory farms and killed by electrocution. Most people across Asia don’t eat dog or cat meat, and HSI is working with local groups to campaign for an end to the trade.
Dog meat trade facts:
- Our Chinese partner activists work all year round to rescue thousands of dogs and cats from the meat trade. Whether crammed onto trucks—where they endure dehydration, starvation, broken limbs, shock and disease—or huddled in the corner of a filthy slaughterhouse, our activist partners are these animals’ last hope.
- In South Korea, dogs are killed by electrocution; elsewhere, they are usually bludgeoned, hanged or more rarely, boiled alive.
- Across Asia, there is increasingly vocal local opposition to this trade due to cruelty, criminality and human health concerns.
- Dog meat is mainly, but not exclusively, eaten by older, male consumers under the misapprehension of health benefits.
- In South Korea and China, most people don’t eat dogs, but there are hot spots and times of year when and where consumption increases. In South Korea, more dog meat is consumed during Bok Nal (the hottest days in summer) than at other times of the year. In China, there is increased consumption in “hotspot” provinces such as Guangdong, Yunnan, Guangxi (where the infamous Yulin dog meat festival takes place), Jilin and Liaoning.
- The World Health Organization warns that the trade, slaughter and consumption of dogs poses human health risks from trichinellosis, cholera and rabies.
- Dog meat bans exist in—among others—Hong Kong, Taiwan, Thailand and Singapore, and most recently South Korea passed a law to ban the dog meat industry by 2027.
Show your support for a dog meat-free Bok Nal in South Korea
A ban on the dog meat industry will come into effect until 2027. Meanwhile, call for a dog meat-free Bok Nal.