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Treat animals right to prove
yourself
By Zou Hanru
Lawmakers in Hong Kong are deliberating a proposal to impose heavier
penalties for animal cruelty offences. And all indications are that the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Amendment) Bill 2006 will sail through
once the legislature reconvenes after its summer recess.
The government seeks to increase the maximum penalty for acts of cruelty
to animals, which include beating, kicking or torturing, from a fine of
HK$5,000 (US$700) to HK$100,000 (US$1,400) and/or imprisonment for six
months to one year. The Hong Kong government felt the need to amend the
statute after a spate of animal torture cases came to light in March.
The first was the tragic story of Pan Pan, a puppy found with all of its
limbs chopped off. The same month, a 26-year-old man was jailed for
three months for beating to death his flatmate’s Shih-tzu dog because
its barking was disturbing his TV-watching. Last month, a 21-year-old
man was sentenced to 14 days in jail and fined HK$1,000 (US$140) for
locking up his pet dog at home without leaving enough water or food,
thus starving it to death.
But the Health, Welfare and Food Bureau is now determined to see an end
to such acts through a more deterrent law, a spokesman said recently.
Unfortunately, the same can’t be said about the mainland, which has yet
to enact a law that would protect animals against torture and abuse. As
living standards rise along with the economy, many mainlanders are
taking to pets and are believed to be keeping 150 million dogs in human
companionship. Beijing alone had half a million pet dogs in 2004.
The pet population would be far greater if cats and other animals are
taken into account. This has raised calls for legislation against
cruelty to animals. The pleas gained strength last year when video clips
of a cat being stomped to death by a young woman in stockings and high
heels were circulated in the cyber world. Despite the public outcry for
the pet’s suffering, the authorities found that no law existed under
which to prosecute her. She eventually got away unscathed after
apologizing online for her mindless act.
Had the woman committed such an act in Hong Kong, she certainly would
have been subjected to the maximum penalty. In the United States, the
website operator, too, would receive punishment under the Federal
Government’s “Crushing Act” for displaying acts of cruelty and/or sexual
abuse for commercial gains. But even the public’s reaction to the
cat-stomping case doesn’t seem to have awakened the authorities as well
as the public to the need for a law against cruelty to animals.
But therein lies a dilemma. People still commit crimes despite all the
criminal penal codes across the world. So will just a statute against
cruelty to animals act as a deterrent? The answer is yes and no. Only by
fostering a caring and loving relationship between humans and all other
animals not only pets can we overcome the second, negative aspect of the
answer. Education is the key to preventing cruelty. And it had better
start with the children. Teaching them kindness and respect will help
their overall moral development. Children who learn to be kind to
animals will mature into kind, caring adults.
A nation’s affluence makes life better for its people, but does not
necessarily make the nation great. A caring, loving people do. Didn’t
that sage of non-violence Mahatma Gandhi say: “The greatness of a nation
and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are
treated”?
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |