South Korea closes largest dog meat slaughterhouse

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption The complex will be replaced by a public park Officials in
South Korea have started to dismantle the country's largest dog slaughterhouse
The Taepyeong-dong complex in Seongnam city, south of Seoul, will be cleared over two days and converted into a public park
About one million dogs are consumed every year and activists have sought to end the custom.Dog meat was once considered a delicacy in South
Korea, but attitudes have changed in recent years."This is a historic moment," Korean Animal Rights Advocates (KARA) said in a statement
"It will open the door for more closures of dog meat slaughterhouses across the country, expediting the decline of the overall dog meat
industry."The Taepyeong-dong complex - an important source of meat for restaurants across the country - housed at least six slaughterhouses,
holding several hundred animals at a time.Campaigners from Humane Society International (HSI) described conditions inside the complex as
"horrifying"
They reported seeing electrocution equipment used to slaughter the dogs, knives and a de-hairing machine
Nara Kim said: "It was a stain on the city of Seongnam and we are so pleased to see it bulldozed."Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption
The number of dog meat restaurants is going down "This really feels like a landmark moment in the demise
of the dog meat industry in South Korea, and sends the clear message that the dog meat industry is increasingly unwelcome in Korean
society."Every summer in South Korea three days are designated as special festivals, and dog meat dishes are served in a highly spiced
stew.However, a growing number of Koreans are opting for samgyetang (chicken soup) over the three days instead.The number of dog meat
restaurants has also been falling in South Korea
Seoul once had 1,500 restaurants serving the dish, but this had dropped to about 700 by 2015.More and more South Koreans are also choosing
to keep dogs as pets - roughly one-fifth of the population.Currently no laws exist on how to treat or slaughter canines for meat in the
country
Western campaigners have in recent years attempted to interfere with the dog meat trade by staging mass rescues.