In attempts to curb 
 
the worst outbreak of this 
 
contagion that has been 
 
ravaging livestock animals 
 
nationwide 
 
since November, 
 
the South Korean 
 
government has spent 
 
over US$2.5 billion 
 
on various measures. 
 
These include culling, 
 
or the deliberate killing 
 
of millions of animals to 
 
stop the spread of illness; 
 
disinfecting entire barns 
 
and vehicles; 
 
compensating farmers, 
 
many of whom lost
 
their entire livelihoods 
 
overnight; and 
 
vaccinating livestock, 
 
which has so far 
 
proven unreliable. 
 
Over 2,000 vaccinated 
 
cows and pigs 
 
still got infected, 
 
while another 6,300-plus 
 
new animal deaths 
 
have been linked
 
to the vaccine itself. 
 
Meanwhile, the people of 
 
South Korea have been 
 
shocked and disturbed 
 
to find that 3.5 million 
 
cows and pigs were 
 
massacred throughout 
 
the nation, mostly 
 
in a horrifying way. 
 
Supreme Master 
 
Television's 
 
correspondent reports 
 
about the web of 
 
challenges surrounding 
 
the disease outbreak.
South Korean correspondent (F): 
 
So far, 3.2 million pigs 
 
were killed, and all of 
 
them were buried alive. 
 
These shocking 
 
measures has become 
 
a big issue 
 
in South Korean society, 
 
generating criticism 
 
in terms of moral and 
 
environmental aspects. 
 
What you are seeing here 
 
is the site where pigs 
 
were buried alive. 
 
There are much more 
 
than 4,000 burial sites 
 
like this 
 
around the country. 
 
These burial sites are 
 
near upper streams of 
 
rivers, residential areas, 
 
and schools. 
 
With a chance that 
 
contamination due to 
 
leaking fluids could 
 
cause an epidemic, 
 
the animals' disaster 
 
due to foot-and-mouth 
 
disease could turn into 
 
a disaster for humans. 
 
Cho Yeon-Soon - Director, Mae Ryu Community Health Center (F): 
 
Because animals 
 
are buried alive near 
 
underground water 
 
or water supply facilities 
 
around here, it might 
 
have a dreadful impact 
 
on the drinking water 
 
for the residents here. 
 
Correspondent (F): 
 
When burying 
 
the animals alive, 
 
they lined the ground 
 
with plastic sheets, 
 
but the live animals 
 
struggled and the plastic 
 
sheets got damaged. 
 
So the oozing fluid from 
 
the dead animals' bodies 
 
are leaking out, creating 
 
a serious potential 
 
environmental problem.  
 
Citizen, Seoul (M): 
 
According to news, 
 
many burial sites are 
 
along with Han River, 
 
and as spring arrives, 
 
the river can be 
 
contaminated. 
 
Han River is the source 
 
of drinking water 
 
for my home, 
 
so I'm really concerned. 
VOICE: 
 
In response to fears 
 
of an environmental 
 
disaster stemming from 
 
burying the live animals, 
 
the South Korean 
 
government has spent 
 
US$274 million 
 
to provide alternative 
 
water supplies to 
 
communities concerned 
 
about the leakage 
 
from decaying carcasses. 
 
But an equal outrage 
 
about the culling is about 
 
the cruelty - which has 
 
also extended to humans. 
 
Lee Hang-Jin - Korea Federation for Environment Movements Yeoju Office (M): 
 
The ethical issue is 
 
about what impact 
 
foot-and-mouth disease 
 
has on human life. 
 
Public servants involved 
 
in this are now suffering 
 
from trauma and getting 
 
psychiatric treatment, 
 
and some even died 
 
because of 
 
extreme stress. 
 
Correspondent (F): 
 
So far, nine public 
 
officers have died due to 
 
extreme stress and 
 
126 officers were injured. 
 
As sad stories became 
 
widely known 
 
such as a mother cow 
 
trying her best to protect 
 
her young until 
 
the last moment when 
 
mother and child were killed, 
 
social awareness 
 
is awakening about 
 
respect for life. 
 
Lee Hang-Jin (M): 
 
I personally decided 
 
to stop eating meat 
 
through this incident. 
 
Correspondent (F): 
 
News media have been 
 
reporting about 
 
factory farming daily, 
 
and discussions about 
 
vegetarianism 
 
have come to the fore.  
 
Citizen, Seoul (M): 
 
I think excessive 
 
meat eating caused 
 
foot-and-mouth disease. 
 
Citizen, Seoul (F): 
 
I feel very sorry for them 
 
because we're causing 
 
so much pain to them. 
 
Correspondent (F): 
 
Citizens, 
 
who till now ignored 
 
the uncomfortable truth 
 
while enjoying meat 
 
nicely presented 
 
on a convenient table, 
 
now in seeing the horror 
 
of the live burials, have 
 
begun to ask themselves 
 
a fundamental question: 
 
Is it morally proper 
 
to eat meat that 
 
underwent the cruelty 
 
of killing animals? 
 
Citizen, Seoul (M): 
 
What's happened now 
 
will consequently 
 
come back to us. 
 
Correspondent (F): 
 
This has been 
 
Supreme Master Television 
 
at a livestock burial site 
 
in South Korea. 
VOICE: 
 
With appreciation 
 
for the South Korean 
 
government's efforts 
 
to respond to this 
 
tragic emergency, 
 
we join in mourning 
 
the loss of both 
 
countless innocent animals 
 
and perished humans, 
 
as we pray 
 
that this cruel crisis will 
 
stop soon and for good. 
 
May societies 
 
everywhere find 
 
permanent safety from 
 
all the risks of animal 
 
farming by ending meat 
 
production altogether.
 
With foot-and-mouth 
 
disease outbreaks 
 
and culling also being 
 
reported elsewhere 
 
in recent years, 
 
Supreme Master 
 
Ching Hai 
 
addressed the issue 
 
of livestock-related 
 
diseases during 
 
an October 2009 
 
videoconference 
 
in Formosa (Taiwan). 
 
Supreme Master 
 
Ching Hai : In one of the worst
 
animal disease outbreaks 
 
to hit the island 
 
of Formosa (Taiwan), 
 
the virus called 
 
hoof-and-mouth disease 
 
was transmitted 
 
from one pig 
 
that came to the island 
 
in early 1997. 
 
Within just six weeks, 
 
6,000 farms 
 
had been stricken, 
 
resulting in the tragic 
 
slaughter, massacring 
 
3.8 million pigs. 
 
 
 
This gives you some idea 
 
of how quickly 
 
animal-borne diseases 
 
can spread, causing 
 
devastation for themselves 
 
and humans alike. 
 
 
 
 
The best is to abolish meat 
 
altogether. 
 
Because 
animal consumption 
 
is eating up our planet, 
 
is killing us humans. 
 
The livestock sector 
 
is probably 
 
the world's biggest source 
 
of water pollution as well.
 
The list never ends 
 
if we continue to partake 
 
in this killing phenomena, 
 
massacring tragedy 
 
called “animal industry.” 
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/03/01/south.korea.farming/?hpt=T2http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2011/0224/South-Korean-farmers-assess-fallout-of-major-outbreak-of-foot-and-mouth-diseasehttp://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iBqTaxksA16r9WY1VapqmVJsoZAg?docId=CNG.273270170b9bb2d7b2be0a00f1d8156f.11http://www.naeil.com/News/politics/ViewNews.asp?nnum=595438&sid=E&tid=9
http://news.kukinews.com/article/view.asp?page=1&gCode=kmi&arcid=0004690930&cp=nvhttp://www.nocutnews.co.kr/show.asp?idx=1729297 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/15/south-korea-foot-mouth-mesmer