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STOP ANIMAL CRUELTY
Foot and Mouth Disease - The Horror of Live Burial P1/2
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The images
in the following program
are highly sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However, we have to
show the truth about
cruelty to animals,
praying that
you will help to stop it.
It’s January 1, 2011
in Gyeonggi Province,
South Korea.
In the chilling winter,
pigs are pushed into a pit
by a metal crane.
Each frantically struggles
to get up, stunned.
Instinctively, they huddle
to one end of the pit
as others come helplessly
tumbling, colliding down.
One piglet failed to
survive the deep fall.
He is lucky.
The other 400 pigs
in this pit died
a much slower death
as they were slowly,
hellishly buried alive.
The highly contagious
foot and mouth disease
virus had struck hard
in South Korea
around November 2010.
Symptoms seen
in the livestock animals
included high fever and
painful blisters inside
the mouth and on the feet.
It spread like wildfire,
and by January, the
massacring had begun.
Millions of cows,
pigs, goats and deer
were buried
in a rushed attempt
to stop an even more
severe epidemic.
Mass killing,
is the routine response to
foot and mouth disease,
one of the most dreaded
livestock diseases
throughout the world.
Mr. Lee Won-Bok,
president of the Korea
Association for Animal
Protection, attended
15 of the mass burials.
Fifteen, that is, out of
a shocking 4,000 pits
scattered across
the country.
They dump and drop
live pigs from trucks
into the pit.
There are 1,500 to 2,500
pigs in one small pit,
and the pigs climb up
on each other’s backs,
piling double,
triple layers
as they’re buried alive.
The pigs scream, groan
and cry out for their lives.
I haven't had any sleep
for a month because
I was haunted by
the screaming sounds.
The slaughtering site
is literally
a horrible hell itself.
Other species besides
pigs were also killed
in recent months.
For chickens, they put
3 to 4 live chickens
in a sack, tie it, and
carrying them by carts
bury the sacks in a pit.
The chickens scream
feeling sharp pain of
their bones shattering
in the sack.
It’s so horrible.
One South Korean count
in February revealed
staggering numbers:
some 6.2 million
chickens and ducks
were destroyed
due to avian flu.
For foot and mouth
disease, it was
over 150,000 cows,
over 6,000 goats,
3,000-plus deer, and
over 3.3 million pigs.
Their burial sites today
are eerily silent.
Signs – like tombstones –
identify the species
and number of animals
in each grave.
As you can see, 3,900
animals have been buried
over there 200 meters
away from here, and
3,000 animals have been
buried here.
Over on the other side
diagonally,
2,000 have been buried.
One thousand and
nine hundred animals
have been buried
in the back.
So that’s 12,000
live-buried animals
in just this area
right before us.
I had taken a look
around the sites myself,
and the feeling was
much different when
I was there first-hand
as opposed to just
watching it on TV.
Humans too were victims.
Reports stated that
approximately
130 workers were injured
in the process of burying
the panicked animals,
which at times
took all day and night.
Some ended up
seeking mental help.
At least 9 workers died,
reportedly
due to “overwork,”
In 1997
in Formosa (Taiwan),
up to 200,000 pigs
were killed per day,
mainly by electrocution.
In the US, one method is
stunning and pithing.
In this method,
a stun gun punches
a metal bolt into
the animal’s head,
breaking the skull; then,
a rod is shoved into
the stunning hole to
utterly destroy the brain.
In South Korea,
the method
was live burial.
When foot and mouth hits,
most people think about
the economic cost and
not about the welfare
of the animals, sadly.
Countries decide often
on a kind of emergency
basis, to kill the animals,
to cull them.
Culling seems to be
a sort of polite word
for mass killing.
And often,
the animals are killed
in huge numbers, not just
the infected animals,
but sometimes
animals nearby, animals
in the certain area.
Ironically, many of
the animals killed were
healthy, their only sin
being their proximity
to a suspected outbreak.
Foot and mouth disease
is an infectious disease
that affects
cloven-hoofed animals.
Its virus covers a large
area in a short time,
affecting a large number
of susceptible animals,
including camels, cattle,
bison, sheep, goats, pigs
and deer, etc.
Affected adult animals
have a low mortality,
while young animals can
have a high mortality.
The reason that
this disease is always
a serious consideration
is its rate of spreading
and infecting.
The virus can even
be carried by the wind
to hundreds of kilometers
and it spreads via
any daily objects due to
the fact that the size
of this virus is very small.
Then, the disease
immediately takes place
if the animals and
livestock are susceptible.
Generally, once
the disease affects a part
of the herd, the whole
herd will be infected.
The percentage of
spreading is very high.
But the percentage of
death is low.
Even if infected,
most animals
can recover if allowed.
And cases of
humans being infected
are extremely rare.
So why the brutal,
destruction of
so many animals?
Greed is the main reason.
It is really terrifying
that this live burial is
our selfishness –
human selfishness that
cares for nothing
but our own interest,
and that selfishness
has become socialized
and authorized, and that
power became
the authoritative power
that killed, in an instant,
3 million livestock
animals in this country.
In South Korea
as in Mongolia, the
government attempted to
halt the spread of the virus
through widespread
vaccination of livestock.
But so far, this
has proven to be
costly – and unreliable.
In South Korea, over
2,000 vaccinated cows
and pigs still got infected,
while more than 6,300
new animal deaths
have been linked to
the vaccine itself.
There are 7 different
types of viruses.
And with globalization,
the exchange of goods,
and tourism,
the types of viruses could
hit anywhere and anytime.
So in order to make sure
that we are protected,
vaccines need to be
given against
7 different viruses, which
is extremely expensive.
So the best situation
is not to get that disease
in the territory.
So what you are saying is
that once the animal
is affected and then
gets cured,
he still carries the virus?
Yes, some of them, and
we don't know who
carries the virus or not.
Once rare and isolated,
foot and mouth epidemics
have been striking
more frequently and
harder across the globe.
Experts attribute this to
the widespread practice
of factory farming.
In order to produce meat
in large amounts at once,
lots of livestock are
crowded in one spot
by people, in a form
of factory farming.
And this in itself creates
a very powerful infectious
disease-causing area.
Many diseases are
being caused by this.
Ninety-nine percent of
livestock farms
in South Korea are run
as factory farms.
Every animal is raised
tied and locked up
in a tiny space in there.
In such conditions,
they don’t have
the immunity to fight
against any tiny germs or
viruses coming into
their body and
this leads to serious
infectious diseases
such as foot and mouth
disease and avian flu.
The purpose of cattle,
poultry and pig farming
and the like
are business and money.
When livestock are
crowded in one spot
in such big numbers,
there’s a huge possibility
for that area to
become the source of
infectious diseases.
There is no consideration
for life at all,
but only concern about
how much weight
the animals can gain
per serving of feed.
So antibiotics are used
before diseases break out;
the teeth are pulled out
before animals bite
one another
or tail is cut off; and
in case of a hen, the beak
is cut off, and so on.
But, more importantly,
factory farms are
very condensed.
If we don’t solve
this density problem
caused by the greed
for money, this outbreak
will continue to happen
again next year.
We have to find
another solution to this.
How we treat the animals
is how we will be treated.
We all have to be
in balance.
We’re forcefully
overriding this balance
by raising livestock in
mass numbers and then
slaughtering them to eat.
Each pit measured about
10 meters long,
30 meters wide
and 10 meters deep.
A mass grave shared by
hundreds of live, terrified,
screaming pigs,
whose intelligence has
been equated to that of
a 3-year-old human child.
When the South Korean
public saw the images of
the live burials emerge,
they erupted in outrage,
as well as pangs of
guilt and sorrow.
I personally decided to
stop eating meat
through this incident.
With recent
foot and mouth disease
outbreaks also reported
in multiple countries,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has addressed
the serious implications
of livestock-related
diseases, as during
an October 2009
videoconference
in Formosa (Taiwan).
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.”
We sorrow for the loss
of both countless
innocent animals
and perished humans,
as we pray that
this cruel crisis will stop.
Thank you,
gentle viewers,
for joining us today.
Please tune in again
next Tuesday, May 3,
as we continue our 2-part
series on more sides of
the global tragedy of
foot and mouth disease.
Coming up next is
Enlightening
Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May all sentient lives
on Earth be cherished
and respected.
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