Lettre adressée à Madame Isabelle Maréchal, Journaliste - TQS Le Grand Journal
Réf.: À poil contre les poils ! Pour dénoncer les fournisseurs de fourrure, cinq personnes d’organismes québécois et américain se sont complètement dénudées face à la boutique BEDO, rue Sainte-Catherine, à Montréal.
TQS - Le Grand Journal
Édition 16h30
À l’attention de Madame Isabelle Maréchal
imarechal@tqs.ca
15 janvier 2006
Translation of this same letter for our English readers
January 15, 2006
Subject: When money is more highly valued than pity!
In your news bulletin televised on January 13, 2006, a representative of the Canadian fur industry was briefly interviewed to comment on an anti-fur demonstration which had just taken place in the Montreal downtown area. Also presented during this news bulletin, were extracts of a video filmed in China, where animals were tortured by being skinned alive. The demonstrators were denouncing the fact that these furs were being imported by many countries, including Canada. The Canadian fur industry representative hastened to dismiss these images by stating that they were staged and fake. He also suggested that fur sold in Canada was not obtained in this way and that the main goal of animal defense groups were to harm the fur industry and pile up funds for their organizations. One must admit that coming from an industry that became prosperous off the skins of defenseless animals, this last argument is rather astonishing! To support his statements, this representative then showed a short video of 2-3 minks (in a clean cage) raised in a fur farm stating that "in Canada the animals used to make coats are well treated"...! He also accused animal rights groups of unjustly accusing "those nasty Chinese" of being cruel to animals by showing one or two exceptional cases of animals being tortured in that country.
In 1998, the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) revealed the existence of an Asian dog and cat fur trade, where animals are raised and killed in horrible conditions and their skins are exported to many countries around the world, mainly as fur trim and under misleading labels. Therefore, on 14 November 2000, the United States adopted a law prohibiting the importation and the sale of any product which included cat and dog fur. In addition to the United States, France, Italy, Denmark, Belgium and Switzerland also made provisions to put a stop to this shameful trafficking. In December 2003, the European Parliament adopted a written declaration aimed at putting an end to the trade of cat and dog fur. While many countries are working to eliminate this wretched trafficking, Canada remains in diapers with respect to this issue! With its hyped publicity campaigns, the Canadian fur industry misleads the Canadian population by glorifying its products. Moreover, in spite of the fact that for many years, numerous questions and letters of protest addressed by animal defense organizations and concerned citizens were sent to the governments of Quebec and Canada, these concerns are still falling on deaf ears.
Since our country has not yet addressed this question and has not yet performed any investigations, it is difficult to prove that cat and dog skins from Asia are actually being sold in our country. Like other countries have already done, our government (independently from the fur industry) must conduct DNA analyses of fur products to ensure that they do not contain cat or dog fur. However, considering the mass importation of Asian furs to our country, it is very naive to suppose that cat and dog fur are not being sold on Canadian soil.
Canadian consumers have the right to be informed of the reality of the monstrous living conditions in which animals are raised and put to death each year for the production of fur. Furthermore, whether fur comes from Asia or anywhere else in the world, whether it comes from animals trapped in the wild or from hunting, whether it comes from animals raised in fur farms or from seals skinned alive on the ice floes, all furs are obtained by cruelty. To promote the sale of furs, or to conscientiously buy fur, is in itself an act of cruelty and violence in a country where only a very small minority of people must absolutely use the skins of animals to keep warm.
Aequo Animo
B.P. 251, succ. Dorval/Pte-Claire
Pointe-Claire, Qc
H9R 4N9
Canada
© 2005 Aequo-Animo - Tous droits réservés