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By Danny Penman
Guilin
, South East China
King the Siberian tiger
stares longingly at me through the bars of his cage. His two beautiful and graceful
companions pace back and forth across their tiny compound. They look crushingly
bored. The most exciting thing they can do is paw mournfully at the dirty
pools of rainwater slowly spreading across the floor of their cage.
Although the Xiongsen tiger park near Guilin
in south east China
appears to be a depressingly typical third world zoo, it actually hides a far
more sinister secret: it's a factory farm breeding tigers for the table
and to be made into wine.
Visitors to the park can dine on strips of stir-fried tiger with ginger and
Chinese vegetables. Also on the menu are tiger soup and a spicy red curry
made with tenderised strips of the big cat. 'Discerning' visitors can wash it
all down with a glass or two of vintage wine made from the bones of Siberian
tigers.
A
waitress at the farm's restaurant tells me proudly: "The tiger meat is
produced here. It's our business. When Government officials come here we kill a
tiger for them so they have fresh meat. Other visitors are given meat from
tigers killed in fights. We now have 140 tigers in the freezer.
"We
also sell lion meat, bear's paw, crocodile and snake. The bears' paw has to be
ordered in advance as it takes a long time to cook."
The
waitress clearly did not care that she was selling meat and wine from endangered
species. She was not in the slightest bit worried that selling them is
also against Chinese and international law and helps to fuel the poaching
that is driving tigers to extinction.
Tigers
and other endangered species are now being reared on an industrial scale
in China.
The Daily Mail discovered three factory
farms breeding tigers in China.
The Guilin farm
alone has 1300 tigers, including the incredibly rare and elusive Siberian
sub-species. It also rears and slaughters Bengal, South
China and White tigers. Over 300 African lions and 400
Asiatic black bears were also being reared for food and traditional Chinese
medicines.
Chinese
bureaucrats have blessed the keeping of all these rare and endangered species,
even though it is against their own laws. It is clear that the authorities
signed up to international treaties protecting tigers and have no intention of
honouring them. Instead, they claim that farms like the one at Guilin are a vital part
of the country's conservation efforts and will one day release these endangered
creatures back into the wild.
A walk
around the Xiongsen Bear and Tiger
Mountain Village,
as the farm is officially known, reveals this excuse to be little better than a
lie. These animals could never survive in the wild as they have none of the
skills essential for survival. These poor creatures were snatched from their
mothers when they were three months old and have spent their lives in tiny
barren cages. They cannot hunt nor have they learnt the art of hiding from
human poachers. They would be dead within days of being released into the wild.
The
lions and tigers are reared in battery-style units to maximise
production. Each shed (and I saw at least 100) houses between three and five
tigers in a space no larger than a typical family living room. In relative
terms they have about as much space as a battery hen. They will spend four
or five years in the sheds and will almost certainly never be allowed
outside to exercise.
Tigers
are naturally solitary creatures that roam over dozens of square miles so its
hardly surprising that life in the cages drives them insane. I saw numerous
examples of endlessly repeating behaviours known as stereotypies, a sure sign
of madness. Tigers paced back and forth across their cages for hours on end.
Each time they would take three steps forward, turn around and take three steps
back. Others hurled themselves helplessly at the bars of their prison cells whilst
others stared into space with a glazed depressed look in their eyes.
Madness,
stress and over-crowding often drives the creatures to attack each other. Tigers
are such powerful beasts that at least one of the tigers is generally
killed in such a clash. Officially it is only these that are eaten or
turned into wine. And if there should be a shortage of tigers killed in such
fights? Well, it's safe to assume that a bullet to a tiger's head will
solve that problem.
Although
the battery tiger units were thoroughly miserable and depressing places an even
more disturbing sight lay around the corner: the "Kindergarden for all
Beasts". This contained around 30 tiger cubs, many as young as three
months old. They are kept here until they are old enough to be transferred to
the battery units.
Many
of the youngsters were desperate to escape and kept leaping at the fencing
of their cages. The younger ones simply wanted to play like kittens. The older
cubs had already learnt that life held no future for them and were showing
signs of extreme stress and madness.
Even
more horrific was the 'live killing exhibition'. Here live animals were
'hunted' and torn to pieces by tigers whilst onlookers gawped and cheered. I
watched in horror as a young cow was stalked and caught by a tiger. Screams and
cries filled the air as the tiger ripped and tore into the young animal's body.
A wild
tiger would despatch its prey within moments but these tigers' natural killing
skills had been blunted by years of living in a battery cage. The tiger was
driven to kill but simply didn't know how. All it could manage to do was tear
and bite at the cow's body in a pathetic looking frenzy. Eventually the keepers
broke up the contest and dispatched the cow, much to the disappointment of the
crowd.
Virtually
all of the tigers from the Guilin
farm end up at a winery 100 miles to the north. Here their carcasses are dumped
in huge vats of rice wine and left to rot for up to nine years. The Chinese
believe that the tiger's strength passes into the wine as its body decomposes. They
also believe that it is a powerful medicine that wards off arthritis,
strengthens bones and acts as a general tonic. Smelling like a mixture of
methylated spirits, antiseptic and congealed meat, it is difficult to
believe that anyone would willingly drink such a brew and yet people are
happy to pay up to £100 a pint for it.
The Guilin farm also has a winery and acts as a distribution
centre for wine across China.
I managed to gain the confidence of the distribution manager and she
showed me and a Chinese tourist around. It was predictably depressing.
A
small dingy office acted as the nerve centre of the warehouse. On the wall were
charts showing that day's deliveries of tiger wine across China. Six crates
were despatched to Wuhan
and another to Tianjing. Six crates of 'powdered bear' were sent to Shanghai. Numerous other
cities and countless deliveries were also listed.
We
were then led into the warehouse where I was hit with
the disgusting and potent aroma of tiger wine. I was led
past countless crates containing the foul smelling brew. In the
corner of the warehouse was a huge brown earthenware vat. It must have held at
least 50 gallons and its contents were probably worth around £12,000.
"We
have three ages of wine," said the manager. "Three, six or
nine-years' old."
"It
helps with arthritis and strengthens old people's bones," she added.
To ram
home her sales pitch the manager slid aside the lid of the earthenware vat to
reveal a reddish-brown liquid with an overpowering smell of meths. A piece of
string was pulled out of the vat. Attached to the end was a tiger's
rib cage. Small slivers of dark red flesh could still be seen clinging to the
bone, even though it had probably been in the vat for at least three years.
The
manager then filled up an old plastic water bottle with a pint of
wine and handed it to my fellow tourist. He paid £30 for it.
Whatever
westerners think of tiger wine, the Chinese regard it as a potent drink with
almost magical qualities. In the past, a Chinese doctor may have prescribed a
small amount of the wine for a short period of time. But in recent years big
companies have moved into the market and industrialised all parts of the
industry. Now the wine is becoming an essential drink for China's corrupt
bureaucrats and the nation's nouveau
riche.
Whilst
it seems abhorrent to farm tigers is it really any different to producing
chicken, pork and beef? Conservationists certainly think so.
"It's
not only cruel and repugnant to farm tigers," says Grace Gabriel, spokeswoman
for the International Fund for Animal Welfare. "It is also driving them to extinction
in the wild. Tiger farming is stimulating demand for meat and wine and this
will inevitably lead to more poaching. It costs £5,000 to raise a tiger from a
cub to maturity in one of these farms while it costs no more than £20 in India to poach
one. On the market a dead tiger can fetch £20,000. With such a huge
profit margin it is inevitable that more people will poach wild tigers if
demand increases.
"There
are only a few thousand tigers left in the wild and the last thing they need is
increased demand for their body parts."
If
present trends continue they could be extinct in the wild within a decade. Three
sub-species of tiger have already vanished. Chinese tigers are down to a
pitiful 20 animals in the wild and are "functionally extinct". There
are only about 450 Siberian tigers left in Russia's
Far East. The remaining 3-4,000 are sparsely
scattered across India, Nepal
and south east Asia.
As
tigers become rarer in the wild their "street value" increases, which in turn
encourages even more poaching. Tigers have already become extinct in India's most
famous reserve at Sariska. Numbers have plunged in several other reserves too. Most
of these tigers will have been sold to traders in China. The Chinese authorities do
virtually nothing to clamp down on this illegal trade and many corrupt
bureaucrats and police earn substantial sums from it.
And
demand is continuing to increase as ever more bizarre uses for tigers are promoted
or created. Tiger whiskers are used to 'cure' laziness and protect against
bullets. Their brains when mixed with oil and rubbed on the skin are promoted
as a cure for acne. Penises are used as aphrodisiacs whilst hearts apparently
impart courage, cunning and strength.
Tiger
farmers also have their eyes on the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. They hope that a huge influx of
tourists will lead to increased demand for tiger wine. And the Chinese
Government is doing its bit to stoke demand. It recently ordered TV presenters
in Tibet
to wear tiger skins whilst reading the news.
Although
it is currently illegal to trade internationally in such tiger products as wine,
the Chinese are lobbying hard to get the law relaxed. This June, the Chinese
Government is expected to press the Convention on the International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES) to allow the trade in 'medicines' such as wine
produced from farmed tigers. If agreed it will lead to a massive increase
in tiger farming and tens of thousands of these noble beasts will spend their
lives in battery cages.
If the
Chinese get their way then it will almost certainly drive the tigers over the
cliff into extinction. It is almost too late to
save the tigers but not quite.
Thrown to the lions: China's latest spectator sport
Gunned down for fashion (how shahtoosh shawls are driving a beatiful creature to extinction)
Read more animal welfare stories
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