MEDICINA CHINA Y LA FALTA DE ETICA HACIA EL MUNDO ANIMAL
Alrededor de 12.000 osos se estima que actualmente pueblan las granjas de bilis en todo el sudeste asiático. Todo se hace en el nombre de la medicina tradicional china, se cree que la bilis de oso es un ingrediente esencial.
Are bears
purposely committing suicide to protest the horror of bile farms?
Bears held
captive in bile farms often go on hunger strikes, their only means of escape
from the conditions.
From animal
experimentation to factory farming, humans have done some horrible things to
other animals. Few practices are as cruel, though, as bear bile farming.
The
practice is so barbaric that bears kept in captivity for bile harvesting are
often driven mad by the poor living conditions and cruelty of the process. Now
reports have surfaced that some bile bears may be performing hunger strikes and
committing suicide as a last respite to protest the cruel conditions they're
kept under, according to Wildlife Extra.
Consider
wildlife campaigner Louis Ng's visit to a Laotian bile farm in 2009. There he
encountered a female bear lying motionless in a cage. The owner of the farm
explained to Ng that the bear was refusing food and was starving herself to
death. This kind of behavior was not uncommon, he explained. This bear was on
the 10th day of her "hunger strike" and had been left outside, likely
dry of bile, to meet her inevitable end.
After a few
minutes sitting with the bear and mourning her fleeting life, Ng watched as her
paw limply reached out from a hole in the cage toward his hand, as if she
wanted to hold it. Filled with emotion, Ng gave it to her. They sat there, hand
in paw, for several minutes. Ng described her eyes as filled with both anguish
and gentleness. It was a moment he would never forget.
The bear
succumbed the following day.
Tragically,
this bear's story is just one of many. Around 12,000 bears are currently
estimated to populate bile farms across Southeast Asia. It's all done in the
name of traditional Chinese medicine, for which bear bile is believed to be an
essential ingredient.
The typical
bile farm holds its bears in extraction cages — sometimes called "crush
cages" — which measure about 2.6 feet by 4.2 feet by 6.5
feet. For animals
as large as Asiatic black bears, the species most often harvested for bile,
these dimensions can make it impossible to stand up or even roll over. The lack
of movement is convenient for farmers, since it allows them easier access to
the bear's abdomen, where the bile can be extracted.
"The
bile is removed from the bear by inserting a catheter tube through a permanent
incision in the abdomen and gall bladder," explained Ng. "Sometimes a
permanently implanted metal tube is used."
Needless to
say, the process is extremely painful for the bears. Bile is typically tubed
from the gall bladder at least twice a day. Often the solitude, pain and fear
will drive bears to madness. According to Ng, the dominant sound inside a bile
farm is a banging noise — bears slamming their own heads against the cages.
Other bears
have been known to chew off their own limbs. One incident in China saw a mother bear escape
from her cage, run over and strangle her cub to death, then kill herself by
intentionally running into a wall.
These
tragedies are difficult to hear, but for some people they may raise further
questions. For instance, is it really possible that these animals are capable
of consciously and purposely killing themselves, as Ng's encounter might
suggest? Might they even be doing it as an act of protest?
Scientists
warn of anthropomorphizing animal behavior, but such attributions do have
comparisons elsewhere in the animal kingdom. For instance, whales are known to
beach themselves, and a few scientists have postulated that some of these
beachings demonstrate suicidal behavior. Stories also abound of dogs and horses killing
themselves to escape maltreatment. Ric O'Barry, former dolphin trainer and
current animal activist, has claimed to have witnessed a depressed, captive dolphin
named Kathy willingly commit suicide in his arms.
Although no
one can say for sure what goes on inside another animal's head, these tragedies
resonate. Regardless of whether the bear suicides were intended as protest or
not, they are waking people up to the horror of bile farming.
For
instance, Ng is currently setting up a five-hectare bear rescue center in Laos.
Not only will the bears be rescued, but they will also be put through a
rehabilitation process that will help adapt them to a community — something they've
never experienced on the bile farms.
It's just a
first step, but for all the bears who have never stepped foot outside of a
crush cage, it's a big one.
By
Thu, Feb 02
2012 at 1:26 AM
PatoAlf. Frente de Liberación Animal MDP, Psicología.
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