Tigers by the Tail

Authors: 
Adams, J. Newsweek
Document Type: 
Media
Citation: 
Adams, J. (2007, July 27). Tigers by the Tail. Newsweek. [Online]. Available: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_kmnew/is_200707/ai_n19403389 [2007, July 27].
Year Published: 
2007
Type Work: 
Magazine Article
Availability: 
Online
Language: 
English
Country: 
China
Url: 
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_kmnew/is_200707/ai_n19403389
Bushmeat Asian Type: 
Wildlife Trade
Keywords: 
Tigers; China; ban; medicinal; trade; conservation; endangered; government
Abstract: 
Under the blazing sun outside Harbin, in northeast China, Tiger No. 31 trots alongside a van packed with Chinese and foreign tourists. The van stops. The driver chucks a live chicken out the window. The 250-kilogram Siberian tiger pounces. Cameras snap away in morbid fascination. It wasn't a pretty end for the chicken, to be sure. And if a proposed lifting of a Chinese ban on the sale of tiger parts goes through, the fate of Tiger No. 31, currently a resident of this tiger park and breeding farm, may not be much better. After he dies, his bones will be crushed up into potions for treating rheumatism. His skin will be turned into a jacket. And his penis and testicles
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