[Congressional Bills 116th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Con. Res. 29 Introduced in Senate (IS)]

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116th CONGRESS
  1st Session
S. CON. RES. 29

Urging all nations to outlaw the dog and cat meat trade and to enforce 
                   existing laws against such trade.


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                   IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

                            November 5, 2019

 Mr. Merkley submitted the following concurrent resolution; which was 
             referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations

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                         CONCURRENT RESOLUTION


 
Urging all nations to outlaw the dog and cat meat trade and to enforce 
                   existing laws against such trade.

Whereas a bipartisan domestic prohibition on the knowing slaughter, 
        transportation, possession, purchase, or sale of a dog or cat for human 
        consumption was included in section 12515 of the Agriculture Improvement 
        Act of 2018 (Public Law 115-334), which was enacted on December 20, 
        2018;
Whereas the dog and cat meat trade occurs throughout the world, primarily in 
        Asia;
Whereas established dog meat markets still exist today;
Whereas Humane Society International, Animals Asia Foundation, and others 
        estimate that 30,000,000 dogs and 10,000,000 cats die annually worldwide 
        as a result of the dog and cat meat trade, and those organizations have 
        found that a considerable number of the dogs and cats in this trade are 
        stolen pets still wearing collars when they reach the slaughterhouses, 
        in addition to stray dogs and cats who are captured for slaughter;
Whereas there have been reports of abuse, poor living conditions, and cruel 
        slaughtering techniques for dogs and cats farmed for their meat;
Whereas many dogs and cats die during transport to slaughterhouses after days or 
        weeks crammed into small cages on the back of vehicles without food or 
        water, and others suffer illness and injury during transport;
Whereas the extreme suffering of dogs and cats at such slaughterhouses and on 
        transportation trucks would breach anti-cruelty laws in the United 
        States and other countries;
Whereas many government officials, civil society advocates, and activists are 
        working to end the dog and cat meat trade on anticruelty and public 
        health grounds, and the Governments of Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, the 
        Philippines, and Hong Kong have passed laws banning the dog meat trade;
Whereas the World Health Organization has linked the dog meat industry to human 
        outbreaks of trichinellosis, cholera, and rabies;
Whereas those involved in the dog meat industry are at an increased health risk 
        for zoonotic diseases, such as rabies, which can transfer from dogs to 
        humans through infectious material such as saliva;
Whereas the spread of disease may be exacerbated by unsanitary conditions of 
        slaughter and by the sale of dog and cat meat at open-air markets and 
        restaurants; and
Whereas the World Health Organization and the Global Alliance for Rabies Control 
        have both acknowledged the link between the spread of rabies and the dog 
        meat trade which sees large numbers of dogs of unknown disease status 
        moved vast distances: Now, therefore be it
    Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), 
That Congress--
            (1) calls for an end to the consumption and trade of dog 
        and cat meat on cruelty and public health grounds;
            (2) urges all nations with a dog or cat meat trade to adopt 
        and enforce laws banning that trade; and
            (3) affirms the commitment of the United States to 
        advancing the cause of animal protection and animal welfare, 
        both domestically and around the world.
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