Google – AFP, 27 January 2014
![]() |
This
undated photo released on January 27, 2014 by conservation group
WildLifeRisk
shows whale shark fins being dried and stacked for export in
Pu Qi in China's
Zhejiang province (WildLifeRisk/AFP)
|
Hong Kong —
A factory which processes around 600 whale sharks annually has been found in
southern China, a conservation group said Monday, calling it the world's
biggest slaughterhouse for the endangered species.
Hong
Kong-based conservation group WildLifeRisk said it discovered the factory in
the town of Pu Qi in Zhejiang province after a four-year investigation.
It said the
sharks are slaughtered and processed mostly to produce shark oil for health
supplements.
Undercover
video footage produced by the group showed workers cutting up the large dotted
back fins of whale sharks and other shark species.
"How
these harmless creatures, these gentle giants of the deep, can be slaughtered
on such an industrial scale is beyond belief," said a WildLifeRisk
statement sent to AFP.
"It?s
even more incredible that this carnage is all for the sake of non-essential
lifestyle props such as lipsticks, face creams, health supplements and shark
fin soup."
The
slaughterhouse also handles other species of sharks including blue sharks and
basking sharks and produces 200 tonnes of shark oil annually from the three
species, its owner -- identified only as Li -- said in the video.
![]() |
This
undated photo released on January 27 by conservation group WildLifeRisk
shows
whale shark fins being processed at a factory in Pu Qi in China's Zhejiang
province (WildLifeRisk/AFP)
|
Li also
said he needed to "smuggle" whale shark skin out.
In another
segment of the video, a man identified as Li's brother said the whale shark
skins are exported to European countries such as Italy and France, where they
are used by Chinese restaurants.
Whale
sharks measure as much as 12 metres (39 feet) but are harmless to humans and
feed on tiny marine animals.
They are on
the "Red List" of endangered species drawn up by the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature.
They are
also listed on Appendix II of the UN's Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES), meaning countries must show that any exports were
derived from a sustainably managed population.
Exports and
imports should also be monitored.
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