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Yulin festival: Animal loving woman pays $1,000 to save 100 dogs at meat market from slaughter

The animal lover has been praised for her compassionate act and is reportedly considering opening an animal sanctuary in Yulin to save more dogs

Siobhan Fenton
Tuesday 23 June 2015 04:39 EDT
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Yang Xiaoyun purchased the dogs on Saturday to save them from slaughter
Yang Xiaoyun purchased the dogs on Saturday to save them from slaughter (Photo by CHINA OUT AFP PHOTOSTR/AFP/Getty Images)

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A Chinese woman has paid over $1,000 to save 100 dogs from being eaten at the Yulin dog meat festival.

65-year-old Yang Xiaoyun, who is retired, travelled 1,500 miles from her home in Tianjin to Yulin city where the festival is being held.

Arriving at the market on Saturday, the animal lover paid 7,000 yuan, or $1,000, to save one hundred dogs before they could be slaughtered and sold as meat.

It is estimated that around 10,000 cats and dogs will be slaughtered during the festival which takes place annually to mark the summer solstice.

There has been international outcry about the festival which has been condemned as animal cruelty. Both Ricky Gervais and Leona Lewis have led calls for the event to be banned.

Yang owns an animal sanctuary called ‘Common Home for All’ and first began rescuing animals in 1995 when she pulled an abandoned kitten from a river. She intends to take the 1,000 dogs from Yulin back to the sanctuary.

Yang hauls away one of the cages containing the dogs
Yang hauls away one of the cages containing the dogs (Photo by CHINA OUT AFP PHOTOSTR/AFP/Getty Images)

It has been reported that she is considering opening an animal sanctuary in the Yulin area to save more dogs from the animal meat festival in the future.

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