Feel free to post these blogs on other websites and social
networks to help spread the word about Ursa Freedom Project and the
plight of the world's bear species.
BLOG #1
Eco Warriors Undercover: Bear bile farming
By
Jeanette
McDermott
Posing as buyers and suppliers in
the illegal wildlife trade, eco warriors have taken hidden cameras
where some of the most heinous crimes against nature are taking
place: on bear bile farms in China. Other Earth saviors have packed
unhidden cameras when they've gone on rescue missions to record the
conditions of the bears they save and the ones they have to
tragically leave behind. These are their photos, their stories, and
the history of bear bile farming.

As many as 10,000 Asiatic black bears in China are locked in cages
the size of their own bodies, and their bile is drained through an
excruciatingly painful procedure and sold for use in traditional
medicine. So they can approach the bears without fear of injury,
the farmers often mutilate the bears by breaking their teeth and
pulling out their claws, sometimes brutally removing whole
digits.

Milking and selling the bile is not the farmers' only source of
profit from the bears. Some farmers amputate one or two paws from
live bears to sell to restaurants. When bears are no longer able to
secrete bile, they are left to die from sickness or starvation.
Bears perceive terror and despair and feel pain the same as we do,
and they endure this torture for up to 25 years.Try to imagine
it.

Many of the bears in bile farms are captured illegally in the wild
as cubs. Poachers wait until the mother leaves the den in search of
food to capture new-born cubs. Sometimes she is killed to get the
babies. Other times cubs are born in captivity from pregnant bears
that were poached from the wild. In either case, the bear cubs
rarely survive the ordeal. Any surviving cubs are removed from
their mothers too early and put into cages, where they sometimes
grow into the bars as their bodies mature.

The bears show their distress and suffering by banging their heads
against the cage bars, gnawing on the bars, and at times tearing
the flesh from their paws and arms in a futile attempt to deflect
their thoughts from the main source of pain. The sores bleed,
resulting in further serious infection. The bears are usually
milked twice a day, before feeding, when more bile is produced.
They moan and writhe in pain and clutch their stomachs as the bile
drains from their bodies. Sometimes the bears try to pull out the
catheters. Those that do, are immobilized in an iron corset.
Under-nourished and highly stressed from horrific pain and
unnatural confinement, the bears lie in agony, in their own
filth.

This is Willow. He was 10 years old
when he arrived at the Animals Asia sanctuary in 2004. He died last
year from a massive liver tumor -- a result of his treatment on the
bile farm.
"Bear bile farming is the worst animal welfare scenario I have ever
encountered," said Swiss born conservation media activist Karl
Ammann. Amman has been named by Time magazine and CNN as a "Hero of
the Environment." He is credited with almost single-handedly
raising awareness about the issue of bush meat, the slaughter and
consumption of wild -- and often protected -- animals. He has
reported on and photographed the likes of hog-tied crocodiles,
charbroiled monkeys and severed gorilla heads draining into
saucepans, but these don’t compare to bear bile farming he
says.

Workers extract bear bile from the
gall bladder of a bear in Myanmar.
Bear bile is totally unnecessary, according to countless scientific
studies. Chinese use bear bile for their traditional medicines
(TCM), claiming it cures a range of ailments – from hemorrhoids to
hangovers, to colds and cancer. But research shows there are more
than 50 far more effective and affordable herbal alternatives, as
well as many synthetic options.

Traditional Chinese Medicines
(TCM)
Amman says, “Bear bile farming is about making a fast
buck, not surviving or feeding the family. These bears and other
wildlife species are protected from being traded internationaly by
the CITES Convention. China and Myanmar are both signatories to
this and other conventions, yet many of their citizens and
officials show flagrant disregard for the law and there has been
little enforcement by the authorities.”
Global citizens take action
People around the world are taking a strong stand against bear
farming and making their voices heard to get China’s attention. The
animal welfare organization One Voice commissioned a report
recently on the condition of bears in China, the role played by
animal-welfare charities there, and the short- and long-term
measures that must be taken to close down all the bear farms.
All 25 member states in the European Union have signed a
declaration to support putting an end to bear farming. World
Society of the Protection of Animals is working worldwide to change
and enforce laws to prevent commercial trade in bears, bear parts
and bile, including western countries like the U.S. and Canada.
Their successes are documented online. Popular Taiwanese rock star
Xin and film actor Jackie Chan are using their fame to denounce
bear bile farming. Later this year Animals Asia will open an
education village in Chengdu to advance consciousness about living
in harmony with nature and animals. WSPA has created a lifelike
mechanical bear that moves and groans in pain inside a tiny cage,
as "bile" drips from its wound. WSPA uses the simulation at Earth
Day, press conferences and large public events to raise awareness
of bear bile farms.

Transported by road on the back of
trucks, 46 sick and unduly stressed bears fight for life as they
travel to the Animals Asia China Bear Rescue Sanctuary.
Of the eight species of bear in the world, all except
the giant panda have seen their numbers reduced as a result of the
bear bile industry. Asiatic black bears are most affected by the
trade because of the high content of the “magic ingredient”
ursodeoxycholic acid in their bile.
The bears are also known as “moon bears” because of the yellow
crescents on their chests. They are listed under the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in Appendix I,
the category for the most critically endangered species. Animals
Asia Foundation is the only NGO actively rescuing farmed bears in
China. Founder and CEO Jill Robinson signed a landmark agreement
with the Chinese authorities in July 2000 to close down the worst
bear farms and rescue the bears. To date, Animals Asia has rescued
247 bears and brought them to its Moon Bear Rescue Center in
Chengdu, Sichuan Province. Animals Asia is in continuing
negotiations with senior Chinese officials in an effort to bring an
end to bear farming.
History
Bear farming began in China in the early 1980s when entrepreneurs
adopted a procedure developed in North Korea to extract bile
through surgically implanted catheters. It was claimed that this
method would satisfy the local demand for bile and reduce the
number of bears killed in the wild for their gall bladders and
other body parts. Tragically, the situation grew out of control and
by the early 1990s, there were over 400 bear farms in operation,
containing more that 10,000 bears. Plans were in place to increase
the number of bears on farms to 40,000 by 2000.

Animals Asia Founder and CEO Jill
Robinson visited a bear farm in 1993 and exposed the cruel industry
through images that shocked the world. International outcry
followed. Chinese authorities acknowledged the concerns of the
international community and, rather than expanding the number of
bear farms, began reducing them.
With increased public awareness, the market for bear
bile began to plunge and farmers saw a major impact on their
profits. The supply of bear bile on the market rapidly overtook
demand. In order to use the surplus, many farmers began making
other products from the bile, such as throat lozenges, shampoo,
wine, and tea.
Today, there are officially 7,000 bears on 68 farms
throughout China. As many smaller farms have consolidated, Animals
Asia fears the number of bears could still be as high as
10,000.

In Vietnam, fewer than 100 Asiatic black bears remain in the wild,
while about 4,000 bears are held in cages on bile farms. Although
bile extraction has been technically illegal since 1992, the
practice remains widespread. The farms welcome busloads of visiting
Koreans, who are among the world’s biggest consumers of bear
bile.
Animals Asia has been negotiating with the Vietnamese Government
since 1999 on the issues arising from non-enforcement of the law.
In 2005, after years of lobbying by a number of international and
local NGOs, the authorities promised to act to phase out bear bile
farming. In 2006, Animals Asia signed an agreement with the Vietnam
Forest Protection Department to build its sanctuary in Tam Dao
National Park near Hanoi and to rescue 200 bears from farms.
At this time, the World Society for the Protection of Animals
worked with Vietnam’s Forest Protection Unit to microchip all the
country’s bears after the government introduced a law stating that
any bears found without microchips on farms would be confiscated
and placed in Animals Asia’s care. In early 2009, Animals Asia had
rescued 24 bears in Vietnam. Animals Asia investigators have
revealed two methods of bile extraction in Vietnam. In both cases,
the bears are incarcerated in small cages, the physical and mental
suffering that they endure is extreme, and the mortality rate is
high.

Veterinarians have described bile
leaking from the gall bladders of bile bears as “black
sludge.”
Crude surgery:
Bears once underwent major abdominal surgery to remove bile from
their gall bladders every three months. The surgery was crude and
unhygienic and, according to the Vietnam government, the bears
usually suffered four such operations before dying from the
infection and pain. Animals Asia believes this method was phased
out in the early 2000s.
Ultrasound:
Another method, introduced around 2002, entails the extraction of
bile with the assistance of an ultrasound machine, catheter and
medicinal pump. The bears are drugged – usually with ketamine –
restrained with ropes and (if the operator is unskilled) have their
abdomens repeatedly jabbed with four-inch needles until the gall
bladder is found. Animals Asia suspects the process leads to
dangerous leakage of bile into the body and a slow and agonizing
death from peritonitis.

Animals Asia is calling on the
authorities to act on growing concerns over the safety to consumers
of bile taken from such sick bears. The bears’ livers and gall
bladders are often severely diseased, the bile contaminated with
pus, blood and feces.
A healthy bear’s bile is as fluid as water and ranges in color from
bright yellow-orange to green. However, Animals Asia’s vets have
described bile leaking from the gall bladders of the rescued bears
as “black sludge.” Eminent Chinese and Vietnamese pathologists have
warned users of traditional Chinese medicine not to consume bile
taken from such sick bears.
The prized ingredient in bear bile, ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), is
used by TCM practitioners for a myriad of complaints; however, UDCA
is synthesized easily under laboratory conditions and is pure,
clean and reliable. Researchers at the University of Hong Kong
announced in December 2008 that initial findings into their
four-year study of the effectiveness of extracts from two species
of the herb “coptis” compared with raw bear bile and purified
active ingredients from bear bile. The tests showed coptis to be
far more effective than bear bile at killing cancer cell lines.

Jasper spent 15 years in a crush
cage unable to move before being rescued by Animals Asia. Here he
is today at the sanctuary.
We can stop bear bile farming.
There is a lot we can do to restore freedom, dignity and life back
to the bears. Most importantly, we can spread the word far and wide
about this horrendous practice, and we can support those
organizations that are working to stop it – as volunteers,
assistants, advocates, donors and grant writers. We can write
letters to governments and politicians, create websites to raise
awareness and help undercover eco warriors expose environmental
crimes. What we cannot do is sit idle. Put pressure on your
government to add a political voice against bear bile farming. This
link provides
addresses and a template for a well-crafted letter.

Blow the whistle when you know something is wrong, or suspect that
something is wrong. It's because of an astute citizen that three
tiny Moon Bear cubs were rescued from a secret compartment under a
passenger bus. The cubs were confiscated by Vietnam customs at the
Lao/Vietnamese border crossing in Dien Bien Province after a
tip-off that the bus might be carrying illegal wildlife. The cubs
are now safe at Animals Asia's Vietnam sanctuary.
“The rewards for working with this intelligent, forgiving species,
and the rewards for people who give their faith and support to the
rescue are seeing animals who awaken each morning with the freedom
to simply stretch their limbs - and seeing us one step closer in
our journey of a thousand miles towards ending a practice which
should never have begun,” said Jill Robinson.

Rupert "Roo" survived an ordeal on
a bear farm that left him physically deformed and mentally ill, but
today he lives in peace at the Animals Asia sanctuary in
China.
Photos courtesy of Animals Asia, World Society for the
Protection of Animals and National Geographic. Special thanks to
Jill Robinson, Angela Leary and Karl Ammann for their assistance
with the story.
LINKS
Happy rescued
bear photos
Animals Asia Foundation
World
Society for the Protection of Animals
One
Voice Wildlife
Direct
Humane Society of the U.S.
Ursa Freedom
Project
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BLOG #2
Beautiful Bears
by Erica Curtis, UK
Beautiful Bears
Do you know how to dream?
Of trees and rivers
Are these things you have seen?
With prayers and love
And all I can do,
A life of these dreams
My pledge to help you.
Special thanks to UFP member
Erica
Curtis for uploading this short 8-minute documentary on the
inspiring work being performed daily at Animals Asia's bear
sanctuary in Chengdu, China. The video shows bears being rescued,
Jill meeting with the Chinese government to end bile farming, and
most joyous -- the release of bears from their agonizing torture
chambers and first day of their new life without the daily ritual
of bile extraction. This video is a Day in the Life of Animals
Asia. It is a testimony to the resolve of Animals Asia to continue
a legacy of exemplary direct action involvement for animal welfare,
and a remarkable testimony to the Moon Bear's will to survive.
Please Twitter, DIGG, copy and paste this blog onto other sites,
click the Pay Pal button, invite your friends to join UFP ... do
something, anything, because Jill reminds us in this video that
"While we celebrate the freedom of the bears we rescue, we never
forget the number that remain in cages. We have a long, long way to
go before every bear sees his freedom."