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Beijing: On the eve of the infamous annual "dog meat festival" in China, majority of Chinese on Sunday for the first time called for an end to the gory event in which over 10,000 canines are expected to be slaughtered and eaten by dog meat lovers.
As the event is set to kick off on Monday in Yulin city, in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, state-run Xinhua news agency reported on Sunday that majority of Chinese call for an end to "Yulin Dog Meat Festival", saying it has "harmed China's reputation" world over.
Yulin residents too backed the ban which links their town with the event.
About 51.7 per cent of the respondents - who included Yulin residents too - wanted the dog meat trade banned completely, while 69 per cent said they have never eaten dog meat.
"The poll shows most people here don't eat dogs," said Qin Xiaona, director of the Capital Animal Welfare Association charity, one of a cluster of animal welfare groups that commissioned the survey.
Yulin, a small town in southwest China's Guangxi region, has become notorious in recent years for its "dog meat festival", a commercial event in which thousands of dogs and cats are slaughtered and eaten.
Local businesses launched the festival - arguing it was a tradition and part of the local culture - in 2009 to promote the remote area to tourists.
"It is embarrassing to us that the world wrongly believes that the brutally cruel Yulin festival is part of Chinese culture," Qin said, adding "it isn't".
The festival in recent years evoked revulsion in China as many Chinese have turned to pets in recent years to cope up with loneliness as the only child permitted under law left home for education or jobs.
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