Having adopted numerous stray dogs from animal rescue groups, the woman slaughtered and prepared them for food, an incident that sparked outrage on Chinese social media.
After eating betel leaves with dog meat, the 31-year-old woman went into shock, felt tired, and her blood pressure dropped, leading to a diagnosis of acute hemolysis.
The Ho Chi Minh City People's Committee has requested relevant units to clarify the identity of Nguyen Minh Phuc, who calls himself "Venerable Thich Tam Phuc," appeared in a bar, and previously filmed himself eating dog meat.
The Executive Board of the Buddhist Association of Cu Chi District (Ho Chi Minh City) has confirmed that Mr. Nguyen Minh Phuc (the monk who ate dog meat) is impersonating a Buddhist monk.
"I believe that animals also sense death and are terrified when they witness the death of their own kind, so killing the mother dog in front of her puppies is too cruel."
After watching the clip of the puppy trembling, its eyes looking like it was about to cry as its mother was being roasted, many VTC News readers wanted to find this puppy to take it home and care for it.
If you still can't give up eating dog meat, please don't kill dogs in front of their fellow animals; think about the fear and pain the animal experiences.
Approximately 10.000 dogs are brutally slaughtered by being beaten with clubs, electrocuted, skinned, and burned alive at the Yulin Dog Meat Festival (Guangxi, China), which takes place on the summer solstice every year.
Mr. Pham Thanh Hoc, Deputy Head of the Propaganda Department of the Hanoi City Party Committee, said that he fully supports Hanoi's initiative to encourage people to abandon the habit of eating dog meat. He himself used to eat it but will now give up this habit.
Some people consider eating dog and cat meat to be normal, while many others believe that killing and eating dogs and cats is uncivilized and uncultured.
People who kill dogs and cats for meat in Taiwan can be fined up to hundreds of millions of Vietnamese dong, while similar acts in Hong Kong, if caught, can result in several months in prison.