Ecopaparazzi

Look Out! We take action and pictures to heal the Earth.

Jill Robinson
  • Female
  • Chengdu, China
  • China, mainland
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Animals Asia

Profile Information

What do you love most about Ma Earth?
All animals, both wild and domestic.
What environmental issue concerns you most?
Bear bile farming and the dog meat trade in China, poaching and habitat destruction worldwide
Who is your Eco Hero/Heroine?
Everyone who helps save animal species from suffering and harm.
What actions are you taking to help heal the Earth?
Rescuing bears from bile farms in China and Vietnam and providing a sanctuary for their care and rehabilitation. Rescuing dogs from meat traders in China who sell them to market where the dogs are brutally slaughtered in the most inhumane ways. I am working through Animals Asia to end both bear bile farming and the dog meat industry in China.
What's the best eco quote you've ever heard?
I work with many compassionate volunteers and staff who say many wise things. Their comments are among some of the best quotes I've heard.
What is your favorite green website?
http://www.animalsasia.org
What gives you the greatest hope for the future of the planet?
That people around the world are helping us end some of the most abusive crimes against the most magnificent creatures on Earth.
What else would you like to tell us about yourself?
There are markets of misery in China, where live animals of every species are on sale, trapped in terror, in the most unbelievable conditions, for human consumption. The markets are a mess of tangled limbs and broken bones, dying puppies and desperate wildlife. The sounds and sights are horrifying, whilst the stench of filth and disease is overwhelming. Blood, guts and excrement cover the floor as animals are carelessly butchered, often with deliberate cruelty. My purpose is to help these animals and work to end their suffering permanently. I am grateful for the many people who help me in this monumental but vital effort.
What is your funniest eco moment?
We shed many tears and suffer much pain, along with the animals we work to protect. But there is also joy and great celebration with our rescue and legislative victories. The funniest moments are when the bears and cubs, dogs and puppies we have rescued surprise us with silly antics and quizzical expressions. We live for those funny moments in time.
What is your blog address?
http://www.animalsasia.org/blog

China's bear bile trade

This is Caesar soon after arrival at the sanctuary. We rescued Caesar from a bile bear farm, where he was locked for 15 years in a cage too small for his body wearing a painful metal corset that restricted him so he wouldn't rip out the catheter that had been permanently inserted into his abdomen to drain his bile. With great care, we removed the corset and, after a long rehabilitation process, Caesar is happy and thriving today at our sanctuary.

In countries across Asia, thousands of bears live a life of torture on bear farms, so that their bile can be extracted and used in traditional medicine to cure ailments ranging from headaches to hemorrhoids. Bears are confined in cages which vary from agonizingly tiny "crush" cages to larger pens, all of which cause terrible physical and mental suffering. Animals Asia has a huge undertaking: the rescue, rehabilitation and care of 500 bears for the rest of their years while steadily working towards ending bear farming.

Bears are not the only animals we help. Dogs are eaten in large numbers in China, Vietnam and Korea. But China is the biggest dog eating country in the world by far, with up to 10 million dogs slaughtered every year for their meat. Nearly all suffer the stress and pain of being farmed in concentrated numbers before being killed in a variety of ways that rarely ensure a quick and humane death. Cruelty is often deliberate and slaughter methods are designed to intensify and prolong suffering in the misguided belief that torture equals taste.

Dogs who have already lived in unmerciful conditions on rural farms, are crammed into cages when they are about one year old and then transported to market by truck, which takes 3 days or longer with no food, water or shelter. Then they are killed in a variety of brutally cruel ways in the belief that torture equals taste. China even has a special sauce for dog meat.

If we can put a stop to this horrific and barbaric trade, then we can prevent this kind of situation ever arising again in the future. We are working diligently to force a ban on China's dog meat trade. We also provide educational outreach with the rescued dogs to help Chinese people make a personal connection with them in an effort to turn them away from eating dog.

Visit Animals Asia and help us spread the word!

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OPPORTUNITIES AT ANIMALS ASIA
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Jill Robinson's Photos

Jill Robinson's Blog

Jill Robinson

New Lease on Life for Chris


This is a bear who originally had a belly full of pus and a hernia the size of a football. I'll never forget Chris arriving at our door on the 10th of June 2002 from a bear farm in Dujiangyan. There were five of them – including Chris – who we heard “hooting” even before the truc… Continue

Posted on January 31, 2009 at 12:15pm — 1 Comment

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At 12:54am on February 6, 2009, Julie Trump-Lynch said…
Hi Jill - I was talking to Anna (Cocker) last night and mentioned your name as having joined Save the Sun Bears Group and she said she knows you from conference in Japan! Small world!!!!! Good luck with all your work x
 
 

Eco photos show the beauty and destruction of Mother Earth. Pictures sound the alarm; wake us up; and motivate us toward activism.

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ECO KUDOS


TreeHugger founder Graham Hill recently asked himself why he still ate meat. Eco kudos to Hill for asking this vital question. His answers might surprise you.

Eco kudos to Clownfish, a marketing company, for including environmental technology, eco-design, corporate responsibility and social media into their services for helping companies become more green.

Hooray for the UN for declaring 2010 International Year of Biodiversity. It is a celebration of life on earth and of the value of biodiversity for our lives. Be inspired and get involved! It is the actions of individuals that will ultimately make a difference for safeguarding biodiversity.

The Indianapolis Prize is the largest individual monetary award for animal species conservation in the world and is given as an unrestricted gift to the chosen honoree by the Eli Lilly and Company Foundation.

The award is not designed to be a quiet, academic, scientist-focused event, but instead an energetic and spectacular celebration of conservation victories. The goal is to inspire the general public to start caring about conservation, and to place heroes, who live in tents in danger of both wild beasts and poachers, on the pedestal that we usually reserve for sports and entertainment stars.


TAKE ACTION!

A Call to Green Blog Readers: TAKE BACK the Comment Boards!

Opponents of environmentalism and loudmouthed climate deniers have controlled them long enough.

By Brian Merchant, Planet Green
This message is going to be short, sweet, simple--and long overdue. It's time to take back the comment boards on green blogs and websites. They've been domineered by obstructionist opponents of science and climate action long enough. So what can we do? Comment back. Read more.

Learn why biodiversity is important. Ask a kid. Even a 3-year old understands the importance of bees for pollination.

Put Earth first in 2010. De-clutter your mind and reprogram it for green. Explore avenues for green activism. Beware of the Green Scare and loss of civil liberties. There are tips on how to do this at Planet Green.

Become part of the Backyard Revolution and landscape for wildlife.

Replace your lawn with native shrubs, flowers and trees. Plant a butterfly garden, and put in a pond. You'll benefit from the beauty and tranquility of your yard, and wildlife will benefit from the food and water sources that you provide.

Need some guidance? Read the book Bringing Nature Home.

Half of all animal species will be extinct in our lifetime, unless emissions peak by 2020. Cut greenhouse gas emissions by reducing your energy consumption, learning more about climate change and getting active in community efforts to heal the Earth. Become part of the solution.

Feed the hungry.
Save indigenous people.
Stand up for workers' rights.

Be kind to animals.
Stop factory farms.
Save 100 animals every year.

End deforestation for grazing.
Save an acre of trees.
End grazing on public lands.

Tell USDA 'Wildlife Services'
to stop killing wildlife for
corporate ranchers' profits.

Stop wars for resources.
Help end corporate rule.
Live your conscience.

Save our oceans.
Stop the #1 polluter of water.
Support a sustainable planet.

Think outside yourself.
Live compassionately.
Stop the violence.

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Created by Jeanette McDermott Aug 23, 2009 at 12:25pm. Last updated by Jeanette McDermott Jan 22.

UFP Newsletter

Learn about the Ursa Freedom Project campaign to free 9,000 bears from bile farms.


Created by Jeanette McDermott Apr 20, 2009 at 1:17pm. Last updated by Jeanette McDermott Jun. 15, 2009.

LEARN!

Download the Implementation Strategy for 2010 International Year of Biodiversity.

Within these eco portals are key people and organizations that are working to heal Mother Earth.

Organic Consumers Association

Smithsonian Zoogoer archives

Download the Educator's Guide to Biodiversity and engage in dialogue about teaching youth about our wondrous Mother Earth.

The IUCN Red List is a key conservation tool. Download the pdf to learn more.

"The longer we wait, the more expensive it will be to prevent future extinctions," says Dr Jane Smart, Head of IUCN's Species Programme. "We now know what species are threatened, what the threats are and where we have no more excuses to watch from the sidelines." Learn more about bears on the IUCN Red List of Threatened and Endangered Species.

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