Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Eatery told 'urine' breach of the law
By Li Fangchao (China Daily)
Updated: 2005-09-08 05:41

When asked how the restaurant obtained the tiger meat, a waiter replied that the owner of the restaurant had good connections within the tiger park and could get the meat of dead tigers.

The tiger-meat story published in a local newspaper has created shock waves.

Police subsequently raided the restaurant and confiscated the so-called tiger meat.

After inspection, the owner, Ma Shikun, confessed that the so-called tiger meat was actually donkey meat that had been dressed with tiger urine, to give the dish a "special" flavour.

Local authorities ordered the restaurant to close for inspection and confiscated its illegal profits, 800 yuan the price of a plate of 'tiger' meat and added another 2,400 yuan (US$296) by way of a fine.

"It is impossible for the meat of dead tigers from the park to be smuggled outside," said Wang Ligang, director of the Siberian Tiger Park.

The Siberian Tiger Park, which was set up in 1986 with only eight tigers, now has a population of 500.

Wang said the park had strict procedures for dealing with the remains of dead tigers.

"We have specialist workers to remove the hide and detach the meat from the bone," said Wang.

"Some useful organs are preserved in formalin for research while the remaining meat is incinerated and buried; the fur and bones are stored in a refrigerator," he added.

Each dead tiger has a file detailing how much meat and bones are produced during the process.

"At least six people are required to attend to each tiger's 'funeral affairs' and all of them must sign their names on the death file," Wang said.

(China Daily 09/08/2005 page3)


Page: 12



Olympics themed jetliner ascends into the sky
Best and worst dressed 2005
S. Korean TV epic hits mainland
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Siberian oil pipeline to go to China first: Putin

 

   
 

Six-party talks to resume September 13

 

   
 

President Hu due in Canada for visit

 

   
 

Vice-premier: Economy to grow 9% this year

 

   
 

China, US smash Viagra counterfeiting case

 

   
 

US$3.7b loan to help Taiwan-funded firms

 

   
  Barbara Bush: It's good enough for the poor
   
  Apple unveils iTunes phone, tiny iPod
   
  Schwarzenegger vows gay marriage bill veto
   
  Woman cheats death in crash horror fall
   
  Eatery told 'urine' breach of the law
   
  Excessive sleepiness could signal depression
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Wild orgies leave the Great Wall in mess, and tears  
Advertisement