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  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Knocked out with a club and blowtorched ALIVE: How 'hundreds of thousands' of dogs and cats are being cruelly slaughtered for meat in Indonesian markets<br />
<br />
The overpowering stench of charred skin wafts through the 'meat section' of Tomohon market, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.<br />
As flies buzz around the carcasses of dogs, cats, pigs and snakes which are strewn across the blood-stained floor, two teenage girls pick out the dog they want for dinner. <br />
The emaciated dogs cower from the lasso of a slaughterhouse worker who reaches into the metal cage they have been trapped in for days - without food or water.<br />
Their eyes widen with fear as he yanks another pup out by its neck and clubs it over the head until it lies motionless on the ground.<br />
The dog looks dead but dreadful footage, shot only this week, shows the animal frantically kicking out as the market worker fires up a blowtorch and burns it to death.<br />
This dog was among the 'hundreds of thousands' of strays and pets which are inhumanely slaughtered every year to supply Indonesia's dog meat trade, animal protection groups claim.<br />
<br />
<br />
The heartbreaking video, and equally disturbing photographs, were taken by Rupert Imhoff, a research officer at the Bob Irwin Wildlife and Conservation Foundation, who flew to northern Sulawesi after he heard that dogs were being beaten and burned to death.<br />
He saw other domestic animals such as cats and rabbits - as well as wild bats, jungle rats, pigs and snakes - suffering the same gruesome fate.<br />
MailOnline has even seen disturbing footage which shows market workers cutting open a cat which had two unborn kittens inside.<br />
Many of the dogs who end up in slaughterhouses are strays and pets. Dog snatchers on motorbikes lasso them around the neck and speed off, animal rights groups have claimed.<br />
Some dogs are captured while their owners are walking them, and a rare few are bought from poor villagers for 'a few dollars'.<br />
<br />
Many Indonesian street dogs are accustomed to people, who feed them
    Exclusivepix_Dogs_Burned_Alive_For_M...jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams4.jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams5.jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams7.jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams6.jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams9.jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams1...jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams1.jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams2.jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams3.jpg
  • Cats and Dogs that Destroyed Christmas<br />
<br />
Your cat or dog might be the most adorable and innocent creature in the world, but when the holiday season comes around, they can suddenly become wild and unstoppable destroyers. Your house, with all of its Christmas decorations and especially your Christmas tree, becomes their terrible playground. These pictures capture some of the worst Christmas carnage we've ever seen.<br />
©animallaughs/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Cats_Dogs_Destroy_Xams8.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested1.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested2.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested10.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested3.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested4.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested6.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested7.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested9.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested8.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested12.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested13.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested11.jpg
  • dog butchers arrested on Highway after carrying more than 100 slaughtered Dogs in Thailand<br />
<br />
Two more dog butchers are out of business. , Soi Dog undercover investigators and the Thai police were alerted to a truck en route to Tha Rae, north-eastern Thailand - the heart of dog meat territory.<br />
Cornered by the police car, the truck had no choice but to stop. Concealed in the back of the pick-up were the carcasses of more than one hundred dogs.<br />
<br />
Traditionally, these snatched dogs would have been transported alive – often up to 10 dogs to a cage and for days at a time – to primitive butcher premises, where they would be tortured and slaughtered.<br />
Under questioning, the occupants of the truck confessed that due to the ever increasing number of arrests, they had slaughtered the dogs before transport, in the hope that they would be easier to conceal and the truck would not be stopped.<br />
The public awareness billboards are leading to more and more arrests and forcing the dog snatchers into a corner! <br />
The butchers were promptly arrested and will now face charges under both the Prevention of Contagious Diseases Act and Thailand’s first ever Animal Welfare Law, brought into effect <br />
©Soi Dog Foundation/Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Dog_Butchers_Arrested5.jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • Sept. 14, 2014 - New York City, NY, United States - <br />
<br />
Anne Hathaway and Adam Shulman walk dogs in New York<br />
<br />
Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband Adam Shulman walk their dogs in Brooklyn on September 14 2014 in New York City<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Anne_Hathaway_And_Husba...jpg
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines08.jpg
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines06.jpg
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines05.JPG
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines04.jpg
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines10.jpg
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines09.JPG
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines07.jpg
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines01.jpg
  • First class Fido: Dogs get their OWN £1,250 seats so they can sit beside their owners on airliners<br />
<br />
The passenger in the seat next to mine yawns contentedly as we taxi along the runway. <br />
He hardly stirs when the engines start to roar and the plane accelerates before lifting into the sky. <br />
By the time our sleek, six-seater jet reaches cruising height his head has dropped and his eyes have closed. <br />
<br />
During the two hour hop to Palma, on the island of Mallorca, where his family has a holiday home, my neighbour eschews his complimentary glass of Moet and Chandon champagne and is tempted neither by the inflight entertainment or the pile of glossy magazines.<br />
He looks every inch the high flyer – prosperous, self-assured, and remarkably well-groomed. My fellow passenger, Dylan, is a dog.<br />
<br />
He belongs to a new breed of pampered mutts who, rather than being confined to cages in the hold along with the cargo, sit in their own leather-upholstered seats in the cabin next to their owners.<br />
The service is being offered by Victor - a private jet charter company. It isn’t a cheap option. <br />
Dylan, an eight-year-old miniature Schnauzer, is being charged £1,250 for a seat on a Victor flight to Palma, exactly the same as it costs humans using the service.<br />
And a seat is what he gets, not a space on the floor at the back of the plane near the lavatories, not a dedicated mat next to the exit. <br />
At one point, Dylan stares out of the window of the Lear40 jet and seems genuinely enthralled by the wispy cloud formation gathering a few hundred feet below. <br />
He enjoys the landing, too, as we soar over the Mediterranean and as buildings come into focus as the pilot makes his descent.<br />
'How can you have a proper family holiday if you don’t take the family dog with you?' asks Dylan’s owner, Isabelle Frank, who live in Putney, south-west London. <br />
'In the past we have put him in the hold but the trauma was terrible for both of us. It used to break my heart seeing him in a crate on the runway waiti
    Exclusivepix_Doggy_Airlines02.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs2.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs3.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs4.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs5.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs8.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs6.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs7.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs9.jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1...jpg
  • Group Wedding For Pet Dogs In Beijing<br />
<br />
Group wedding for pet dogs gets held at Purple Jade Villa on April 12, 2015 in Beijing, China. 21 couples of pets attended wedding ceremony together at Purple Jade Villa in Beijing on Sunday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Group_Wedding_For_Dogs1.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured walking her dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • Most of us, as children, had a favorite teddy, blanket or pillow, and dogs and cats do just the same thing – oftentimes, the toy they played with when they were youngest will remain their favorite. These before-and-after photos show adorable pets growing up together with their very favorite chew toys.<br />
But why do pets like certain toys and not others? Dogs prefer toys that either taste like food or can be torn apart, while cats like things that they can play with; both animals might like their owner to engage them. And once a pet starts to play with one toy, habit soon makes it their favorite.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pets_Growing_Up_With_To...jpg
  • Most of us, as children, had a favorite teddy, blanket or pillow, and dogs and cats do just the same thing – oftentimes, the toy they played with when they were youngest will remain their favorite. These before-and-after photos show adorable pets growing up together with their very favorite chew toys.<br />
But why do pets like certain toys and not others? Dogs prefer toys that either taste like food or can be torn apart, while cats like things that they can play with; both animals might like their owner to engage them. And once a pet starts to play with one toy, habit soon makes it their favorite.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Pets_Growing_Up_With_To...jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured walking her dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured at a bridge waiting for dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured walking her dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured walking her dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE<br />
<br />
Glamour model gran Sharon Perkins with 32MM breasts pictured in Bulgaria with her dogs as she takes a stroll in Bulgaria<br />
<br />
Photo shows: Sharon pictured walking her dogs in Bulgaria<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Big_Boobs_Glamour_Gran_Sharon_...JPG
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