Group calls on Taiwan’s largest food and beverage conglomerate to follow suit
For immediate release:
August 6, 2021
Contact:
Tasgola Bruner 202-483-7382
Taipei – After over six months of negotiations with PETA and Kindness to Animals in Taiwan, Lian Hwa Foods Corp. –Taiwan’s major convenience store 7-Eleven, known for its snacks, has adopted a new government policy that reads: “Lian Hwa Foods … does not conduct, sponsor, or outsource / outsource animal testing to third parties unless directly required by regulatory enactments. ” (English translation of the original policy into Mandarin) In previous years, the company has tested or funded at least 178 animals in an effort to claim human health through the marketing of its products.
“Animals cannot be locked up in laboratories, maimed or killed so that a food company can sell its products,” says PETA vice president Shalin Gala. “Lian Hwa Foods’ compassionate decision to ban animal testing will delight consumers who do not want to snack on the cruelty.”
PETA has recruited 20 major food companies in Taiwan, including its largest food and beverage conglomerate Uni-President Enterprises Corp. and licensee Nestlé AGV Products Corp., to end unnecessary animal experimentation that has included force-feeding, electric shock, and drowning. , starvation, bleeding, poisoning, autopsy and / or killing of more than 8000 animals in the last two decades. Lian Hwa Foods now joins Standard Foods Group – the largest health food company in Taiwan and licensed by PepsiCo’s Quaker Oats Company – and the third largest health food company in Taiwan, Vitalon Foods Group, in banning such tests, none of the which is not required by law.
PETA has also successfully pressured the Taiwan Food and Drug Administration (TFDA) to adopt two groundbreaking reforms: first, removing horrific drowning tests and electroshock on animals from regulations regarding companies trying to make claims. on the health risks of marketing its products, and secondly, the update to its healthy food safety testing regulations prioritizes “internationally recognized non-animal testing methods.” PETA and over 96,000 supporters are now calling on the TFDA to ban animal testing in an attempt to make similar health claims in food marketing.
PETA, whose motto is in part that “animals are not ours to experiment on” – opposes arrogance, a worldview focused on human excellence. For more information please visit PETA.org or subscribe to the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram…