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Girl who kills rabbits for fun

Z

Zhu Rong

Guest

Girl who kills rabbits for fun

Published Nov 22 2010

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What started out as an innocous play soon turned out to be a nightmare for the bunny.

Chinese blogs have called for a "human-flesh search" for a woman who recorded herself squashing a rabbit to death and then posting the video on YouTube.
"Human-flesh" searches are popular in China where netizens extensively research on the Internet to uncover details of a targeted party to humiliate him or her.

The woman who tortured the rabbit is now the latest target of this Chinese phenomenon. According to online reports, more photos have surfaced showing the woman killing more rabbits by stepping on them with her high-heeled shoes. Photos have not been included below due to their graphic nature.

The video, which was recently removed from YouTube, shows the woman squashing the rabbit to death by placing a thick glass pane on top of the bunny and sitting on it. Not only did she do it once, she flipped the limp body of the bunny, placed the glass pane on it and sat on it again. While committing the sadistic act, she was seen singing, swinging her legs, smiling and looking as if she was having a lot of fun.

 
S

San Zang

Guest
Chinese girls paid to crush small animals


Chinese girls paid to crush small animals

Published Nov 23 2010

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Sick or just plain greedy?

Online reports say women in China are paid to video themselves crushing small animals to satisfy customers' fetishes.
According to a reader who wrote in to the Singaporean website STOMP, these women are paid by overseas customers to crush kittens, puppies, rabbits or guinea pigs with high heels on. A netizen said the women get paid around 6,000 yuan.

This information has come to light after a video surfaced online of a woman squashing a rabbit to death while laughing and posing for the camera. Chinese blogs have called for a 'human-flesh search' for the woman to uncover her to humiliate him or her. Crush films were banned in the United States of America in September this year.

 
O

Okuni

Guest

'Crush fetishists' outrage China with bunny video

A group of Chinese fetishists who produced graphic videos of live animals apparently being crushed to death and then posted them online, has caused outrage in China.

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The women was eventually tracked down by online 'vigilantes' and exposed to be a nurse at a hospital in the northwestern province of Heilongjiang


By Peter Foster, Beijing 11:23AM GMT 25 Nov 2010

The videos, one of which appeared to show an attractive young woman squashing a small rabbit under a sheet of glass as other giggling girls looked on, led to widespread condemnation and a public call to find those responsible.

China, a country with a population of 1.3bn people of whom 420m are online, has some of the tightest internet censorship in the world, much of which is officially aimed at curbing what China's authoritarian government has called the three "vulgarities" – vulgar, cheap and tasteless content.

The latest grim offering from China's internet fringe drew widespread expressions of disgust on China's vibrant online chat-room and bulletin board discussion forums.

"Abnormal! Has she ever think about the feeling of the bunny? She deserves to be crushed by elephant!", said one entry on the popular web portal sina.com. "How can you imagine such a nice-looking girl with such a venomous heart!", said another. The calculated viciousness of the films met with calls to find for those responsible through what Chinese internet users call a "human flesh" search, using networks of individuals to uncover people's real identities.

Chinese media reports sourced the videos to a group of fetishists that were offering money to the women to perform in the videos, with payments from as little as £10 for crushing fruit rising to £40 for animals, according to a report on China Radio International. Another paper, the Chengdu Evening identified the group responsible as "crushfetish", the same group that was blamed for a notorious video that appeared in February 2006 showing a woman killing a puppy with her stiletto heals.

The women was eventually tracked down by online 'vigilantes' and exposed to be a nurse at a hospital in the northwestern province of Heilongjiang who initially defended her actions, but was forced under public pressure to make an apology. It is unclear if the latest videos – which were screened late at night for two to three hours to avoid detection by the authorities – are genuine or the product of video software.

Several reasons for making the videos have been advanced, ranging from a satire on the controlling nature of Chinese society to the more prosaic demands of the sadist adult video industry which, according to one Chinese newspaper, can charge £600 for a single tape.

 
Z

Zhu Rong

Guest
Woman in rabbit killing video apologizes


Woman in rabbit killing video apologizes

By Jia Xu
Updated: 2010-11-30 16:14


A girl who filmed herself killing a rabbit for a video to be sold online has apologized for her actions, as it was revealed a secret group is behind the animal abuse videos, the Jinghua Times reported Tuesday.
<table style="border: 0px none rgb(255, 228, 225); width: 80px; height: 20px; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-size: 14px;" align="right" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"> <tbody> <tr> <td style="min-height: 16px; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); text-align: left;" align="left" valign="center">
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Huang stamps on a rabbit in a video posted online.[Photo/Jinghua Times]
</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> In the widely seen recording, the girl is seen picking up the rabbit to stroke it before placing it under a piece of glass on a table. She then sits on a piece of thick glass on the top of the animal, crushing it to death.
<table style="font-size: 14px;" border="1"> <tbody></tbody> <tbody></tbody> <tbody></tbody></table> The girl, alias Huang Xu, from Sichuan province, confessed to police that received 400 Yuan ($60) after making the video.
She told a reporter: "I got the job from a QQ group when I had posted my resume on the Internet and I didn't actually know what the company did when I got their call telling me I can get make decent money out of the job."
The sickening four minute video enraged netizens who started a“human flesh search” posting the girl’s personal details online.

<table style="border: 0px none rgb(255, 228, 225); width: 80px; height: 20px; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-size: 14px;" align="left" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"> <tbody> <tr> <td style="min-height: 16px; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); text-align: left;" align="left" valign="center">
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Huang crushes the rabbit under a piece of glass. [Photo/Jinghua Times]
</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> An animal protectionist saw the video and started his own investigation into the group. Under the alias, crush fetish, he pretended to have an interest in animal abuse videos and through the online SNS community tracked down those responsible. According to a police statement, the group makes maltreatment videos to sell to overseas online video companies. The company has allegedly made 279 animal abuse videos involving cats, rabbits, and fish. The subscription fees for such videos range from $3.70 to $9.00 each.
Chang Jiwen, a law expert, said: "In Europe and the US, there's a complete law system on animal protection, including strong punishment to animal abusers. Thus, maltreatment videos have the market overseas."
Online campaigners in China also called for a comprehensive law on animal protection saying it’s a shame on the nation that these videos are sent overseas.




 
Z

Zhu Rong

Guest
Girl paid 400 yuan to crush rabbits


Girl paid 400 yuan to crush rabbits


The New Paper

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The woman shown crushing a rabbit to death in a video clip has gone to the police after netizens tracked her down.
The 26-year-old Chinese woman goes by the alias Huang Xu.

She told police she was paid 400 yuan to do it by a group cashing in on people with animal abuse fetishes, reported Xinhua News Agency. She appeared in a four-minute video torturing a little rabbit under her high-heeled shoes and then crushing the creature to death by sitting on a thick glass plate placed on it.

The video was put up on mop.cam, a popular Chinese website, and reportedly drew more than 500,000 hits the first day it was published.
One of Huang's friends told Xinhua that she had been doing this since 2007. According to the friend, it started innocently enough when Huang put her resume online.

She was contacted by a man who offered her a job of "preparing salad by foot". All she had to do was to be filmed crushing fruits. She would get 100 yuan for each attempt. But soon the man insisted she crush animals such as fish, insects and rabbits, and threatened to release the videos online if she quit, Xinhua reported.

Huang said she later quit the business anyway. Police said the group makes such videos to sell to overseas online video companies. The company has allegedly made 279 animal abuse videos involving cats, rabbits, and fish. The subscription fees for such videos range from US$4 to US$9.00 each. Legal expert Chang Jiwen told Xinhua: "In Europe and the US, there are laws on animal protection, including strong punishment for animal abusers.

Thus, (such) videos have a market overseas."
Popular netizen Liusuifeng revealed on tianya.com, one of the most popular Chinese forums, that videos like these were produced by a group of like-minded people named "crushfetish", who hire women to abuse animals.

"I am shocked by these animal cruelty videos and their negative influence on the public, especially the younger generation, is beyond my imagination," said campaign manager for the International Fund for Animal Welfare Beijing office Hua Ning. "We call on the Internet supervision authorities to delete all these videos and ban online animal abuse information," the manager said.

"However, in the long term, we expect the expedition of legislation to prevent cruelty to animals."

 
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