Trump fans can now buy swimsuit featuring his face
Los Angeles: For beachgoers looking to make a splash this summer, a California company has come up with a swimsuit featuring the gaping face of Donald Trump. The “Shocked Trump” bathing suit lit up the internet on Tuesday, with images of the one-piece printed with an enlarged picture of the US president’s face going viral on social media. The swimsuit made in the USA “contours your form and is meant to flatter,” the company said. The suit is on sale for USD 49.95 by the California clothing company Beloved Shirts and cannot be returned or exchanged. Beloved also began selling a “hairy chest” swimsuit in May that has been trending on social media. That suit looks like a hairy man’s upper body complete with nipples and a navel. (AFP)
China’s dog meat festival opens despite ban rumours
Yulin: A notorious Chinese dog meat festival opened today with butchers hacking slabs of canines and cooks frying the flesh despite rumours that authorities would impose a ban this year. After initial reports that authorities would prohibit the meat at the summer solstice event in the southern town of Yulin, animal rights groups said vendors and officials reached a compromise setting a limit of two dogs displayed per stall.
But multiple carcasses rested on some stalls at the main Nanqiao market, with stiff pointy tails, leathery yellow skin, eyes shut and bared teeth as if in a final growl. Behind two long rows of dog butchers, other vendors sold more typical fare like cow tongues and pork hocks and trotters.
But even they sold some dog parts, including liver. The market also features poultry, tanks of fish and vegetables and fruits, including big bundles of lychees. There was a heavy police presence outside the market and at all intersections. “Despite the fact that there does not seem to be a ban on all dog meat, the festival appears to be smaller this year, with fewer dogs losing their lives to this cruel industry,” Irene Feng of Animals Asia told AFP.
Thousands of dogs have traditionally been killed during the festival in conditions activists describe as brutal, with dogs beaten and boiled alive in the belief that the more terrified they are, the tastier the meat. Dog meat sellers have said previously that activists’ protests have actually attracted greater attention and encouraged more people to eat the meat. Between 10 million and 20 million dogs are killed for food annually in China, according to the Humane Society International.
Dog meat consumption is not illegal in China, but animal rights groups have sought to stop its sale at the annual festival. Outside the market, vendors sold stewed dog meat out of enormous steaming woks, shovelling big portions into plastic bags for passing customers. Some changed their “dog meat” signs to read “tasty meat” instead. (AFP)