Sydney calls to end Indonesia’s dog and cat meat trade
As part of a global hand in of 700,000 petition signatures across 12 countries.
SYDNEY (30 April 2026) ― To demonstrate global solidarity to end Indonesia’s brutal dog and cat meat trade, animal campaigners in 12 cities―including Sydney― and across six continents, submitted today a 700,000-signature petition to the Indonesian Embassy / Consulate. The petition urges Indonesia’s President Prabowo Subianto to support the passage of the Animal Protection and Welfare Bill currently being debated, to ban the trade that sees more than a million dogs and countless cats stolen, trafficked and slaughtered for human consumption every year. If passed into law, Indonesia would become the sixth nation or territory in Asia to explicitly ban the cruel trade.

Sydney handover featuring representatives from FOUR PAWS Australia and Humane World for Animals Australia.
Campaigners from Humane World for Animals and FOUR PAWS―members of the Dog Meat Free Indonesia coalition―submitted the petition at Indonesian embassy and consulates in a dozen countries around the world.
Australia is home to an estimated 13 million dogs and cats. Although the sale and trade in dog or cat meat is prohibited here under food safety laws, petition signers from Australia have signed in solidarity to afford dogs and cats in Indonesia the same legal protections.
The dog and cat meat trade is a significant animal welfare issue in Indonesia involving the suffering and death of large numbers of animals, including stolen pets. Dogs and cats are trafficked across the country to supply markets, slaughterhouses and restaurants where they are slaughtered using crude and brutal methods.
The trade’s mass movement of dogs of unknown disease or vaccination status is also a major human health concern. It facilitates the spread of deadly diseases, including rabies and directly undermines the country achieving its pledge to eliminate rabies by 2030 by bringing infected dogs into previously rabies-free areas. Dog thieves also remove vaccinated dogs from communities, breaking down ‘herd’ immunity achieved when at least 70% of dogs are vaccinated in each area and which is necessary for rabies eradication.

Campaigners submitted petitions to officials in Australia, South Africa, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Canada, Chile, India, Italy, Mexico, Poland, South Korea and Thailand.
Opinion polls nationwide reveal that 93% of Indonesians support a ban on the trade, with just 5.4% having ever consumed dog meat and less than 1% cat meat.
The bill in Indonesia is being considered at a time when South Korea is preparing for its nationwide ban on the dog meat industry to come into full force in February 2027. The country’s groundbreaking Special Act bans the farming, slaughter and sale of dogs for meat, setting a landmark victory against the trade that campaigners hope Indonesia will follow.
Facts:
- To date, 121 regencies, cities and provinces across Indonesia have issued local bans on the dog and cat meat trade.
- The Animal Welfare and Protection Bill, introduced in September 2025, has received cross-party support including from the Golkar Party Faction, National Democratic Party Faction, National Mandate Party Faction and Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle Faction.
- A Nielsen opinion poll in January 2021, commissioned by DMFI, revealed that 93% of Indonesians support a national dog meat ban, and just 5% have ever consumed dog meat.
- An estimated 30 million dogs are brutally killed and eaten each year across Asia in countries including Viet Nam, China, Cambodia, Indonesia and several states in Northeast India.
- Across Asia the slaughter and sale of dogs and cats for human consumption is explicitly banned in Taiwan, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Thailand and South Korea (coming into force 2027). In other countries such as Singapore and Malaysia, while there are no explicit bans, the trade is essentially prohibited under existing animal welfare, animal cruelty and animal or food hygiene laws. In addition, the trades are banned in two major cities in mainland China (Shenzhen and Zuhai) and the city of Siem Reap in Cambodia.
- Dog Meat Free Indonesia is a coalition of international and Indonesian animal protection organizations comprising Jakarta Animal Aid Network, Humane World for Animals, FOUR PAWS, Animals Asia, Animal Friends Jogja and Natha Satwa Nusantara. Since 2017, DMFI has engaged in advocacy, public campaigns and cooperation with central and regional governments to promote policies that protect both animals and people.

Elise Burgess
Head of CommunicationsFOUR PAWS Australia
GPO Box 2845
SYDNEY NSW 2001
Main Phone: 1800 454 228
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FOUR PAWS is the global animal welfare organisation for animals under direct human influence, which reveals suffering, rescues animals in need and protects them.
Founded in 1988 in Vienna by Heli Dungler and friends, the organisation advocates for a world where humans treat animals with respect, empathy and understanding. The sustainable campaigns and projects of FOUR PAWS focus on companion animals including stray dogs and cats, animals in fashion, farm animals, and wild animals – such as bears, big cats, and orangutans – kept in inappropriate conditions as well as in disaster and conflict zones.
With offices in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Kosovo, the Netherlands, Switzerland, South Africa, Thailand, Ukraine, the UK, the USA, and Vietnam as well as sanctuaries for rescued animals in eleven countries, FOUR PAWS provides rapid help and long-term solutions. www.four-paws.org.au
