A Plea for Compassion: Protect Chained Dogs from Burning Alive in South Korean Wildfires (Sister City: Yeongdong County & Alameda, California)

Photos: Charles, a dog who miraculously escaped a wildfire after being severely burned across his entire body, including inside his mouth, is now receiving intensive care and showing remarkable resilience despite his horrific injuries. Tragically, Charles witnessed his friend, tied next to him, burn to death. https://koreandogs.org/charles/
Despite the 2023 revision of South Korea’s Animal Protection Act—which set a two-meter minimum tether length—lifelong tethering remains legal, widespread, and profoundly inhumane. A two-meter chain offers no real freedom or dignity. Across the country, dogs endure short chains, filth, harsh weather, and utter neglect. Treated as tools or property, their suffering is normalized, hidden, and ignored.
The devastating wildfires of March 2025 once again exposed the full horror of this systemic neglect. Countless dogs, permanently chained or caged, were abandoned during evacuations—left to burn alive in agony. This was not just a failure of disaster response—it was a moral and ethical failure of society as a whole.
In response, South Korea’s Ministry of Agriculture, Food, and Rural Affairs (MAFRA) issued the “Manual for the Rescue and Protection of Companion Animals During Natural Disasters” in May 2025. We recognize and commend this step as an important milestone: the manual acknowledges companion animals as family members, outlines roles for government agencies, and promotes local emergency planning and public awareness. However, the manual is non-binding. It does not mandate the evacuation of animals, nor does it address or prohibit the practice of lifelong tethering.
Even more alarmingly, countless dogs are kept in isolation—chained at fields, orchards, factories, or warehouses, far from human care. Labeled as tools, not pets, they are denied legal protection and left exposed to extreme weather and deadly disasters, unable to escape. This is not mere neglect—it’s institutionalized cruelty. If people won’t protect them, the law must.
As KoreanDogs.org and many allied organizations have emphasized, true protection requires more than suggestions. Real change requires legally enforceable action and accountability.
We therefore call on the South Korean government to enact urgent and meaningful reforms:
• Ban lifelong tethering nationwide. This cruel and outdated practice causes ongoing physical and psychological suffering and must end.
• Ban the remote, solitary confinement of dogs—isolated from human residences, care, and companionship. No dog should be forced to live out its life alone and unprotected, treated as a disposable tool.
• Mandate companion animal evacuation by law during all declared emergencies. No animal should ever be left behind to burn, drown, starve, or freeze.
• Prosecute abandonment and cruelty with severe, consistent penalties, especially during disasters when the consequences are often fatal.
• Require local governments to develop and implement enforceable animal disaster plans, with oversight and accountability.
We also urge Sister and Friendship Cities around the world to take a principled stand. These partnerships must not overlook the suffering and destruction caused by inadequate animal protection laws in South Korea. We ask global partners to raise their voices: urge your counterparts in South Korea to legislate lasting reforms, including a ban on tethering, isolated keeping, and mandatory evacuation protocols for all companion animals.
This is a pivotal moment. The world is watching. South Korea can choose compassion and leadership, or remain complicit in avoidable cruelty.
Let us demand change—together.

Call for Action
👉 📧 Send emails using the Suggested Message (below) to all listed officials—both U.S. and Korean.
Alameda City Council:
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Yeongdong County Council:
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Chungcheongbuk-do Council:
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National Assembly of South Korea:
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👉 📬 Mail the letter.
City of Alameda
2263 Santa Clara Avenue
Alameda, CA 94501
USA
📬 Send a copy of your letter to Yeongdong County:
Mayor Jeong Young-Chul
Yeongdong County
(29140) 1 Dongjeong-ro, Yeongdong-eup, Yeongdong-gun, Chungcheongbuk-do
South Korea
Yeongdong County Council
(29140) 1 Dongjeong-ro, Yeongdong-eup, Yeongdong-gun, Chungcheongbuk-do
South Korea
📬 Yeongdong County addresses in Korean:
Mayor Jeong Young-Chul (Yeongdong County Hall)
정영철 영동군수님
영동군청
(29140) 충청북도 영동군 영동읍 동정로 1
South Korea
Yeongdong County Council
영동군의회
(29140) 충청북도 영동군 영동읍 동정로 1
South Korea
📝 Suggested message
Urgent Appeal to Alameda: Help End Tethering and Remote Solitary Confinement of Dogs in Sister County Yeongdong County, South Korea
Dear Mayor Marilyn Ezzy Ashcraft and Esteemed Representatives of Alameda,
I write with deep urgency and a heartfelt plea for your compassionate leadership. In Yeongdong County, South Korea—your Sister County—countless dogs are suffering in silence due to the systemic cruelty of lifelong tethering and remote, solitary confinement.
Across South Korea, dogs—often called “field dogs”—are chained alone in remote fields, orchards, warehouses, and even fish farms at sea. Labeled as “guard dogs,” they are in reality powerless to protect anything—not even themselves. Bound by short chains with little to no shelter or care, they endure scorching heat, bitter cold, hunger, and fear. When fires, floods, or other disasters strike, these animals are left to die horrific deaths, unable to escape. This is not a cultural tradition—it is cruelty that has been tolerated and overlooked for far too long.
These “field dogs” are not treated as living beings in need of protection, but as disposable property. This is not merely neglect—it is institutionalized cruelty, enabled by a legal loophole that allows owners to deny animals basic protection simply by asserting they are not “companion animals.”
Although South Korea recently issued a Manual for the Rescue and Protection of Companion Animals During Natural Disasters (May 2025), it carries no legal force. Lifelong tethering is still legal, and there are no enforceable requirements mandating that animals be evacuated or protected during emergencies.
This is a moral crisis—and it is unfolding in your Sister County.
We have joined a growing national campaign urging the South Korean government to ban the remote confinement and tethering of dogs. It is time to end the abandonment of animals in places far from human care. If people cannot be their guardians, then the law must become their protector.
As a global city with a meaningful relationship with Yeongdong County, Alameda has a rare opportunity to influence real change. I respectfully urge you to take the following actions:
1. Publicly denounce the cruelty of lifelong tethering and the abandonment of animals during disasters. Silence allows systemic suffering to continue.
2. Contact your counterparts in Yeongdong County and urge them to support national legislation banning the remote confinement of dogs and mandating animal evacuation protocols.
3. Advocate for comprehensive reforms in South Korea including:
- A complete ban on lifelong tethering and remote confinement
- Legally binding evacuation and protection measures for animals during emergencies
- Real penalties for abandonment and neglect
- Public education campaigns promoting empathy and responsible care
4. Extend Alameda’s hand in partnership by offering support through humane disaster planning, policy exchange, and public messaging that elevates the meaning of international friendship.
Please take a moment to see the faces behind this tragedy (warning: deeply disturbing content):
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/m0FWFjIfbC8
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/7vZE_P_wGho
- https://koreandogs.org/700-dogs-burned-alive/
- https://koreandogs.org/bbibbi/
- https://koreandogs.org/charles/
- https://koreandogs.org/daepoong/
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/sbUi7K9mPTU
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/sStj0hH6MyM
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/A8OskdtJvjg
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/BfEbt6s79sE
- https://youtu.be/MunZMwl6BmQ
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/hRocjMfllqM
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/hotkDKh8Ii8
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/SJ-bYNdeS6I
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/CeTa4VRG6pk
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/9Bway6u5sb4
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/cDWUTYsVQHQ
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/_LjaYeZkrQU
- https://koreandogs.org/two-brothers-rescued/
- https://koreandogs.org/uljin-fire/
- https://koreandogs.org/heendoongi/
- https://koreandogs.org/gangwondo-fire/
- https://koreandogs.org/danbi/
- https://koreandogs.org/pasha/
- https://koreandogs.org/jinsooni/
Legal reform is the only true path to ending this cruelty. While South Korea’s recent efforts are a step forward, only strong, enforceable laws can save countless lives and demonstrate true compassion. As leaders of Yeongdong County’s Sister City, your voice matters more than you know. Please use it to speak for these forgotten animals. A global petition is growing: https://c.org/cyjcwjyFMt. Let this be the moment when Alameda’s relationship with Yeongdong County becomes a force for meaningful change—not only for people, but for the loyal animals who suffer unseen, tethered and forgotten.
With deep respect, urgency, and hope for your leadership,
[Your name, city, country]
👉 Join the effort! Click HERE and HERE for more ways you can help.
Video: Left chained to farm equipment as a wildfire engulfed her village in South Korea, Bbibbi, a year-old puppy, was found barely alive with severe burns after her owner abandoned her, highlighting a critical lack of empathy and inadequate animal protection laws. https://koreandogs.org/bbibbi/
Video: Daan spent three agonizing years tied to a tree, enduring harsh weather, malnutrition, and blindness with no love or shelter, until he was finally rescued—too late to regain his health but given a chance to experience kindness. Despite medical care and a brief time in a safe space, he passed away, leaving behind a heartbreaking reminder of the cruelty animals endure and a plea for compassion toward all sentient beings. To learn more, click 👉 HERE, HERE, HERE.
Video: 💔 CARE’s Grim Discovery: Agony in the Ashes - Burned Dogs Found
Video: Amidst the devastating South Korean wildfires that killed many and destroyed homes, junior dogs who escaped a burning dog farm were found by CARE, demonstrating incredible loyalty by staying together despite severe burns and starvation, highlighting the tragic abandonment of countless animals and the urgent need for improved animal welfare.
Amidst the Inferno: Junior Dogs Found and Rescued, Clinging to Each Other.🐾🐾 CARE




































All animals are born free, and shall be respected and loved, not chained. NO animal deserves to be a victim of dehumanized, desensitized and sadistic psychopaths, because only this kind of people are able to chain innocent and defenseless animals to a life of constant suffering and neglect.
South-Koreans, would you like to be chained your entire life!? If not, why do you treat other sentient life with such cruelty? SHAME on you, South Korea. Your reputation as extreme animal abusers is known all over the world. FREE dogs from chains… and start to respect and love them instead.