Bodypainted ‘Reptiles’ to Protest Louis Vuitton’s ‘Killer’ Exotic-Skin Bags
PETA’s Naked ‘Crocodiles’ Will Highlight Hideous Lives and Torturous Deaths at Vietnamese Suppliers
For Immediate Release:
February 1, 2017
Contact:
Sophia Charchuk 202-483-7382
What: Wearing little more than bodypaint, two PETA “crocodiles” will appear outside a Holt Renfrew store on Thursday and drape themselves over an oversized purse that proclaims, “Louis Vuitton: A Look That Kills.”
When: Thursday, February 2, 12 noon sharp
Where: Holt Renfrew, at the southwest corner of 102 Avenue N.W. and 101 Street N.W., Edmonton
PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to wear”—is calling on shoppers to ditch exotic-skin bags, watchbands, shoes, and other accessories on the heels of a new PETA video exposé of crocodile farms in Vietnam, including two that say they have supplied skins to a tannery owned by Louis Vuitton’s parent company, LVMH. The eyewitness footage shows that reptiles lie motionless in thousands of tiny concrete cells, some shorter than their own bodies, and that workers hack into thrashing crocodiles’ necks and ram metal rods down their spines as blood pours from the wounds.
“Every crocodile-skin handbag represents the hideously gruesome death of a sensitive animal,” says PETA President Ingrid Newkirk. “PETA is calling on every decent human being to refuse to purchase any such cruelly produced accessories.”
For more information, please visit PETA.org.