Guide 1
What the Trade Involves
Cats may be stolen, collected from streets or moved through dealers before reaching holding sites and slaughterhouses. The trade creates severe welfare harm through confinement, transport stress, injury, fear and disease risk.
Guide 2
What Happens After Rescue
Cats removed from the trade need quarantine, rabies risk assessment, wound treatment, vaccination, parasite care and behaviour support. Some can be adopted locally; others need longer shelter or sanctuary placement.
Guide 3
Why Donor Support Matters
Rescue operations only work when there is somewhere safe for cats to go after seizure. Funding veterinary care and shelter capacity helps local teams say yes when enforcement or surrender opportunities arise.
Guide 4
The Vietnam Cat Meat Trade
An estimated millions of cats are consumed annually in parts of Vietnam, including stolen pets. Live transport and slaughter conditions breach welfare and public-health standards. Seizure rescue, quarantine and shelter recovery are the immediate welfare gap after police intercepts.
Guide 5
UK Donor Route
Donate at donate or read donate stop dog cat meat trade for the broader meat-trade path. Vietnam is in WARN's 17-country network for cat and dog meat trade rescue alongside Indonesia and Malaysia.
Guide 6
Why UK Donors Choose WARN — Transparent Partner Grants
WARN is a registered UK Community Interest Company (Company no. 17298990) and is not a charity, so it cannot claim Gift Aid. The donation case is transparent partner-led welfare where support reaches practical field needs. WARN states upfront that gifts fund WARN's 17-country partner network across South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa, Southern Africa and South America programmes through vetted local partners — not WARN-run sanctuaries. Every gift is receipted; give one-off at donate or monthly at monthly giving.