Chien Chih-cheng
Chien Chih-cheng was a Taiwanese veterinarian, animal welfare worker and director of an animal shelter. Her suicide caused outrage across Taiwan over the inadequate legislation regarding animal euthanasia, as well as the issue of cyberbullying by netizens and the press.
Background
Chien graduated from the National Taiwan University as a veterinarian, achieving the highest score in Taiwan's Tekao civil service examination. She worked as the director of an animal shelter in Xinwu District. Chien appeared in a TV show which revealed that she had euthanized over 700 stray dogs in one year. This led to many animal activists attacking her, and the Taiwanese media and netizens branded her as a 'female butcher' and 'female executioner'. At the time, Taiwan struggled with animal abandonment and overcrowding in its shelters. In 2015, Taiwan euthanized 10,900 shelter animals, and nearly 9,000 others died due to other causes. That year, 550,000 animals were adopted.
Death
On 5 May 2016, Chien injected herself with the same drug she used to euthanize stray dogs, eventually passing on the 12th. She was 32. Chien was said to have left a note describing how much she loved animals and that she had taken her own life in an effort to communicate that "all lives are equal" and urge the government to do more to help abandoned animals. Her death highlighted the immense stress animal welfare workers were under. It also led to widespread condemnation of the netizens and the media over the portrayal of Chien.
Legacy
One year after Chien's suicide, changes to Taiwan's, came into force, making it illegal to euthanize stray animals. The law was passed a year before Chien's suicide. The Taiwanese government additionally offered greater psychological support to shelter workers.