Có thể là hình ảnh về một hoặc nhiều người, râu, chó và văn bản

In the sweltering haze of a South Korean summer night, where the air hung heavy with the metallic tang of rusting cages and the faint, acrid bite of fear-sweat, Pete Wicks found himself crouched in the underbrush of a forgotten industrial fringe. It was June 2025, and the 37-year-old reality TV heartthrob—known for his inked arms, Essex swagger, and a string of tabloid romances—had traded the glamour of TOWIE reunions for something far grittier: a black-ops raid on one of the country’s last-stand dog meat farms. Flanked by a crack team from Humane Society International (HSI), Wicks wasn’t there for a photo op or a podcast plug. He was there because of a sound—a low, keening wail that pierced the midnight stillness like a siren’s call.

“I heard them first,” Pete confessed later, his voice cracking over a grainy Zoom call from his London flat, where his rescue dogs Eric and Peggy dozed at his feet. “The rest of the team was prepping the vans, checking the perimeters, but me? I was frozen. It wasn’t barking. It was… crying. Like they knew. Like they were begging in a language no one else could hear.” That cry, he says, echoed the ghosts of his own losses—his French Bulldog Ernie, who taught him unconditional love before passing in 2016; the strays he’d scooped up as a broke 19-year-old in Essex. But this was different. This was 170 souls on the brink, crammed into wire hells on a sprawling 10-acre compound in Siheung, a city on the edge of Seoul where tradition clashed with modernity like tectonic plates.

The farm wasn’t on any map. Tucked behind a facade of rusting shipping containers and razor-wire fences, it operated as a “hidden market”—a clandestine node in South Korea’s fading but ferocious dog meat trade, which slaughters up to a million animals annually despite a 2024 legislative ban set to take full effect in 2027. Insiders called it “The Whispering Fields,” a euphemism for the labyrinth of pens where dogs—stolen pets, farm rejects, trafficked strays—were fattened for festivals like Boknal, then herded to slaughter in the dead of night. HSI had been tracking it for months via drone flyovers and whistleblower tips, but it was Pete’s involvement that turned reconnaissance into redemption. As ambassador for Dogs Trust and fresh off filming series two of his hit “dog-umentary” Pete Wicks: For Dogs’ Sake, he’d leveraged his 1.2 million Instagram followers to crowdfund the op: £150,000 raised in 48 hours, branded #HearTheCry.

The raid kicked off at 1:47 a.m., under a moonless sky bruised purple by monsoon clouds. Pete, clad in a black hoodie and cargo pants stuffed with sedatives and muzzles, was the “civilian asset”—his role? Distraction and morale. As HSI’s Korean coordinator, Jihyun, hacked the perimeter cameras, Pete slipped through a drainage culvert, his torch beam catching the glint of eyes in the dark. “Hundreds of them,” he recalls, throat tightening. “Golden Retrievers with matted fur, Jindos trembling in corners, even a few Pomeranians that looked like they’d been ripped from someone’s handbag. The smell hit me like a gut punch—urine, feces, despair. But those cries… they built into this chorus. I swear, it was like they were singing for help.”

What unfolded over the next four hours was a ballet of brutality and mercy. HSI teams, equipped with thermal imaging and veterinary kits, breached the main gate at 2:15 a.m., posing as “health inspectors” to the lone night guard, who bolted at the sight of their badges. Pete, positioned at the eastern pens, became the human bridge: coaxing terrified dogs with whispers and treats smuggled from his own pantry—dried lamb crisps that Eric adored. One by one, they emerged: a skeletal Akita named Sora, her ribs like piano keys; a litter of six-week-old pups, eyes still milky, huddled in a feed trough; an elder Husky mix, blind in one eye, who licked Pete’s tattooed knuckles as if recognizing a kindred survivor.

But the real exposure came in the farm’s “processing shed”—a cinderblock nightmare HSI dubbed the “Chamber of Echoes.” Floodlights snapped on at 2:45 a.m., revealing not just hooks and scalding vats, but ledgers: doggedly kept records of “inventory” sourced from as far as Thailand and Vietnam, laundered through underground auctions in Incheon’s port district. Pete, vomit rising in his throat, filmed it all on a GoPro strapped to his chest—grainy footage that would later go viral, amassing 50 million views and sparking protests from Seoul to San Francisco. “This wasn’t some back-alley slaughter,” he says. “It was industrialized. They had QR codes on crates, tracking ‘yield’ like it was Amazon Prime. The hidden market? It’s a syndicate—triads, corrupt officials, exporters hiding behind ‘cultural heritage’ bullshit.”

By 5:32 a.m., as the first blush of dawn streaked the horizon, the last van rumbled out: 173 dogs in total, a number that swelled to 178 when eight escapees were rounded up from nearby ditches. Vets on standby triaged them on-site—deworming, vaccinations, microchipping—while Pete collapsed against a tire, Peggy’s photo clutched in his fist. “I broke down there,” he admits. “Sobbing like a kid. These weren’t statistics; they were families waiting to be whole.” The op’s success hinged on a tip from a defecting worker, a 22-year-old named Min-ho, who’d heard Pete’s podcast episode on “Staying Relevant” about losing Ernie. “He messaged me anonymously,” Pete reveals. “Said, ‘Your dog story saved me. Now let me save theirs.’”

The aftermath was a whirlwind of wings and warrants. The dogs touched down at Incheon Airport by noon, crated in climate-controlled holds bound for HSI’s global network: 92 to U.S. sanctuaries in California and New York, 45 to UK rehoming centers via Dogs Trust partnerships, the rest scattered to Canada and Australia. Pete flew commercial with the first batch to Heathrow, emerging bleary-eyed into a scrum of flashbulbs, Eric and Peggy barking from the arrivals gate. “They’re free,” he declared, voice hoarse. “But the fight’s just starting.”

Back in Seoul, the raid cracked the syndicate wide open. Siheung police, under international pressure from the footage, raided three linked farms by week’s end, seizing £2.4 million in assets and indicting four traffickers. South Korea’s Ministry of Agriculture, facing boycott threats from K-pop stans and vegan influencers, fast-tracked enforcement of the 2027 ban, allocating ₩500 billion for “ethical transitions” to pig farming. Pete’s role? He testified remotely for the prosecution, his Essex drawl cutting through translators: “I heard the cries. You can’t unhear that.”

Yet for Pete, the true measure of salvation lies in the souls saved. Meet Luna, the Akita who now romps in a Hertfordshire garden, adopted by a vet tech who binge-watched For Dogs’ Sake; or Kai, the blind Husky, guide-dog trained for a visually impaired teen in Vancouver. Over 170—now thriving, tails wagging in defiance of their past. Pete’s own home swelled too: he fostered three pups from the raid, dubbing them “The Cry Crew,” and launched a #HearTheSilent foundation, partnering with HSI to fund 10 more ops worldwide.

Reflecting in his sun-dappled lounge, Pete—tattoos peeking from a fresh Dogs Trust tee—strokes Peggy’s ears. “People see me as the TOWIE lad, the Strictly flirt,” he muses. “But this? This exposed the real me. And the real horror out there. If my breakdown on that farm saves one more dog from the hook, I’ll cry a thousand times over.” As Eric snores contentedly, the distant echo of those midnight wails fades—but the chorus of lives reclaimed? It howls louder than ever, a testament to one man’s ear for the unheard.