Outrage over video of kitten being stoned

A sickening video of a kitten being stoned has been circulating online - and animal rights groups are calling for the culprits to be named and prosecuted.

The graphic video was posted to Facebook last night by Paw Justice.

In it a female, who appears to be in her teens, throws a tiny kitten on the ground. Then she and a companion begin repeatedly throwing a large piece of concrete at the kitten, hitting it several times.

At least two people in the background can be heard laughing and egging her on, all speaking in New Zealand accents.

It is not known if the kitten died, nor who shot the footage - but Paw Justice said on Facebook it was believed to have been filmed in Invercargill.

The video quickly spread online with more than 100,000 views in a matter of hours last night.

Within an hour an Invercargill teen had been named as the girl in the video, and posters were threatening violence against her.

In its Facebook post Paw Justice said the video "sickens and saddens us at the same time, because this is reality in New Zealand".

"This terrible act of cruelty and senseless death of a young kitten is what we have to fight against! We can't even begin understand why this little soul was stoned to death," the post said.

"What the hell is happening with our youth if they can do this and laugh, and in front of at least one young child."

Paw Justice asked people to "please stand with us, identify them".

"Let them know it's not right, and in fact it's so wrong it's beyond sick. Let them know it won't be tolerated."

Paw Justice co-founder Craig Dunn told Radio New Zealand the video was "one of the most disturbing videos I've seen ... it's just horrific".

"It was so casual and blasé - there was no empathy, no consideration, nothing towards it."

Dunn told RNZ the people involved "need to be brought to law and made accountable" for the "sadistic" behaviour.

Anyone with information on the incident was asked to email craig@pawjustice.co.nz with the word "kitten" in the subject line.

People could also text 'reward' to 4413 to help offer a reward for information leading to those responsible being caught.

Police say they are aware of the video and are making enquiries.

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