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(IN) Aftermath of Bangalore dog purge vindicates Animal Birth Control

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From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2007:

 

 

Aftermath of Bangalore dog purge vindicates Animal Birth Control

 

 

BANGALORE--Newly released Bangalore dog bite data vindicates

the local Animal Birth Control programs and demonstrates that the

programs were working, until they were suspended in early 2007 amid

a civic frenzy over two fatal dog attacks on children that occurred

outside the ABC program boundaries.

Official Bangalore bite statistics collected and tabulated by

veterinarian Susan Shaw, released in mid-April 2007, showed a 62%

decline from 2005 through 2006 in dog bites requiring medical

treatment, said Compassion Unlimited Plus Action cofounder Suparna

Ganguly.

The numbers " reflect the ground reality before the tragic

culling and displacement of dogs in March 2007, " Ganguly told ANIMAL

PEOPLE. " In March and April 2007, we feel that all our good work

has been undone. Rabies has already returned to Bangalore. "

" We succeeded in seeing that no humans died of rabies in

Bangalore after 2003, " elaborated Animal Rights Fund volunteer

Poornima Harish to ANIMAL PEOPLE. " This is an opportunity to silence

detractors. But I am very worried for the dogs. "

The return of rabies to Bangalore was confirmed after ARF

caught a biting dog in Ramachandrapura, a former suburb overtaken by

urban sprawl, on March 28. The dog died two days later, and was

confirmed rabid by post mortem examination on April 2. ARF

immediately notified all relevant officials, but apparently nothing

was done to find the bite victims while all government offices took a

four-day holiday.

" We caught some dogs and did dog anti-rabies vaccination in

the neighborhood, " said Harish.

At request of Bangalore municipal veterinarian Prakash Reddy,

ARF also sent an eight-member team to respond to a dog bite complaint

in the Mariyappana Bhavi area, another suburb swallowed by the fast

expanding city. A dog unknown to the neighborhood had bitten six

people in an apparent rabid frenzy before being beaten to death by a

mob.

ARF, " with the help of local residents and police, caught

20 dogs, " who were held for observation, and retrieved the carcass

of the dead dog. The dead dog was confirmed rabid. Returning to the

scene, ARF ensured that all six known bite victims received

post-exposure vaccination.

" In the recent past we seem to have developed a knack of

attracting goons, " Harish recounted. " We sure did on April 6,

2007. Our name, the Animal Rights Fund, to an illiterate person

roughly equates with money: 'If you are from some Fund, give me

money.' Out of nowhere, exactly as people described the dog attack,

a goon came from nowhere and told our staff in a blackmailing sort of

way, 'If you don't give me money, I will ensure that the dog bite

victims don't take medicines.' It was good that our people went in a

big team. We had enough people to see that while one person kept

this rabid guy occupied with small talk, the critical counseling was

handled by the other team members. It was important to isolate this

guy. "

 

Public education

 

Animal advocates on April 8 distributed nearly 100,000 copies

of an newspaper insert promoting and defending the role of Animal

Birth Control in preventing dog bites and rabies.

" We tried to cover almost all 100 wards of Bangalore, and

also outlying areas such as Krishnarajapuram, which witnessed some

horrific violence against animals, " explained project coordinator

Gopi Shankar. " We made efforts to cover all papers in both English

and Kannada, and in all areas. But we are working from limited

resources, and managed to cover just a quarter of the over 440,000

newspapers that are distributed in Bangalore every day. "

CUPA on the same day began a series of Sunday sterilization

and vaccination demonstrations in Bangalore parks. Eight dogs were

sterilized and 29 were vaccinated on the first day of the program.

" Things are getting better, for the humane societies, but

culling dogs in smaller towns and cities is still going on, " CUPA

chief veterinarian Shiela Rao told ANIMAL PEOPLE. " It is so

arbitrary and sporadic that it makes no sense at all. Savitha

Nag-bhushan, " whose photographs appeared in the April 2007 edition

of ANIMAL PEOPLE, and in this edition, " has been tirelessly

photographing mounds of dead dogs and preventing further culling in

those towns that she visits, but [the killers, a mercenary crew

from Kerala state] just move to the next location and repeat the

process. "

" Killing in smaller towns is nothing new, " pointed out Arpan

Sharma and Erika Abrams, as cofounders of the recently formed

Federation of Indian Animal Protection Organisations. " Local

authorities do take recourse to random killing, wherever pressure

from animal groups or local citizens [on dogs' behalf] is not strong.

As far as we have been able to determine, " Sharma and Abrams agreed,

" killings in other cities are not a reaction to the events in

Bangalore. It does not appear that Bangalore has started any sort of

a chain reaction, " but rather, the spotlight on Bangalore may have

exposed the routine practices of outlying communities.

Mob attacks on dogs and municipal dog pogroms began in

Chandra Layout, a Bangalore suburb, after three dogs killed a

five-year-old girl named Sridevi on January 5, 2007. Exactly as

CUPA, the Animal Rights Fund, and other Bangalore animal welfare

organizations warned at the time, indiscriminately killing or

impounding dogs other than those directly involved in the attack only

opened habitat to others.

Often dogs who had been sterilized and vaccinated were

replaced by unvaccinated, unsterilized dogs from outlying districts,

who invaded the city to take advantage of meat wastes that continue

to be dumped in vacant lots by illegal butchers. Typically dogs

follow migrant construction workers into the city, taking up

residence wherever they find an unguarded food source.

" Now, there are dogs who do not belong here, bigger and

more ferocious. I cannot let my children out for fear that they

might be hurt, " Chandra Layout resident K.N. Chandrasekhar

complained to Swathi Shivanand of The Hindu.

Other suburbs were afflicted by dog-dumping, as catchers

paid by the head tried to unload dogs as quickly as possible.

Nine residents of Somasandrapalya, a Bangalore suburb, were

bitten on March 22-23. At least four were younger than school age.

Two suffered head bites, one of them a four-year-old girl who was

bitten on the nose.

Haralur Welfare Association president Srinivasa Reddy told

The Hindu that Bangalore employees " brought a van full of stray dogs,

probably from the dog pounds after they were sterilised, and left

them in our area on March 18. The problem started after that, "

Reddy said.

Almost certainly the dogs were not sterilized, as the

Bangalore area ABC programs were suspended at the time, due to lack

of municipal support.

Hemanth Kumar, 6, of Yelahanka, a northern suburb of

Bangalore, died from rabies on April 9, two weeks after a dog bit

his legs on March 25. He was treated at a local clinic, but

reportedly did not tell his parents immediately, and did not receive

post-exposure vaccination.

Neighbour S. Parthasarathy told The Hindu that others had

also been bitten, and that dogcatchers from Bangalore " seem to be

releasing dogs from other areas to our area. "

 

Animal Help

 

Yelehanka " is not covered by ABC, or for that matter any

sort of dog management, " observed Gopi Shankar. " Yelahanka is one

of the areas in which the Animal Help Foundation is expected to

sterilize 1,000 dogs, " Shankar added.

Having sterilized more than 45,000 dogs in Ahmedabad during

2006, using much faster and more stringently aseptic procedures

than the Indian norm, the Animal Help Foundation is now offering to

introduce the same methods to other cities around India. Bangalore

and Hyderabad are among those accepting the offer, but the start of

work in Bangalore was delayed because Animal Help founder Rahul

Sehgal requires guaranteed full municipal funding. Having not paid

the local ABC programs for their services, as contracted, since

September 2006, Bangalore officials balked at paying Animal Help.

" Considering that nearly four months have lapsed since the

first unfortunate incident in Bangalore, if only the city's

authorities had tackled this problem in a scientific and rational

manner, Hemanth Kumar's death would perhaps not have happened, "

charged Shankar.

Requesting " patience and accurate reporting " from Bangalore

news media, Animal Help founder Rahul Sehgal was soon disappointed

when one newspaper alleged that the Animal Help program was off to a

" dismal start, " after only one day on the job.

" My team is settling down, and they need to be given some

time to get adjusted to the new environment, where people don't

speak their language, don't eat their food, and definitely do not

understand them, " Sehgal said. " They are in your city to help you

and work with you. I leave the judgment to you as to what will help

us get motivated to work harder and what kind of a support we really

need to get comfortable in Bangalore.

" I have contracted to spay/neuter 5,000 dogs in five months,

and promise to achieve it. We might do only 1,000 till July and may

complete 4,000 more in August. This is entirely dependent on

circumstances beyond our control, so kindly give the project some

time to establish itself. "

Steering for political middle ground, Karnatake High Court

Justices Chidanand Ullal and Ashok B. Hinchigeri on April 17, 2007

ordered the Bangalore city government to " expeditiously take steps to

tackle the stray dog menace, " and " spare no effort to ensure human

safety, " but recommended that dogs be impounded for care by

nonprofit organizations, funded by the city--as is already done.

Petitioner Krishna Bhat had asked the court to suspend Animal

Birth Control programs that release dogs in Bangalore, and

reinstitute killing dogs as official policy. Bhat contended that ABC

programs violate constitutional provisions guaranteeing the lives and

liberty of Indian citizens, and that sterilizing dogs had only made

them more dangerous. His petition was endorsed by the Karnataka

State Legal Services Authority.

Further action on the case was postponed until May 29.

 

 

 

--

Merritt Clifton

Editor, ANIMAL PEOPLE

P.O. Box 960

Clinton, WA 98236

 

Telephone: 360-579-2505

Fax: 360-579-2575

E-mail: anmlpepl

Web: www.animalpeoplenews.org

 

[ANIMAL PEOPLE is the leading independent newspaper providing

original investigative coverage of animal protection worldwide,

founded in 1992. Our readership of 30,000-plus includes the

decision-makers at more than 10,000 animal protection organizations.

We have no alignment or affiliation with any other entity. $24/year;

for free sample, send address.]

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