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From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2007:

 

 

 

Dogs symbolize the west in Iran

 

TEHRAN--Radio Free Europe on September 14, 2007 amplified

and elaborated upon accounts circulating for more than six weeks that

Iran has embarked upon an intensified campaign of harassment against

dog keepers.

" Since the creation of the Islamic republic in Iran in 1979, "

Radio Free Europe said, " the acceptability of dog ownership has been

debated by the authorities. Friday prayer leader Hojatoleslam

Gholamreza Hassani, known for his hard-line stances, was quoted a

few years ago as saying that all dog owners and their dogs should be

arrested.

" In the past, " Radio Free Europe recounted, " dog owners

have received warnings or were forced to pay fines for having a pet

dog. Despite such harassment, dog ownership has increased,

especially among young people in Tehran.

" One of them, " Radio Free Europe said, " is 23-year-old

Banafshe, whose dog was recently detained in Tehran for 48 hours and

then released on bail. Banafshe says she was walking her young

puppy, Jessica, when Iranian police snatched the dog and took her

to a dog jail. The dog's crime was 'walking in public.' Banafshe

claims the police insulted her, but out of fear for her dog, she

didn't protest. She said she told the police that Allah says in the

Koran that nothing bad has been created in this world. "

" We want to get rid of Western culture, " Banafshe said she

was told. " They said, 'You live in an Islamic country. It's not

right to have dogs. Are you not Islamic? Why does your family allow

you to own a dog?' They insulted me. They even told me that they

hoped my dog would die. But there was nothing I could do but cry.

You can't imagine how badly I was insulted.' "

Radio Free Europe alleged that, " The new clampdown on dogs follows a

recent order by the head of Tehran's security forces, Ahmad Reza

Radan, who said it is against the law for dogs to walk in public. "

" If we want to speak about symbols of Western civilization

then maybe wearing a suit is also Western, " Society to Defend the

Rights of Animals secretary Reza Javalchi told Radio Free Europe.

" Based on our research, " Javalchi said, " domestic dogs were kept in

Iran for hunting and guarding maybe long before it became widespread

in the West. "

Accounts similar to that of Radio Free Europe have circulated

since August 3, 2007, when animal welfare organizations in Iran as

well as abroad scrambled to try to verify and respond to an Adnkronos

International Iran (AKI) news service item headlined " Search for lost

dog leads to arrest. "

Reported AKI, a web news site that covers Iran from Italy,

" A young Iranian who was searching for his lost puppy in a Tehran

neighborhood has been arrested and ordered to stand trial for 'moral

corruption.' According to the Tehran daily Etemad Melli, " AKI said,

" the young man was caught while putting up a notice in which he was

promising a reward to anyone who found his dog. "

Tehran police spokesperson Mehdi Ahmadi was said to have told Etemad

Melli that, " Looking for a lost dog indicates the spread of a

corrupt culture, which indirectly popularizes keeping a dog at home,

something that is completely foreign to the Iranian culture and

Islamic tradition. In arresting this young man, we wanted to send a

very clear message to our young people to steer away from the corrupt

culture imported from the west. "

Etemad Melli reportedly then cited Hadith 4:539, from a

collection of the sayings of the Prophet Mohammed as posthumously

remembered, compared, and often debated by his closest associates:

" Angels (of Mercy) do not enter a house wherein there is a dog or a

picture of a living creature (a human being or an animal). "

Hadiths 4:539 through 4:542, each contributed by a different

disciple, are widely interpreted in the Islamic world as forbidding

keeping dogs for any purposes other than farm work and guarding

livestock, along with Hadith 3:515, which includes a similar

admonition recalled by one of the same men, but also allows the use

of dogs for hunting.

Questions about both the linguistic evolution and context of

these passages have been raised for more than 50 years. Some

scholars believe they originally referred specifically to Mohammed's

imposition of a quarantine in Medina, Saudi Arabia, to stop a

rabies outbreak.

 

WSPA is cautious

 

As international blogs and e-mail lists heated up with

denunciations of the Iranian government based on the AKI report,

World Society for the Protection of Animals director general Peter

Davies advised caution, pending verification, and recommended that

if the AKI story was verified, comment should be solicited from the

Centre for Islamic Studies in London.

" WSPA needs to have authoritative comment from them before we

make our deep concerns public, " Davies said.

Reported WSPA Middle East projects director Trevor Wheeler,

" I have had some communication with our member society, the Iranian

SPCA. Their president was aware of the story and had contacted the

police about this. The police were very rude to him, but did point

out that apparently the person concerned was putting his missing dog

posters in an area where posters etc are banned. The SPCA still sent

a letter to the newspaper which ran the original story and it was

printed, but with some modifications.

" I have explained that our concern is principally the

statement from the police which intimates that looking for your lost

pet is 'Westernized corruption,' " Wheeler said. " The president is

going to see what else he can find out, but I don't think there is

much else the Iranian SPCA can do without causing themselves

problems. "

Radio Farda, which like AKI serves an audience including

many Iranian expatriates, several weeks later broadcast a report

similar in outline to that of the later broadcast from Radio Free

Europe.

" Nowadays a new project which is called the Moral Security

Project is being operated by police in Iran, " translated Center for

Animal Lovers founder Fatemeh Motamedi, who is currently living in

the U.S. " If the police sees someone with a companion dog, walking

or in a car, the dog will be captured and jailed, but the owner is

released. There is a special jail for these dogs that Dr. Javid

Aledavud from the Iran SPCA has visited. He says it is in very bad

condition. Most of the impounded dogs are small, have had a strong

bond with their people, and separation traumatizes and severely

depresses them. "

Aledavud's remarks were incorporated into the Radio Free

Europe report, with credit given to Radio Farda reporters Mohammad

Zarghami, Keyvan Hosseini, and Azadeh Sharafshahi.

Founded in 2002, Radio Farda is, like Radio Free Europe,

heavily subsidized by the U.S. government. Radio Farda received $7

million from the U.S. government in 2006, according to SourceWatch,

a project of the Center for Media & Democracy, whose information

page about the station mentions a September 2006 U.S. Defense

Department report recommending that U.S.-supported broadcast media

reaching Iran should air more critical material about the Iranian

government.

Center for Media & Democracy founders John Stauber and

Sheldon Rampton, though focused on other issues, have been friendly

toward animal advocacy in several of their six books, including

Toxic Sludge Is Good For You! Lies, Damn Lies and the Public

Relations Industry' (1995), Mad Cow U.S.A. (1997), and Trust Us,

We're Experts! How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles With Your

Future (2001).

The Radio Free Europe, Radio Farda, and AKI allegations

have apparently not been echoed--at least not prominently--by other

international news media reporting from Iran.

Prior to the Etemad Melli and Radio Farda reports, most of

the recent news about dogs from Iran indicated some easing of the

official hostility toward dogs which has prevailed since the January

1979 overthrow of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.

" On May 23, 2007, " Motamedi relayed to ANIMAL PEOPLE,

" volunteers from Vafa Animal Shelter [founded by the Center for

Animal Lovers] encountered an incident of dog killing by the City of

Hashtgerd. As soon as the volunteers heard the shots, they started

walking toward the sound. Finally, they found the city employee who

was shooting stray dogs, and asked him to stop until they could

speak with the Mayor of Hashtgerd about alternative solutions.

" Volunteers Lida Esnaashari, Kamiar Kashani, and Farah

Dakhili offered Mayor Asgari the alternative of capturing the dogs

alive, sterilizing and vaccinating them, and then either releasing

them back to the streets or finding homes for them. The city asked

the Vafa shelter to come up with a written proposal and plan. The

Vafa shelter proposed in preliminary talks to assume responsibility

for capturing of the dogs and performing the necessary surgery. The

city, in return, will provide the shelter with free food for the

dogs and possibly vaccines, " Motamedi said.

The agreement was to be finalized after the shelter carried

out a pilot project.

" This agreement has not been finalized, " Motamedi told

ANIMAL PEOPLE in mid-July 2007. " Further talks are scheduled to take

place. But, they agreed to do the project for a month and if it was

successful, then finalize it. Some of our volunteers have already

begun the project by capturing dogs and bringing them to the shelter

for vaccination and spay/neuter operations. "

The Vafa shelter at last report housed about 150 dogs.

" If this partnership with the government turns out to be successful, "

Motamedi hoped, " it can open many other doors to us. This is a big

project, " she said, " and the shelter needs financial support. "

[Contact the Vafa shelter c/o Kamiar Kashani, P.O.Box

14335-1451, Tehran, Iran; 0912-3107670.

Contact the Center for Animal Lovers c/o Fatemeh Motamedi,

<fatemehmotamedi.]

One week before publishing the first report about the claimed

Iranian crackdown against dog-keeping, AKI reported that, " Iran's

Islamic authorities have issued a fatwa, or religious order,

allowing people to breed crocodiles for their hides and other

purposes, " but prohibiting human consumption of crocodile meat and

wearing the hides of crocodiles or other reptiles during prayers and

other religious ceremonies.

AKI said " The edict also permits the use of crocodile bone

for medical purposes including the treatment of cancer, while the

reptile's flesh could be used as food for domestic animals such as

cats and dogs, " according to an aide to Iranian supreme spiritual

leader identified as Hassan Alemi.

--Merritt Clifton

 

--

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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