ANIMAL CONTROL, RESCUE, & SHELTERING

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1998:

Fixing the problem
Vancouver, British Columbia,
officially went to no-kill animal control
effective October 1, after killing only 74
dogs in 1997. The announcement brought
the surge of owner surrenders that typically
follows publicity about a no-kill policy,
causing crowding which pound director
Barbara Fellnermayr predicted would be
only temporary. The volunteer group
Animal Advocates has pledged to expand a
fostering program to handle the overflow.
Animal Advocates reportedly already has
about 50 active fostering families, who
have enabled the West Vancouver SPCA
to “virtually stop killing adoptable dogs,”
wrote Robert Sarti of the Vancouver Sun.
The Vancouver pound does not handle cats.

Read more

Shocked Townend halts

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1998:

VISAKHAPATNAM, MUMBAI, BANGALORE––
Dogs must no longer be electrocuted in Visakhapatam, India,
the Andhra Pradesh High Court ruled on November 4––just as
ANIMAL PEOPLE prepared to publish excerpts from an
expose of the practice by Help In Suffering managing trustee
Christine Townend, documented by photographs far too gruesome
to print.
“Yesterday, late night, I received the news that the
High Court has passed the order that the Municipal Corporation
of Visakhapatnam must immediately stop the killing of stray
dogs,” Visakha SPCA secretary Pradeep Kumar Nath faxed to
Townend. “The petitioner,” Nath on behalf of the Visakha
SPCA, “has been given three months’ time, with an extended
grace period of two months, to start an Animal Birth Control
Program,” modeled after those in effect in Mumbai,
Hyderabad, Jaipur, Delhi, and other Indian cities with a nokill
animal control policy.

“Meanwhile,” Nath continued, “only the terminally
sick and dangerous dogs may be put to sleep, by means of
sodium pentathol.”
Nath said he was arranging for the Visakha SPCA to
supervise enforcement of the High Court order.
“I’m totally over the moon,” said Townend.
Townend visited Visakhapatnam on October 21 at
Nath’s request, after his lawsuit against the dog electrocutions
hadn’t advanced in 18 months. Townend recorded in detail a
30-minute procedure by one Mr. Bangarayya, the municipal
dogcatcher, which included packing a two-day collection of 40
dogs into a single wire cage, drenching them with the help of
“several young children” whom the dogcatcher hired “for a few
rupees per day,” jolting them repeatedly with household current,
stabbing the survivors, and burying some alive who were
unconscious but still breathing.
Mr. Bangarayya was paid 10 rupees per dog
killed––about $1.75 for each day’s work.
“The dogs were almost all young, verifying that massive
killing of dogs does not eliminate the dog population, but
only encourages it to breed rapidly to fill the available space,”
Townend wrote.
“After taking photos and witnessing the procedure,”
she added, “I determined that this must be stopped at once.”
She had already complained to the Viskhapatnam city
veterinarian, a Dr. Reddy, to no avail. She had also solicited
use of surgical facilities for the ABC program from “the deputy
director of the Visakhapatnam Polyclinic,” who promised
cooperation, but “suggested that he would like curtains put on
the window of the room at the Polyclinic where he lives.”
Then Townend was frustrated. Now she was furious.
“I again visited Dr. Reddy, with Mr. Nath,” she
wrote, “and told him that if he did not stop this method of
killing, which is contrary to the 1960 Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals Act, I would go straight to Delhi to Mrs. Maneka
Gandhi and to the media, and that Visakhapatnam’s name
would be blackened around the world. After this, his attitude
changed,” at least to the extent of agreeing to make the electrocutions
more efficient.
That wasn’t good enough. Townend dispatched
copies of her documentation to Maneka Gandhi, the Indian
cabinet minister for social justice and empowerment, and––still
on October 21, en route back to the Help In Suffering sanctuary
in Jaipur––met in Mumbai with D.R. Mehta, chair of the
Securities and Exchange Board of India.
Author of a recent pamphlet entitled The New Allies:
Science & Non-Violence, Mehta is also a dedicated Jain advocate
for both animals and human rights.
“D.R. Mehta immediately donated 15,000 rupees to
Mr. Nath,” to help start the Visakhapatnam ABC program,
Townend recounted, “and took me to meet other wealthy Jains
who might also help. One of his contacts agreed to donate
another 100,000 rupees from a charitable fund,” and agreed to
help expedite the court case.
It was an extraordinary day for Nath, who founded
the Visakha SPCA with little but hope in 1995. According to
Townend, who confirmed her account with independent witnesses,
Nath rises each morning at 4:30 a.m. “to patrol the
nearby beaches to ensure no olive ridley turtles are on the sand,
where they face the risk of killing by dogs, rats, or humans.
He then purchases food with his own money and feeds various
colonies of dogs and cats. After this, he returns to his house
where he feeds 11 rescued animals, whom he has nowhere else
to keep. He works as a clerk at the State Bank of India,”
Townsend continued, “and has refused promotion because he
does not wish to be transferred to another city where he cannot
watch over the street dogs and the turtles. He sleeps about four
hours a night.”
Before D.R. Mehta’s gift, the largest contribution the
Visakha SPCA had received in 1998 was $100 from ANIMAL
PEOPLE in payment for photographs.
[The Visakha SPCA is located at 26-15-200, Main
Road, Visakhapatnam 530 001, India.]

Mumbai
D.R. Mehta was earlier instrumental in obtaining an
October 5 ruling from the Bombay High Court that Mumbai
may not kill stray dogs.
The court directed Mumbai to adhere to Animal
Welfare Board of India guidelines, which require that dogs
suspected of being ill, rabid, or vicious be quarantined. The
decision to kill any dog is to be made by a veterinarian.
Mumbai adopted a no-kill animal control policy in
1994, after spending 10 million rupees to catch and electrocute
stray dogs during the preceding year. Under the no-kill agreement,
Mumbai animal welfare organizations were to sterilize at
least 5,000 stray dogs per year. Among them, they actually
sterilized 7,500 to 8,000 dogs per year.
Successfully emulated elsewhere in India, the
Mumbai program was recommended as national policy in
December 1997.
In mid-1998, however, a stray dog bit the son of
Kirit Somaiya, president of the Mumbai chapter of the
Bharatiya Janata Party––and the BJP had just formed a new
national government. At Somaiya’s demand, the BMC
announced it would kill all “nuisance” dogs––which it claimed
would be only dogs who were sick or bite.
Remembering that “sick” had been quite broadly
defined before 1994, the animal welfare organizations Ahimsa
and the Viniyog Parivar Trust immediately challenged the
killing policy, and won a temporary stay on it in late August.
The High Court ruling––pending further appeal or legislative
amendment––makes the stay permanent.
Earlier, Hyderabad opted for an escalated ABC program
instead of wholesale dog-killing, after Swapna Devi, age
4, was reportedly dragged from her family’s shack in June and
eaten by a pack of as many as 30 dogs. Andhra Pradesh High
Court Justice B. Sudarshan Reddy on November 5 found the
city and state jointly responsible for Devi’s death, and awarded
her mother Padma Devi compensation of $3,700, with which
“to better the life of her two sisters.”

Bangalore

Bangalore is reportedly still electrocuting about 1,300
dogs a year, at a pound The Times of India recently described
as “a throwback to the Nazis.”
As in Visakhapatnam, the electrocutions result from
public fear of dogbites, and especially from fear of rabies.
Human deaths from rabies in Bangalore alone through the first
two-thirds of 1998 were coming at a pace likely to top 100, up
from 73 in 1997––which is more than the total number of
human rabies deaths in the U.S. since 1960.
“Only the Animal Birth Control program is the
longterm humane answer,” Compassion Unlimited Plus Action
honorary secretary Suparna Baksi-Ganguly told ANIMAL
PEOPLE. CUPA, the major Bangalore humane society,
recovers, sterilizes, and vaccinates about 200 dogs per year
from the city pound: enough to demonstrate the efficacy of the
approach, but far short of a full-scale ABC program. BaksiGanguly
has written to ANIMAL PEOPLE at least three times
since July 1996, seeking updated information on possible
sources of funding for full-scale ABC, to replace the dog electrocutions,
but has not so far attracted notice from any major
U.S. animal welfare foundations.
[CUPA is located at 257 1st Cross, HAL II Stage,
Indiranagar, Bangalore 560 038, India.]

Editorial: Henry and the No-Kill Conference

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

The late Henry Spira was invited to attend the recent No-Kill Conference in
Concord, California, but failing health forced him to decline.
Spira died at home in New York as the conference was in progress, having accomplished
more for animals caught up in farming and scientific research than anyone, perhaps,
since Mahavira and the Buddha. No one ever drove more successful bargains to spare animals––by
the million––from misery. Neither has anyone else in the animal protection cause
ever put more effort into teaching others the method Spira developed of systematically bringing
about change through what he called “stepwise incremental action.”
Though devoted to his cats, Spira didn’t work much on companion animal issues.

Read more

Maneka claims cabinet post for animals

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

NEW DELHI, India––”You will
be happy to know that I have finally gotten
the animal welfare department, which is the
first of its kind anywhere in the world,”
People For Animals founder Maneka Gandhi
e-mailed to ANIMAL PEOPLE on
September 8.
“It is now a part of my ministry,”
Maneka said, as welfare minister for the government
of India, “and I would like to make
it into a full-fledged department.”
A senior independent member of
the Indian parliament, representing her New
Delhi district since 1989, Maneka is among
the power brokers in the coalition government
of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya
Janata party. She may actually have more
clout now than she did during two appointments
as environment minister while a member
of the Janata Dal party, from which she
was ousted in 1996 for denouncing alleged
corruption among fellow ministers.

Read more

$200 million fund to save dogs and cats

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

CONCORD, Calif.––Richard Avanzino, president
of the San Francisco SPCA since 1976, has 200 million reasons
why no-kill animal control should catch on across the U.S.
They’re the same 200 million reasons why Avanzino
is leaving the SF/SPCA to head the Duffield Family
Foundation, effective January 1, 1999.
“Dave and Cheryl Duffield of the Duffield Family
Foundation have pledged to put in the bank $200 million for a
no-kill nation,” Avanzino told the fourth annual No Kill
Conference on September 11.
The funding is to underwrite a program which
Avanzino is to head, effective January 1, 1999, whose mission,
he continued, “is to revolutionize the status and wellbeing
for companion animals.”

Read more

ANIMAL CONTROL, RESCUE, & SHELTERING

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

Newly appointed City of Los
Angeles Animal Services chief Dan
Knapp in September opted against retaining
Animal Foundation International t o
provide low-cost neutering under a city
contract. AFI opened a neutering clinic by
agreement with L.A. Animal Services in
November 1997, modeled after the AFI
clinic in Las Vegas, which has fixed more
than 100,000 animals since 1989. After
complaints about the quality of care at the
Los Angeles branch surfaced in May 1998,
amplified by local activists, AFI president
Mary Herro shut the clinic and dismissed
the whole staff––although clinic statistics
indicated the AFI clinic had no higher a rate
of post-operative complications than the
average (4%) for all U.S. veterinary hospitals.

Read more

Still no injectable birth control for dogs and cats

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

Hopes for an inexpensive injection
sterilant for dogs and cats were prematurely
raised worldwide in early September by a
CNN report about an experimental contraceptive
vaccine for female rodents developed by
California researcher Jeff Bleil.
In theory, the Bleil vaccine could
work in dogs and cats, as CNN noted, but
Bleil so far has tested it only in mice and rats,
and he is reportedly still at least two years
from being able to market it for laboratory
mouse population control, his first objective.
He apparently hasn’t begun work yet to adapt
the product for use with other animals.
Zonagen Inc., of Massachusetts,
announced in 1990, 1991 and 1994 that it had
almost perfected a similar contraceptive vaccine,
called Zonavax, for female dogs and
cats, but there has been no further word of it.

Read more

RABIES UPDATES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

Afflicting the Atlantic seaboard
and New England since 1976, the midAtlantic
raccoon rabies pandemic shows signs
of containment through the escalating use of
Raboral, an oral vaccine developed by the
Wistar Institute of Philadelphia. Used successfuly
against fox rabies in Europe for more
than 20 years, Raboral has kept Cape Cod
free of rabies since 1993, Alison Robbins,
DVM, of the Tufts University School of
Veterinary Medicine announced in late
August. Earlier, Texas officials credited
Raboral with stopping the only recorded mass
outbreak of rabies in coyotes. The Tufts program
is now expanding to vaccinate the raccoons
of Plymouth, Wareham, and Carver,
and as funding becomes available, Massa –
chusetts Department of Public Health

Read more

What do you do about monkeys?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 1998:

NAPLES, Fla.; CAPE TOWN, South Africa;
HONG KONG; NEW DELHI & MUMBAI, India;
TOKYO, Japan; TAIPEI, Taiwan; KUALA LUMPUR,
Malaysia; BANGKOK, Thailand––Officials in Naples,
Florida, in late July endured an exotic headache when someone
complained to the local health department about a colony of
feral South American squirrel monkeys who have lived in the
trees overlooking the tennis court at the Collier Athletic Club for
at least 50 years.
The Health Department forwarded the complaint to
Lieutenant Wayne Maahs of the Florida Game and Fresh Water
Fish Commission, who in 1995 reportedly recommended
removing the monkeys because they are not native to Florida.
Maahs called trapper Gary Rosenblum, 42, owner of World
Exotics Zoo Supply in South Naples. Rosenblum agreed to capture
the five-pound monkeys for resale as pets. He expected to
get about $500 apiece for them.

Read more

1 36 37 38 39 40 60