Young humane societies abroad strive to avoid old traps

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

NAIROBI, SOFIA––Kenya SPCA
animal welfare director Jean Gilchrist greets
Americans with a blunt admission that she is
not impressed with how most U.S. humane
societies operate.
A well-meaning donor sent Gilchrist
to the Humane Society of the United States’
Animal Care Expo in February 1998.
“All morning people taught us how
to do euthanasia,” Gilchrist remembers.
“Then in the afternoon they taught us how to
get counseling and cope with grief, because
you feel so bad about killing animals. I said to
myself, ‘That’s not going to be us.’ We do
euthanize,” Gilchrist explains, leading her
guests through a bevy of tail-wagging threelegged
dogs, “because some animals come to
us too sick or too badly injured to patch up,
and some animals don’t take well to being
here, but if an animal gets along, we’re going
to give that animal a chance.”

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OBITUARIES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

Ndyakira Amooti, longtime environmental
reporter for the Ugandan newspaper
New Vision, “died on August 25, 1999
after a protracted illness,” according to the
November 1999 edition of the International
Primate Protection League newsletter. IPPL
became aquainted with Amooti in 1988,
founder Shirley McGreal reecalled, “when
we contacted him about wildlife trafficking
issues. He showed outstanding courage in
driving a U.S. wildlife trafficker from the
country. Amooti also worked with us on a
case involving the smuggling of five baby
chimpanzees from Uganda to Russia.
Eventually the chimpanzees were returned to
Uganda. Amooti was the author of several
childrens’ books about animals,” McGreal
added. “In 1992 IPPL received a foundation
grant to sponsor Amooti’s attendance at the
CITES triennial meeting in Kyoto. He
dogged the Ugandan delegates, and faxed
home stories every day about how they
voted.” Amooti won the 1996 Goldman
Award for outstanding environmental work in
the African sector.

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BOOKS: The Emperor’s Embrace

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

The Emperor’s Embrace:
Reflection on Animal Families and Fatherhood
by Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson
Pocketbooks (c/o Simon & Schuster, 1230 Ave. of the Americas,
New York, NY 10020), 1999. 253 pages, hardcover. $24.00.

At the recent No Kill Conference in
Chicago, I told seven fellow participants in a
round-table discussion group about an extraordinary
old feral tomcat named Bull, whom we
sheltered for the last two years of his life.
Bull, immensely popular with almost all other
cats but deeply mistrustful of humans, came
to our notice because he fed and looked after
two kittens through a Connecticut winter in
the wrecked car that was his former home.
Three of the seven No Kill conferees,
all of them veteran feral cat rescuers, had
also encountered cases of tomcats feeding and
protecting kittens––exactly opposite to the
stereotype of tomcats as kitten-killers.

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HERO DOG AND PROBLEM-FIXING PEOPLE

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

Inspired by Hero, the mangy
street dog who saved 18-month-old Lexee
Manor from a rattlesnake bite in June after
surviving shooting by a sheriff’s deputy, the
Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office o n
November 4 announced that deputies will no
longer shoot strays “unless emergency
action is warranted” or unless “humane considerations
require an immediate end to suffering.”
Hero was shot under an old policy
which presumed that dogs eluding capture
might be rabid and/or a threat to livestock.

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The Dogs’ Home Battersea: A Dickensian animal shelter

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

LONDON––Wedged between the massive brick
Battersea coal-burning powerhouse and the dilapidated
Battersea train station, dating to circa 1855, the Dogs’ Home
Battersea had literally Dickensian origins.
To present Londoners, the powerhouse and the
neighborhood are metaphors for each other, and for failed great
expectations. Begun in 1929 and first fired up in 1937, but not
completed until 1955, the art deco powerhouse ran at full
capacity for just 18 years before it was shut as a health hazard
on Halloween 1983. Politicians and developers have sought
ever since to find a purpose for the building.
The neighborhood was originally characterized,
however, by the now empty Battersea Pumping Station, built
in 1830 to feed the first London water mains. Now near the
heart of the city, it was then believed to be far enough out to
provide clean water from the Thames.

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NCDL today: building a better doghouse

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

MERSEYSIDE, U.K.–– Learning
at the mid-October International Companion
Animal Welfare Conference in Sofia, Bulgaria
that ANIMAL PEOPLE would have a day in
London between flights a few days later,
NCDL field director Marc Weston reached for
his cellular telephone and quickly arranged to
fly us from London to Manchester and back
during the layover to show off the NCDL’s
new $1.6 million Merseyside shelter, the 13th
in a nationwide network.
NCDL chief executive Clarissa
Baldwin has urged such alacrity toward the
media throughout her 13-year tenure, building
on her experience as public relations officer
for 12 years before that. She has also understood,
as a former reporter, the value of
putting substance behind the hype.

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NCDL: going to the dogs since 1891

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

A “small party of gentlemen”
brought together by Lady Gertrude Stock
during the first-ever Crufts dog show in
1891 incorporated the National Canine
Defence League to protect dogs from
“torture and ill-usage of every kind.”
Honoring heroic dogs helped
raise regard for the species. An early
honoree was Bob, who carried water to
British troops under fire throughout the
Boer War, 1899-1902. He filled bottles
strapped to his body by dashing into a
stream and lying down. He would then
return to the front.

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Boatfield is reported casualty of kill/no-kill clash in Toledo

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

TOLEDO, Ohio– –Mary Pat
Boatfield, 49, a frequent instructor at
national animal care and control conferences,
said little to media about her
October 11 surprise resignation after 15
years as executive director of the Toledo
Humane Society, but Lucas County dog
warden Tom Skeldon told Toledo Blade
staff writer Lisa Abraham that he thought
she was ousted by the THS board for
refusing to move toward a no-kill policy.
On September 13 Lend-A-Paw
Feline Shelter and Lend-A-Paw Foundation
and Puppy Nursery founder Patty
Rood told a press conference that she
believed Boatfield brought neglect
charges against her in early September
from fear of “competition.” Rood surrendered
17 sickly cats to THS on
August 31, after which THS seized 135
more cats and two dogs in a series of
raids on the Lend-A-Paw Foundation
Puppy Nursery and a foster home. Rood
later surrendered another seven cats.

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On the job with Jean Gilchrist and crew at the Kenya SPCA

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1999:

NAIROBI––“Kenya SPCA director of animal welfare
Jean Gilchrist, KSPCA vice chair Dr. S.V. Varma, some
KSPCA staff, and a visiting vet from Burundi set off bright
and early one morning on a field trip to Naivasha,” recounted
the Kenya SPCA July/September 1999 quarterly report.
“They were looking forward to a day in the country,
but things did not go according to plan. They were inching
their way through traffic when out of an alley hurtled a bull,
closely followed by a pack of screaming men, wielding clubs.
“Jean stopped the vehicle and took off in hot pursuit.
She grabbed one man, wrestled his club away, and pounced on
the next man, also grabbing his club, waving both in the air
and bellowing at the gathering crowd of about 300 people. The
men insisted they were not going to club the bull, but Jean
noticed that one of the clubs had blood on it.

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