“Official” Indian human rabies death toll of 20,000 ignored government’s own data & appears to have been based on 101-year-old research

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2012:

DELHI, CHENNAI–Collecting current data about disease
incidence in India since 2003, the Indian Central Bureau of Health
Intelligence has known for nearly 10 years that the oft-claimed
Indian human rabies death toll of 20,000 per year is high by a factor
of nearly 100.
Often cited by politicians and media, the 20,000 figure has
repeatedly inflamed rabies panics, including street dog massacres
and mob attacks on humane societies that participate in the federally
sponsored Animal Birth Control program. Funded by the Animal Welfare
Board of India since2003, the ABC program seeks to replace lethal
dog population control with sterilization.

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People & positions

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2012:

People & positions

Sonja Van Tichelen, a 20-year representative of Eurogroup for Animals, based in Brussels, on June 6, 2012 announced that she has “accepted the post of European Union director for the International Fund for Animal Welfare, starting on September 1.”

Joining Eurogroup as a campaign coordinator in 1992, Van Tichelen was promoted to deputy director in 1997. She became director in 2004. Wrote Van Tichelen in the April 2012 edition of the Eurogroup newsletter, “The EU published last February its new strategy to promote animal welfare. After a full year of evaluating the outcome of the EU animal welfare policy, the Commission has disappointed the animal welfare movement with an ‘ultra-light’ strategy, welcomed enthusiastically by the Farmers Union but far removed from what EU citizens expect. It is disappointing,” Van Tichelen wrote, “that the focus of the strategy is on farm animal welfare, with the protection of wild animals and the high-profile issue of animal testing completely out of the picture. Although the [European] Parliament and the member states have asked for EU initiatives on cats and dogs, we will have to wait until 2014 for a study of the welfare of dogs and cats involved in commercial practices. In essence,” Van Tichelen finished, “this means that no new legislation is foreseen to improve animal welfare. This despite the fact that several categories of animals–cattle, fish, dogs and cats, sheep and goats–are left with no legal protection.” Read more

Rhode Island to give animals legal representation in cruelty & neglect cases

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2012:

Rhode Island to give animals legal representation in cruelty & neglect case

PROVIDENCE–Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee on June 15, 2012 endorsed into law a bill that allows the director of the state Department of Environmental Management to designate a department veterinarian or a representative of the Rhode Island SPCA to act as an advocate for the animal victims in abuse and neglect cases. The advocate would be assigned to make recommendations on behalf of animal victims to any court in Rhode Island before which the custody or well-being of an animal is at issue. Introduced by state senator John J. Tassoni Jr. and state representative Peter John Petrarca, the new Rhode Island law is believed to be among the first of its kind in the world. Swiss voters in March 2007 rejected by a margin of more than 2-to-1 a ballot question seeking to establish a similar system. Governor Chafee on June 21 signed into law a bill banning the use of veal crates and restricting the use of gestation stalls for pigs. Nine other states have similar legislation.

Taiji plans "swim with dolphins" park

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2012:

Taiji plans “swim with dolphins” park

TAIJI, Japan–Notorious for killing as many as 2,000 dolphins and small whales per winter, the coastal Japanese city of Taiji plans to make Moriura Bay, where the 2009 Oscar-winning documentary The Cove was clandestinely filmed, “a huge pool where people can swim and kayak among small whales and dolphins,” the Daily Yomiuri disclosed on May 1, 2012. Read more

Vier Pfoten sees a new era for animals in Ukraine; locals are doubtful

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2012:

Vier Pfoten sees a new era for animals in Ukraine; locals are doubtful
KIEV–Spain took home the Euro 2012 football championship trophy, but the biggest winners, hopes Helmut Dungler, chief executive of the Austrian-based animal charity Vier Pfoten, are more than 4,000 street dogs in Kiev, Lviv, Donetsk, and Zaporozhye whom Vier Pfoten has sterilized, vaccinated, and treated for any evident illnesses or injuries, with the help of local organizations and volunteers. “Both our stray dog neutering program and our bear rescue project,” which recovered four bears from illegal private possession, “will continue,” Dungler pledged. Read more

BOOKS—Dangerous By Default: Extreme Breeds

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2012:

Dangerous By Default: Extreme Breeds by Anthony Solesky / 109 pages. Free download from:

www.dogsbite.org/pdf/dangerous-by-default-by-anthony-solesky.pdf

Ruling in Tracey v. Solesky, the Maryland Court of Appeals on April 26, 2012 held that knowing a dog is a pit bull or pit bull cross is sufficient to establish landlord liability if a dog escapes from leased premises.

The court found, in effect, that the risk presented to the public by inadequately confined pit bulls is so extreme and so self-evident that a landlord should not rent to people who keep pit bulls if the premises cannot securely hold them.

The verdict was denounced by representatives of many leading animal advocacy organizations, partly because it might lead to the eviction of pit bulls from housing that does not meet the court’s implied requirements for safe containment, including that the property must be fenced. The verdict also implies that to avoid potential liability in the event an adopted pitbull attacks someone, rescue agencies must ensure that the pit bulls are going to homes where they will not present foreseeable risk to the adopters’ neighbors and their pets.

At least four legislators pledged to push bills to overturn the ruling, which introduced to Maryland a breed-limited version of the strict liability standard for dog attacks that already exists for keepers of all dogs in 35 other states.

As father of pit bull attack victim Dominic Solesky, Dangerous By Default author Tony Solesky–nobody really calls him Anthony–was star witness at an ensuing legislative hearing. Tony Solesky summarized the facts of the case. He also testified about how much of the humane community, hellbent on saving dogs at any cost, is increasingly alienating the substantial part of the public–about two-thirds, according to most polls–who believe their right to safety supersedes anyone’s right to keep a dog who may be inclined and able to dismember children, cats, horses, livestock, and other dogs.

Dangerous By Default articulates Solesky’s experience and arguments in depth. As of April 28, 2007, he was a fairly ordinary “football father,” who attended his sons’ games and was restoring a used boat. The seizure of 66 pit bulls three days earlier from football star Michael Vick’s premises in Surry County, Virginia, was still in the headlines. Dominic Solesky and three friends started a game of Nerf tag in their yards and the shared alley that linked them, unaware of two pit bulls who had been left in a portable pen across the alley.

First a pit bull leaped out of the pen to blindside and maul a 9-year-old boy named Scotty. “Fortunately, the dog owner saw the attack through his back door and came out and got the dog off of Scotty,” Tony Solesky writes. “He put the dog back in the same enclosure with a female pit bull who had not attempted to escape.

He took Scotty into his house, and threatened Scotty not to tell because he said they [law enforcement] could take his dogs away. He told Scotty to tell his parents he fell off a bike. He gave Scotty water and a sponge to wipe the blood away and then he led Scotty out of the front door of his house,” not back to the alley and his friends, but to a busy traffic artery without a sidewalk.

“Panicked, Scotty made his way up that side of the street and home to his mother. He never was able to see or warn the other boys who were coming down the alley to his rescue,” Solesky continues. The same dog then jumped back out of the pen to maul Dominic. Three of the boys’ mothers heard the ensuing screaming and came to Dominic’s aid, while the pit bull keeper fled with his dogs.

Dominic suffered “a bite to the face just missing his left eye that had torn away and left his cheek and the tip of his nose hanging,” Tony Solesky recalls. “He had claw marks and puncture wounds, bites to the arms, chest and back. The flesh had been torn away from his upper left thigh and a life threatening tear to his femoral artery. He had various other scrapes, road rash, bruises, and contusions.” Dominic Solesky spent 17 days in intensive care. He returned eventually to school and football, but some of the effects of his injuries are permanent.

Tony Solesky began to feel betrayed when the Baltimore public health director, whose department supervises animal control, responded to the attack with a statement that he was concerned that discussing breed-specific legislation might “unfairly stereotype certain breeds of dogs and breed owners.”

“That is like saying you have concern about researching a helmet law for motorcyclists because a helmet law may unfairly stereotype certain types of vehicles and vehicle owners,” writes Solesky. “It is obvious by this incident that some dogs cross the line of suitability as domestic pets. Any breed of dog that is capable of exacting extreme harm while on the loose is an excessive pet and a dangerous breed.

“It is true that we would all be safer in our cars if drivers also wore helmets,” Solesky continues, but points out that “a line of acceptable risk is established by the suitability of the passenger car to the task of transportation. A motorcycle exposes riders to extreme accident characteristics that do not exist with an automobile. Because accidents are part of the nature of transportation, a helmet must be worn by motorcyclists.”

Solesky hopes to establish a similar standard for keeping dogs, regardless of temperament assessments or training. “Those are, as with driver education, the bare minimum standards demanded by common sense for any pet or breed brought into a community,” Solesky argues. “Temperament and training do not eliminate the severity of an attack. They bring the bite potential for all breeds down to the acceptable risk level in a suitable pet.

“The majority of dog owners,” Solesky holds, “are good dog owners primarily by choosing innocuous, more suitable breeds as pets. It is not by education or training,” he believes, “but by default that most people are good pet owners. I come from a background and time, unfortunately, where most people were much worse dog owners but at the same time tended to own much more innocuous breeds. I don’t know that I knew many kids, including my wife and myself, who hadn’t been bitten by a dog. It was like falling off your bike, breaking a window, or denting a car playing street ball, even ending up in a scuffle. My wife fully expected to go down the alley and find a child crying while being consoled by an apologetic dog owner. Instead, she and other neighbors rushed headlong into what could have been a life-threatening situation for them as well. The common thread that all sides agree upon is that any dog can bite. From there we have the responsibility to determine when that common thread of reality crosses the line of acceptable risk.”

Solesky acknowledges that the attacks on Dominic and Scotty involved multiple non-breed-specific risk factors. “Most dog attacks occur during spring and summer,” Solesky recites. “Children between six and 14 years of age are the most likely to be attacked; the boys were 9 and 10. Boys are attacked more then girls. The attacking dog is more likely to be male. There is a higher likelihood of attack if the male has not been neutered; this dog was not neutered. It is more likely for a male to attack if an unaltered female is in his company. The female was not spayed. There is an even higher likelihood of attack if the female has puppies. She did. Attack probability can be higher if the animal is not properly contained and can escape; the pen was only four-and-a-half feet high. In addition, the yard was not fenced. There is a higher likelihood of attack if the dog has already shown signs of aggression. Neighbors at that end of the alley had already called animal control about these dogs.” Notwithstanding all of those factors, Solesky points out that comparing what the average dog might do to what the attacking pit bull did is “the equivalent of comparing non-venomous and venomous snake bites.”

Continues Solesky, “In my experience, dangerous breeds are every bit and completely as warm, loving, loyal, and affectionate as any other breed. My sister’s bully Roxy and my neighbor’s bully Sage, are two examples. My Brittany has jumped up and put more scratches on visitors than what these two dogs combined have done to fleas. Pit bulls and other dangerous breed mixes are, without doubt, as nice as any well raised, trained, cared for, and properly socialized dog. It is bite potential which alone establishes their questionable suitability.”

Solesky warns against “confusing their propensity to attack with the intensity of their attack.”

Solesky, a onetime hunter who long ago gave up hunting in favor of golf, recognizes “the dilemma of the advocacy, defender, and rescue position. The strain to find homes and place rescued dogs is overwhelming. Further,” he acknowledges, “if these dogs could only be placed in homes and environments that were mandated to meet the common sense safety recommendations of specific breed restrictions,” as the Tracey v. Solesky verdict implies, “rescue groups would be drowned in a sea of dogs.”

But Solesky rejects the position of “rescue extremists [who] have decided that, given the choice between not placing or placing a dog, [any violation of] covenants, codes, you, your family, and community safety is an acceptable risk.

“I have always loved and admired dogs,” Solesky concludes. “They seem so eager and aspire to please. Paradoxically, many people are only too eager to have their pets treated as human citizens, while treating their fellow citizens like dogs.”

–Merritt Clifton

EDITORIAL: Agribusiness, green politics, & the art of compromise

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2012:

Editorial feature: Agribusiness, green politics, & the art of compromise

KFC sells dead chickens from 17,000 sales outlets in 105 nations. Part of the $66.5-billion-a-year PepsiCo. empire, KFC boasts revenue in the U.S. alone of $4.6 billion.

Founded by honorary Colonel Harlan Sanders in 1952 as Kentucky Fried Chicken, KFC would not appear to need much help defending itself in any defensible cause. Even a 10-year-old PETA “Kentucky Fried Cruelty” campaign, attacking abuses in the KFC supply chain that were captured on video camera, appears to have accomplished relatively little against KFC corporate intransigence. Nonetheless, the far-right advocacy front Consumers Alliance for Global Prosperity on June 11, 2012 appealed to supporters and media to “Help Fight The Attack On The Colonel!” Read more

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