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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Penelope MacRae in Delhi

Indian court orders removal of thousands of stray dogs from Delhi region

Two dogs sit and wait out the rain on a New Delhi street
Stray dogs at a metro station in Delhi. The city reported 49 rabies cases between January and June this year. Photograph: Manish Swarup/AP

India’s supreme court has ordered the immediate removal of thousands of stray dogs from the Delhi capital region, citing canine attacks and the country’s alarming rabies toll.

The sweeping move has set up a clash between public safety advocates and those who see the animals as beloved fixtures of their neighbourhoods.

The ruling on Monday, one of the strongest in the nation’s long-running struggle with its street dog population, directs civic authorities to capture all strays, sterilise and vaccinate them and relocate them to newly built shelters. The court gave authorities eight weeks to create the facilities and install CCTV monitoring to ensure no animals are released back on to the streets.

The bench stressed the need for immediate action. “Round up all stray dogs from all localities … whether sterilised or unsterilised,” Justice JB Pardiwala declared. “Children must feel safe while cycling and playing. The elderly must feel safe on their walks.”

Stray dog control has become a lightning rod civic issue in Delhi and other Indian cities. While some residents see the dogs as a menace, others consider them to be like family. Many of the dogs are fed daily by “community feeders” who provide food, water and veterinary care.

Nishima Bhagat, who attended a candlelight march in the centre of the city on Monday night to protest against the court ruling, said: “We are walking in solidarity to show that there are people for the voiceless. They [the dogs] cannot speak for themselves. They cannot be put into the pounds. We cannot uproot them from the place where they live.”

India bears the highest rabies burden globally. Each year about 5,700 people die from rabies, according to government figures, and the World Health Organization believes the toll to be as high as 20,000 deaths.

The last dog census, in 2012, put Delhi’s stray population at 60,000 and the figure now is estimated to be closer to 1 million. Dog packs roam parks, construction sites and residential lanes. Attacks on children and elderly people often make news headlines.

Between January and June this year, Delhi reported 35,198 animal bite incidents and 49 rabies cases, municipal data shows.

Pardiwala dismissed India’s animal birth control (ABC) rules, which mandate that sterilised dogs be returned to their territories, as “absurd” and ineffective. “All these so-called animal lovers, will they bring back the children who have lost their lives?” he said, urging civic authorities to act decisively rather than debate policy.

The ruling said there could be no exceptions and that anyone resisting the removals would face charges.

Animal protection groups called the order “impractical and inhumane”. Bharati Ramachandran, the chief executive of the Federation of Indian Animal Protection Organisations, urged large-scale sterilisation, vaccination, and public awareness campaigns.

Mini Aravindan, a senior official at Peta India, said: “It’s infeasible to build and staff enough shelters for hundreds of thousands of dogs” and the cost would be huge.

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