• 26May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 2

    Advocate Mrs. Kamini Kashyap has been working for self aided organization for more than 26 years. Her house has become an asylum for all kind of stray, abandoned and wounded animals. She is working on her own expenses. With the help of New Delhi based Friendicoes SECA, Kamini has organized an animal welfare and stray dog birth control and vaccination camp in Almora for the second year in a row.
    She needs your help and donations. Please get in touch with me at smitajo79@gmail.com if you would like to donate cash or kind.The following weblink has some pictures: http://www.myrung.com/pashusurakshasamiti.html

  • 20May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 1

    Smita’s comment – I dont understand why this particular reporter of Economic Times writes again and again about removing stray dogs? She has been sent numerous emails, notices etc by animal welfare organizations informing of the law and the right ways to handle the stray dog situation, but she continues to write about moving the dogs to the shelter etc. Why is she so cruel, insensitive to the poor animals plight?

    Killing two birds with one stone
    16 May 2010, 0035 hrs IST,Mythili Bhusnurmath,ET Bureau
    Topics:

    The capital city of Delhi is getting a complete makeover in time for the Commonwealth Games this October. Work is going on at a feverish pace to give it what is, perhaps, best described as the ‘Singapore look’, albeit in our well-known jugaad style (read papering over shortcomings rather than looking for permanent answers).

    What this means is potholes are getting covered, trees planted, cobble-stones laid and dry patches turned ‘verdant’ green almost overnight. What this means is that ornamental potted plants (six million of them according to news reports) are in. But strays, beggars, roadside hawkers and all other unseemly sights are out.

    The Delhi government does not want them defacing its pristine streets. Predictably, animal lovers and human rights activists are up in arms against the government’s move. Equally predictably, the former are better organised and have been holding protests and rallies in the city. Many celebrities have also lent their support.

    They have a point. Strays and beggars cannot be wished away overnight. Except that no city that wishes to lay claim to being the capital of an emerging economic superpower and wants to host what are the biggest and most extravagant Commonwealth Games till date can afford to have beggars and strays on its streets!

    But when you have about 60,000 beggars (though NGOs claim the numbers are likely to be closer to one lakh) and more than 300,000 odd stray animals, give or take a few thousand, there are no simple answers. Delhi’s social welfare minister has announced the setting up of a dozen mobile courts for trying beggars. Anyone caught begging is sent to one of 12 shelters in the capital. The problem is these are woefully over-crowded and poorly maintained.

    In an affidavit filed before a division bench of the Delhi High Court in March this year, the Delhi government stated it has written letters to 10 states, including Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal, to take back beggars hailing from these states. Rough estimates suggest the maximum number are from Uttar Pradesh (27%) followed by Bihar (17%), West Bengal (6%) and Haryana (5%).

    It is doubtful state governments will be willing to cooperate in ‘cleaning’ up Delhi streets. Even if they do the beggars are likely to come back; the reason the poor from all over the country flock to Delhi is that begging in the capital city is more profitable compared to other cities.

    As far as strays are concerned, the government has no clue about their precise number. The first census of stray dogs done by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) estimates there are over 260,000 stray dogs in the capital of which only roughly 50% have reportedly been vaccinated against rabies. Rabies is a constant danger.

    The Association for Prevention and Control of Rabies in India estimates the frequency of rabies deaths in India at one per 30 minutes and the frequency of bites, one every two seconds. The overwhelming majority is due to stray dog bites and the victims are usually the faceless poor. Once infected, not only is there no cure but death is excruciatingly painful.

    Animal lovers say street dogs can be vaccinated but what is the guarantee that the dog in question has been immunised? None! And unlike with pets, it is impossible to track a stray. Apart from dogs there are monkeys, cattle, not to mention the odd goats and pigs, all jostling for space on city streets
    So what is the way out?

    In response to the petition against the government’s move on beggars protesting against the unconstitutionality of the present act that defines begging as a crime, the division bench of the Delhi High Court remarked (quite rightly), “You are seeing only one side of the picture.”

    So too with strays! Animal lovers find it hard to accept but the reality is that strays cannot be allowed a free run of city streets and residential colonies.

    Just as the solution to the problem of beggars is not to make begging a crime but to provide alternative shelters for the truly destitute in the short run and more employment opportunities long term so they do not have to resort to begging, the solution to the problem of strays is to provide shelters where they can be cared for properly, not to allow them a free run of our streets.

    A fraction of the money being spent to beautify the city would suffice and give us a permanent solution to the problem of both beggars and strays. Is the Delhi government listening?

  • 20May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 3

    16-yr-old psychopath is a contract killer
    Pervez Iqbal Siddiqui , TNN, Apr 28, 2010, 06.02am IST
    LUCKNOW: He is unbelieveably ruthless and brutal. So much so that after strangling a 13-year-old boy, he hammered long steel nails through both his palms only to confirm if he was dead or merely faking it. His confession has prompted the police to recommend necessary solitary confinement for him, while behind bars. Barely 16, Rahil, a psychopath, is a contract killer.

    The arrest of Rahil and his 14-year-old aide Shahbaz (names changed as both are minors) by the Ghaziabad police on Monday and their subsequent interrogation have come as an eye-opener for the police who claim that the teenager is anything but a normal boy. He is a young psychopath, it seems, say the Vijay Nagar police.

    “Even I wasn’t initially convinced that he could be the culprit. But once he started to sing even I was left surprised,” says senior superintendent of police (SSP), Ghaziabad, Raghubir Lal. “After I was through with him, I got everything crossed-checked and to my surprise every bit of it was confirmed,” says the IPS officer, adding: “I haven’t come across anything even remotely like him in my entire service till date.”

    Police sources revealed how Rahil described an incident in which he hung a stray canine by its neck from the rear mud guard of the tractor. He then stabbed it twice every five minutes till the dog bled to death in front of him. “He told me about what he did to a pigeon once,” Raghuvir Lal said talking to TOI on Tuesday evening. “He started with cutting-off the bird’s wings and chased it all over the place, scaring the life out of it. He then chopped its head off in one go without holding the bird,” the IPS officer said.

    About the murder of Nisran, Rahil – youngest among three brothers and two sisters – said that the crime was committed at the instance of a middle-aged woman named Shabnam Khan, who owns a general store in the same village. Shabnam’s nephew and Nisran were friends and used to visit the general store quite often.

    She had this hunch that the two kids were stealing money from the cash box every now and then. Instead of talking it out with the duo, she asked Rahil to take care of Nisran. It was yet to be established if Shabnam had actually asked Rahil to murder the boy or merely thrash him up with a warning because the woman has been absconding ever since Nisran’s body was recovered on April 20 last, police said.

    About the murder of Nisran, whose body was found at an under-construction premises on the outskirts of Saveri village along the National Highway – 24, Rahil said that since all of them were students of class VII at a public school near their village, they were well known to each other. He invited Nisran for a joyride on his elder brother’s bike along with another local lad Shahbaz. Once they reached the thicket, he pulled Nisran off the bike and strangled him with a brake cable used in motorcycles.

    As Nisran lay still thereafter, Rahil picked up a brick and smashed it on the forehead of Nisran. Not satisfied with it, he picked up a few long steel nails lying at the scene and hammered them through both his palms with a brick till they passed through and through. Shahbaz told the police that Rahil used the nails because he wanted to confirm beyond doubt that Nisran was no longer alive.

    Both the accused were produced before the district juvenile justice board Ghaziabad and subsequently sent to a juvenile remand home in Meerut. The board, taking note of the police recommendation, ordered that Rahil be kept alone from the rest of those at the remand home or kept under watch 24X7. The remand home staff was also warned by the police to ensure that all precautions were taken while dealing with the 16-year-old who was capable of doing anything to anyone, young or old.

  • 20May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 1

    Kind Attn: Ms. Neha Shukla, Times of India, Lucknow

    In response to http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/lucknow/LMC-drive-against-stray-menace-to-be-less-noisy-/articleshow/5870245.cms

    Dear Neha Shukla,

    The Central law with respect to controlling stray dogs, and stray dog population is the Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Rules, 2001, enacted under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960. These Rules provide for sterilization and vaccination of dogs to control dog population and nuisance attributable to dogs.

    The World Health Organization, after considerable research, has published its conclusion that the only effective method of controlling stray dog numbers is sterilization, i.e. targeting the ability to procreate. The same, if systematically resorted to, starts showing results in a couple of years.

    Per an interesting and well informed article titled ‘Zero-rabies city shows the way to small towns’ on June 10, 2009, rabies has virtually been readicated from the city of Chennai. This hasn’t been done by writing provocative and ill-informed articles like yours, but by diligently working towards achieving a humane solution to a problem.

    TOI is a reputed paper and we would expect you to be more sensitized to issues where life and death is concerned, whether it is human or animal. We, animal welfare activists of New Delhi and NCR, take offense to your article. You have mentioned, matter of factly, cruel statements like ‘It would have been much easier to flung a dog inside a coach. The dogs could have been dumped in there all through the day’s drive and then collectively taken away to far off areas.’ This is abhorrent! I cant understand how you could even write something like flinging a live being inside a coach!

    Please note that ill informed articles like yours do discredit to TOI. We were shocked to read your article and didnt know how to react.

    I would like to reiterate that per the Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Rules, 2001, enacted under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, the only way to control stray dog population is by carrying out stray animal birth control and vaccination. I wish your paper would write more about how the Animal Birth Control could be made more effective and about effective garbage control, instead of writing such provocative articles and creating hinderence in the path of grassroot workers who are actually trying to reduce the stray dog population in Indian cities.

    Note: You can read more about the Chennai anti-rabies campaign at :
    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Chennai/Zero-rabies-city-shows-the-way-to-small-towns/articleshow/4637380.cms

    Thanks and regards, Smita Joshi
    Animal Welfare Activist, New Delhi

    CC: Ms. Anjali Sharma, Legal Advisor, Animal Welfare Board of India.

  • 14May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 3

    http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/animals-in-india-need-urgent-help

  • 12May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 1

    Across India:
    http://straysrhot.blogspot.com/

    In New Delhi & NCR:
    http://saiashram.blogspot.com/
    http://angeleyespetadoption.blogspot.com/

  • 06May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 0

    EU moves toward new rules on animal welfare
    posted 29-April-2010

    Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest • 28th April 2010

    EU moves toward new rules on animal welfare

    The EU is starting to consider new rules on animal welfare that could have significant impacts on its trading partners.

    The European Commissioner for health and consumer affairs, John Dalli of Malta, who took up his post in February, told The New York Times in an interview this week that he plans to introduce draft legislation to eliminate loopholes that allow some cosmetics companies to test their products on animals. He hopes to forbid such products from being sold in Europe unless the companies halt the testing before the end of 2012, he said.

    More broadly, Dalli intends to propose new legislation on animal welfare “by early 2012? in the hope that the reforms could be implemented in conjunction with changes to European farm policy that will take effect after 2013, the commissioner said in a speech in Ireland earlier this month.

    “Our EU animal health legislation is now a vast body of legal texts – some 60 basic acts on trade, disease control, animal identification and so forth. The new law will simplify the current complex legal structure by replacing it with a streamlined framework,” Dalli told a conference on animal health on 12 April.

    The European Commission has already held public consultations to gauge citizens’ thoughts on reforming the EU’s animal welfare laws. The more than 150 submissions that have been received have made it clear “that a high level of animal health remains essential,” Dalli said.

    The European Union has long been known for its stringent health and safety standards for food and other products. Dalli hinted that he sympathises with such an approach.

    “Careful analysis and consideration of convergence [with international standards] is necessary – but the EU should retain a higher level of protection of public health and animal health where this is justified,” he said in his speech.

    In The New York Times interview, Dalli also signalled that the EU has no plans to lift bans on imports of US chicken that has been washed with chlorine or imports of US beef that has been treated with hormones. The two embargos have long irritated US exporters.

    But Dalli does not always toe the traditionally strict European line on all of the issues that fall under his authority. He caused some eyebrows to raise in March – just a month after he took up his post – when his office approved the use of a genetically modified potato in Europe (for industrial purposes only, however).

    “I do not believe in telling consumers what they should eat or buy, but I firmly believe we have a duty to let them know what they are eating or buying,” Dalli told the Irish conference.

    ICTSD reporting; “EU push on animal welfare may open new trade front with US,” THE NEW YORK TIMES, 26 April 2010.

    source : Bridges

  • 05May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 1

    http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=417078710338&ref=mf

  • 04May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 3

    Here is a draft that you could cut copy paste and email to the CEO (ceodjb@hotmail.com) from your email id and urge others to do the same.  Feel free to add your own two bits.

    “Subject: Kind Attn: Mr. Ramesh Negi, CEO, Delhi Jal Board

    Mr. Negi,

    I hope you have received the below email from the Animal Welfare Board of India. We are appalled to know what goes on in the DJB compound. I think it is absolutely disgusting that you have employed criminals like these.

    When the city trusts you with such huge responsibility, it is very very shocking, disgusting, appalling to get news like this.

    Mr. Negi, by now the media, citizens of Delhi & NCR and animal lovers and organizations around the world will have received a copy of this email.

    We hope you will take corrective action. We want you to take action against these criminals and inform the public of the same.

    We want you to employ respectable people, with a sense of decency who will not indulge in such criminal and cruel activities. I hope you realise what shame this has brought on our city, on our country and mainly on Delhi Jal Board.

    Sincerely, <your name>”

  • 04May10
    Categories: Misc Comments: 15

    By E-mail & through Courier

    5th May 2010

    To

    Shri Ramesh Negi

    Chief Executive Officer

    Delhi Jal Board

    Varunalaya

    Phase II, Karol Bagh,

    New Delhi-110005

    (ceodjb@hotmail.com )

    SUB:  SHOCKING BUTCHERY AT THE JAL BOARD BUILDING AT LAJPAT NAGAR

    Dear Sir,

    In my capacity as Chairperson of the Animal Welfare Board of India, a statutory body set up under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, I am writing to you to invite your attention to a shocking instance of butchery, and utterly brutal killings of stray dogs at the Jal Board office, Jal Sadan, Lajpat Nagar, on Sunday, the 2nd of May, a little after 2.00 p.m., that has come to light a little while ago.  As information filters out, several agitated residents of Delhi are calling me up and demanding that the perpetrators of the criminal acts be brought to book.

    Apparently, on Sunday, the 2nd of May, 2010, between 2 and 3 p.m., when 4 (four) guards, including one Ram Kher, were ostensibly guarding the complex, and 12 (twelve) Delhi Jal Board staff, including one Rakesh, and one Ashok, were on emergency water supply duty, and therefore present at the complex, and some canteen staff were also present, 5 to 6 miscreants easily breached the security and entered the complex ! We have learnt that they were probably from the adjoining Vinoba Puri area. Despite the sensitive nature of the installation – a Delhi Jal Board installation – they were allowed to enter.   Thereafter, in connivance with the 4 guards on duty, and either some or all of the staff on emergency duty, the miscreants, and the guards, and some of the others brutally beat up and cut / chopped 11 community dogs (i.e. stray dogs resident at the complex), to a horribly painful death. Apparently, legs were broken, cuts were inflicted, and bodies pierced with bhalas and other sharp objects, before the poor, hapless animals died. Some dogs, in a desperate bid to escape, ran into the building. However, the guards, and some or all of the 12 staff of duty kicked and beat them out. They were then killed in the gruesome and horribly sub-human manner described above.

    The Board has also learnt that thereafter, the flesh and some parts of the body of the poor animals that suffered and died were eaten/kept aside for eating later. Some animal remains were thrown into an adjoining area, and other remains and blood were strewn  over  the  place  at  that  time.  What  is shocking  is  that  none  of the persons present called up the police, or even the Number 100, clearly demonstrating that they were all participating in the act. It was only yesterday, and today, that the other employees learnt what had occurred, and informed some Animal Welfare Organizations and the Animal Welfare Board of India.

    The Board would have you know that animal cruelty is an offence – under Section 11 of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, and Sections 428 and 429 of the Indian Penal Code – punishable with imprisonment and fine. The Animal Welfare Board of India shall of course be lodging a criminal complaint and taking legal recourse ; but I urge you as well to investigate, and take strong action against the employees who connived with the miscreants and perpetrated the heinous crime described above.

    Please bear in mind that apart from the shameful slaughter of community dogs that the guards, and some/all of the employees present at the complex on Sunday, the 2nd of May, 2010, resorted to, a sensitive Jal Board installation was breached with impunity! The miscreants could have as easily mixed hazardous substances with water, leading to human casualties / illness.

    What has occurred is serious enough to merit your intervention and strong action. Kindly do the needful, and please keep me informed.

    Yours Sincerely

    (Dr. R.M. Kharb)

    Maj.Gen.(Retd.), AVSM

    Chairman, AWBI

    Copies to:-

    Mr. B.P. Saraswat

    Executive Engineer, South IInd

    Delhi Jal Board, Jal Sadan Building ,

    Near Shiv Mandir, Lajpat Nagar

    New Delhi

    &

    The S.H.O.

    Police Station Lajpat Nagar

    New Delhi.