India's top court orders Delhi authorities to move stray dogs to shelters

Dogs walk on empty roads in New Delhi, India, September 10, 2023. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis/File Photo

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India's top court
ordered authorities in the capital Delhi and its suburbs on Monday to relocate
all stray dogs to shelters within eight weeks, according to the Live Law
website, after media reports of a rise in cases of rabies, especially among
children.
The Indian
government said in April that nearly 430,000 cases of dog bites had been
reported across the country in January, compared with 3.7 million cases all
through 2024.
India has 52.5
million stray dogs, according to a State of Pet Homelessness survey by Mars
Petcare, while 8 million homeless dogs are in shelters.
Local media
reports suggest that Delhi alone has 1 million stray dogs. Reuters could not
independently verify the number.
India's top court
took up the case after several reports in local media of stray dogs biting
children in Delhi, with some turning fatal.
On Monday, Live
Law reported that the court has asked authorities in Delhi to pick up stray
dogs from across the city and move them to dog shelters.
"Infants and
young children, should not at any cost, fall prey to rabies. The action should
inspire confidence that they can move freely without fear of being bitten by
stray dogs. No sentiment should be involved," the court said, according to
Live Law website.
Solicitor General
of India Tushar Mehta, for the Delhi government, urged for strong intervention
as "sterilisation only prevents the increase in their population, but it
does not take away the power of the dogs to give rabies," the website reported.
However, the move
has drawn criticism from conservationists over its implementation.
"Where are
the shelters to house thousands of dogs?" conservation biologist Bahar
Dutt said in a post on X, calling the top court's order an "impractical
unscientific move".
"We need mass
vaccination & mass sterilization — the only humane, proven ways to reduce
conflicts," Vidit Sharma, founder of animal welfare organization Save A
Stray, said on X.
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