Popular Post webfact Posted November 21, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted November 21, 2018 Why the official plan to impound Bangkok street dogs won’t work By The Soi Dog Foundation The scheme to control stray dogs recently announced in Bangkok is inappropriate and unlikely to be effective, the Soi Dog Foundation (SDF) believes. The Thapthan shelter in Uthai Thani, where it is proposed that captured dogs will be impounded is one of the best shelters in the country, but it is already at or near capacity. Even if the Thapthan shelter were empty it could house only a fraction of the capital’s street dogs. SDF has already carried out surveys of the 50 districts within the Bangkok Metropolitan area, and three years ago carried out a census in the whole Greater Bangkok area, which revealed approximately 640,000 free roaming dogs in Greater Bangkok. The foundation agrees that aggressive dogs that bite people should be removed. But the majority of strays tend to steer clear of people, which is why people have to be trained in the skills of catching them. With the support of Dogs Trust Worldwide, Soi Dog began sterilising and vaccinating the dogs living in the BMA area two years ago, as well as supporting other private initiatives in Greater Bangkok and other parts of the country. We currently have four full-time mobile teams operating in the capital and hope to increase that to six next year. Sterilisation, vaccination and rabies We are now close to sterilising 100,000 animals per year. This costs Bt50 million a year, with no support from the city. If sterilised and vaccinated dogs are going to be removed from their territories, then SDF will have to consider whether there is any point in continuing with such a programme. The World Health Organisation, the UN Food and Agriculture division, the World Organisation for Animal Health and the Global Alliance for Rabies Control all agree that the most effective way to eliminate rabies is to vaccinate dogs, and if a minimum of 70 per cent of dogs are vaccinated in a city or country, then you will eliminate rabies, providing you control any new dogs coming in. The reason for this is that mass vaccination establishes herd immunity. But remove those vaccinated dogs, and other dogs that are not vaccinated will rapidly reproduce to take their place, and rabies will once again raise its ugly head. The same applies to population control. Sterilise 80 per cent of the female dogs and you will start to see numbers fall. Dogs are territorial and will keep other dogs out. Lessons from Phuket A maintenance programme will be required but, as has been shown in countries around the world, once sterilisation is introduced, as well as people exercising proper control of their dogs, then the situation will be under control. You can see this happening in Phuket where SDF has been vaccinating and sterilising dogs for 15 years. Despite hundreds of unvaccinated puppies being allowed into the province for sale each year, and despite vaccinated and sterilised dogs being removed to the provincial pound from time to time (making the maintenance operation far harder) the number of stray dogs in Phuket has fallen drastically. In addition, the government has declared the province rabies-free – the only province in Thailand to have received this accolade. Food source Bangkok has always had a big stray dog problem. Over the years, many measures have been tried and failed, including poisoning and shooting (stopped by HM the late King Bhumibol), and removing dogs to Pravet and Uthai Thani. SDF believes that the latest measure announced will also fail. Dogs, cats and rats, like people, need food to survive. Until the authorities can control the garbage and waste problem in Thailand, as they have now in many countries, then something is going to feed on that waste. At present, dogs are top of the pecking order. Remove the dogs and the cat population will explode, as it has in Phuket. Remove the cats and the city will have a plague of rats and mice. That is nature. Provide a food source and something will feed on it. It will take investment and education, but unless you solve the underlying issue – unsterilised animals and a ready source of food – you will never solve the problem. You will need 100 shelters like Uthai Thani, or more, to take all of the dogs in the Greater Bangkok area. The cost of building them and then feeding and caring for the dogs would be astronomical – certainly far more than employing a large number of people to catch the dogs, then sterilise and vaccinate them. Even if it were possible to remove all the current free-roaming dogs in Bangkok, whether owned or stray, they would be replaced in no time at all by dogs from areas around the city, by unwanted pups discarded by puppy factories, and the offspring of unsterilised pets, the origin of all the current strays. Educating people on responsible pet ownership, and that it is not wrong or against Buddhist principles to sterilise dogs and cats, is also essential. Controlling the growing number of puppy farms is also badly needed. Finally, it is worth noting that in September senior officials from the Singapore Veterinary Department, who have responsibility for controlling the stray dogs in that country, visited Soi Dog in Bangkok for three days to study our methods. They have found that years of a capture-and-euthanise policy had no impact. They are now switching to a Catch-Neuter-Vaccinate-Release policy in close cooperation with local animal welfare groups. Lessons continue not to be learned on controlling the number of stray dogs in Bangkok and the rest of Thailand. Once again, the Soi Dog Foundation urges authorities in the capital and elsewhere in Thailand to heed the lessons of the past and to commit to a concerted long-term campaign to catch, neuter, sterilise and release street dogs, and to make bringing garbage under control a priority. Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/opinion/30359050 -- © Copyright The Nation 2018-11-22 3 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Samui Bodoh Posted November 21, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted November 21, 2018 Kudos to the Soi Dog Foundation! I make a contribution to them every year, and I would encourage others to do the same. The article above is excellent; it raises some issues that are a wee bit uncomfortable for the city of Bangkok, but somethings need to be said. I would especially highlight; "...Dogs, cats and rats, like people, need food to survive. Until the authorities can control the garbage and waste problem in Thailand, as they have now in many countries, then something is going to feed on that waste. At present, dogs are top of the pecking order. Remove the dogs and the cat population will explode, as it has in Phuket. Remove the cats and the city will have a plague of rats and mice. That is nature. Provide a food source and something will feed on it. It will take investment and education, but unless you solve the underlying issue – unsterilised animals and a ready source of food – you will never solve the problem..." The other issue that I would add is that Thailand needs to think about mass culling. Yes, Buddhism doesn't really condone it (and, I have great respect for Buddhist principles), but sometimes, as the old adage goes, you need to be cruel to be kind. I will simply repeat what I wrote at the top; I donate to the SDF and I hope everyone will as well. 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
humbug Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 Soi dog are a wonderful organisation 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Darcula Posted November 22, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted November 22, 2018 2 hours ago, webfact said: Remove the dogs and the cat population will explode, as it has in Phuket. Remove the cats and the city will have a plague of rats and mice. I say give it a try......then start a Soi Rats & Mice Foundation. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post digger70 Posted November 22, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted November 22, 2018 5 hours ago, webfact said: The scheme to control stray dogs recently announced in Bangkok is inappropriate and unlikely to be effective, the Soi Dog Foundation (SDF) believes. Nothing is effective if one doesn't follow trough ,Impound the dog /cats/ keep them for 4 weeks like the pounds in Australia, if Nobody owns up to own the animal and pay a Fee they ALL get exterminated 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post marko kok prong Posted November 22, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted November 22, 2018 Backhoe,big pit,dead rounded up dogs in said pit,add petrol,later back fill,problem solved. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Krataiboy Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 Barking mad. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dallen52 Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 Yesterday morning 7:25 I drove from the top of klang to buchao. Slow traffic so I counted dogs. 64 dogs just laying around the foot paths. God knows how many in the small sois off the central road. I said previously. Three houses facing me. 20 dogs. Then the nighttime mutts come wandering around on the sniff. License or removal. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Humpy Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 '' sterilising and vaccinating the dogs '' ... wont stop them fouling the pavements and ripping refuse bags apart . 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
johng Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 22 minutes ago, Humpy said: wont stop them Wont stop them biting,howling all night, chasing and causing accidents either. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kekalot Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 10 hours ago, digger70 said: Nothing is effective if one doesn't follow trough ,Impound the dog /cats/ keep them for 4 weeks like the pounds in Australia, if Nobody owns up to own the animal and pay a Fee they ALL get exterminated absolutely and I would reckon that 10 days or 2 weeks would be even better. and tag the dogs that DO get claimed by "owners", if they come back a second time. nope 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Henrik Andersen Posted November 22, 2018 Share Posted November 22, 2018 Perfect and spot on article only solution now is to kill all the dog's and start to ear mark all home owners dogs so owners can be prosecuted when their dogs running around But ofcores that will never happen Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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