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Man Dies After Attack by Mixed-Breed Stray Dogs in Ubon Ratchathani


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Posted

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Representative image courtesy: iStock

 

In a tragic incident, a 49-year-old man was found dead in his home in Ubon Ratchathani after being mauled by two mixed-breed dogs. The man, whose identity has been withheld, was discovered face down in his single-storey house on Wednesday, according to local police reports on Friday.

 

The victim had suffered severe bite wounds to his head, including torn ears, and investigators concluded that he died from excessive blood loss.

 

Initially, the man's relatives suspected foul play, believing he might have been killed before the dogs attacked him. However, forensic analysis revealed no signs of human assault, ruling out the possibility of murder.


Police estimated that the man had been dead for approximately six hours before his body was found.

 

During the investigation, police located two stray dogs near the scene—one a mixed-breed pit bull and the other a mixed-breed Rottweiler. Believing these dogs were responsible for the attack, local livestock officers sedated both animals and measured their teeth, which matched the size of the bite wounds on the victim.

 

This incident has raised concerns about the presence of stray dogs, especially those with aggressive tendencies, in residential areas. Authorities are taking steps to prevent future incidents. The dogs have been taken into custody by the livestock office for further evaluation, reported Bangkok Post.

 

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-- 2024-09-27


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Posted

Stray Rottweiler-Mix Dogs Maul Man to Death in Ubon Ratchathani
By Kittisak Phalaharn

 

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Ubon Ratchathani — On September 27th, 2024, Don Mod Daeng police officers received a report of a man found dead after evidently being attacked by two stray Rottweiler-mix dogs at a residence in Don Mod Daeng, Ubon Ratchathani.


Officers arrived at the single-story home to find the body of Mr. Wetchai (whose last name was withheld by the police), lying face down in his bedroom. He was found with severe bite wounds on his head, a torn ear, and his body lying in a pool of blood.


Medical examiners found no evidence of blunt force trauma or sharp objects being used, ruling out murder. The room showed signs of a struggle, with objects scattered around and the back door left open.

 

 

Full story: THE PATTAYA NEWS 

-- 2024-09-28


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Posted
55 minutes ago, Ben Zioner said:

You mean removing ALL stray and feral dogs, once for all. Would be a nice assignment for the army, but sadly no one has the balls to do such thing.

 

These dogs make Thailand a third world country, and sadly the Thai want to keep it like that.

Yeah, that´s the whole problem. It´s so silly, that it´s hard to find words for it.

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Posted
11 minutes ago, NativeBob said:

sure and after " the dogs removal operation" Thailand will become prosperous and truly well developed country..

 

generally speaking TH is the third world country and that is one of the reason why nobody cares about stray and feral mutts.

Just take away Bob and go native......

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Posted
30 minutes ago, NorthernRyland said:

They need a national campaign to teach the people because they can't figure it out on their own.

Sounds like a good topic for a new post/thread.

 

"National campaign to teach the people how to handle:

  • dogs
  • cats
  • children with cell phones
  • unhealthy diet for kids
  • "thou shall not fail at exam" dogma
  • "but she has a family to support" excuse
  • absence of basic hygiene at any diner/street vendor/food court
  • uncontrolled disposal of hardcore antibiotics at pharmacies

and that just first things came to mind. 

^^^ these are the results of being 3rd world country. Not backward. More to add.

 

PS: at microbiology class professor asked college grads "what is isomer?". Master's program. Poker faces.

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Posted
7 hours ago, NorthernRyland said:

Thai people are mental with dogs. They simply don't know how to keep them. Just look at how they have to walk through their own streets with stick in hand to beat off dogs. Letting them sleep on the road covered with diseases and run after passing traffi etc... They need a national campaign to teach the people because they can't figure it out on their own.


Not just dogs, but pets in general. The majority, it would seem [to me] don't regard pets at all as we do in the west; they're much more of a status symbol to Thais rather than a loved companion. "Look at me" show-off syndrome, or just a way to try and make money. Pets, more often than not, are just tools here.

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Posted

The dogs would be owned by somebody but if these breeds manage to go wild and multiply what a major stuff up by the government who will not ban dangerous breeds from this country...

Posted
7 hours ago, NativeBob said:

Sounds like a good topic for a new post/thread.

 

"National campaign to teach the people how to handle:

  • dogs
  • cats
  • children with cell phones
  • unhealthy diet for kids
  • "thou shall not fail at exam" dogma
  • "but she has a family to support" excuse
  • absence of basic hygiene at any diner/street vendor/food court
  • uncontrolled disposal of hardcore antibiotics at pharmacies

and that just first things came to mind. 

^^^ these are the results of being 3rd world country. Not backward. More to add.

 

PS: at microbiology class professor asked college grads "what is isomer?". Master's program. Poker faces.

 

Thailand?

I thought you were listing conditions in the UK.

  • Agree 2
Posted

You dont need to get bitten to death. These stray dogs can also carry rabies in Thailand. Legislation of dangerous breeds and the banning of certain breeds is required. This is the second death inside a week and previous deaths include minors. Will legislation happen anytime soon? Unlikely.

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Posted
11 hours ago, proton said:

Dogs being dogs, no surprise what the mixed breeds were, 2 of the worst. Always thought when Pitbull and Rottie genes get in to the soi dog pool that attacks would increase. Lets not have any no bad dogs nonsense or he must have provoked them. 

The usual insanity of not putting the killers down and pretending steps are being taken to prevent future attacks, like what?

The Rottweiler is not by itself aggressive. Cannot say the same of Pitbulls never met a good one. What Thailand needs is Dog control and Dog registration to control what is a huge problem.

  • Agree 1
Posted
8 minutes ago, Kiwiken said:

The Rottweiler is not by itself aggressive. Cannot say the same of Pitbulls never met a good one. What Thailand needs is Dog control and Dog registration to control what is a huge problem.

They have a spay/neuter program that goes around, but it needs to be government funded, and countrywide, to do more good. Many stray dogs are born stray, from strays, and essentially from dogs people owned who let them run free without taking the time or money to fix them, not caring about the inevitable outcome. People don't care about animals here like they do in the west, with a few exceptions I have seen. The Buddhist attitude says no killing, yet people kill others daily here , so that means little in a population where a lot are practicing Buddhists. This is something the authorities has to take charge over, as they do most everything else, but for the greater good of all people here, instead of just a select few that have  money to burn. When one of the rich's relatives is attacked or killed, maybe then something might be done. Rottweilers and all dogs have the ability to hurt people, aggressive or not. It's just that some breeds can kill very quickly because of their strength.

Posted

apart from the obvious "these dogs and their owners need to be put to sleep" argument ...

 

this is a helluva painful way to die.

 

how many minutes of agonizing excruciating pain do you need to endure in this type of death before you finally die?

 

 

 

 

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Posted
11 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said:

 

Mixed breeds.

 

I am always careful about associating with mixed breeds, myself.

 

 

Girls look beautiful as mixed. Sometimes.

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