Dubai Telegraph - Turkish stray dog law sparks opposition anger

EUR -
AED 3.82175
AFN 76.745773
ALL 99.403572
AMD 409.745233
ANG 1.878893
AOA 952.677278
ARS 1104.281011
AUD 1.674265
AWG 1.873088
AZN 1.772196
BAM 1.960802
BBD 2.10497
BDT 126.663109
BGN 1.960802
BHD 0.392
BIF 3087.977227
BMD 1.040605
BND 1.405786
BOB 7.203375
BRL 6.124376
BSD 1.04256
BTN 91.157537
BWP 14.429809
BYN 3.411803
BYR 20395.848471
BZD 2.094142
CAD 1.503335
CDF 2988.616337
CHF 0.939473
CLF 0.025872
CLP 992.842677
CNY 7.579558
CNH 7.586236
COP 4307.087097
CRC 529.049571
CUC 1.040605
CUP 27.57602
CVE 110.546998
CZK 25.087415
DJF 185.643565
DKK 7.45796
DOP 64.945672
DZD 140.748039
EGP 52.547431
ERN 15.609068
ETB 134.499199
FJD 2.417843
FKP 0.827454
GBP 0.825959
GEL 2.898102
GGP 0.827454
GHS 16.159221
GIP 0.827454
GMD 74.403645
GNF 9017.00178
GTQ 8.044521
GYD 218.106375
HKD 8.093853
HNL 26.655998
HRK 7.532417
HTG 136.939323
HUF 401.979802
IDR 17202.70149
ILS 3.744251
IMP 0.827454
INR 91.023238
IQD 1365.68377
IRR 43822.461265
ISK 145.889585
JEP 0.827454
JMD 164.35927
JOD 0.737996
JPY 156.900274
KES 134.643467
KGS 90.999803
KHR 4181.667159
KMF 494.286862
KPW 936.544062
KRW 1521.148247
KWD 0.321232
KYD 0.868816
KZT 519.775914
LAK 22623.711604
LBP 93409.982736
LKR 307.805191
LRD 208.33144
LSL 19.253514
LTL 3.072635
LVL 0.629451
LYD 5.094997
MAD 10.378375
MDL 19.49473
MGA 4963.661976
MKD 61.692373
MMK 2184.894525
MNT 3611.780289
MOP 8.35371
MRU 41.481817
MUR 48.702028
MVR 16.028971
MWK 1807.811609
MXN 21.356795
MYR 4.6437
MZN 66.505189
NAD 19.253514
NGN 1563.51321
NIO 38.367874
NOK 11.692218
NPR 145.852059
NZD 1.858499
OMR 0.400472
PAB 1.04266
PEN 3.830772
PGK 4.196706
PHP 60.292847
PKR 291.48917
PLN 4.173134
PYG 8263.078571
QAR 3.799492
RON 4.980073
RSD 117.499734
RUB 92.104382
RWF 1491.805498
SAR 3.902889
SBD 8.775123
SCR 15.260472
SDG 625.403207
SEK 11.17885
SGD 1.404561
SHP 0.826891
SLE 23.777727
SLL 21820.96222
SOS 595.819897
SRD 36.985687
STD 21538.412464
SVC 9.12227
SYP 13529.748079
SZL 19.246096
THB 35.62978
TJS 11.373914
TMT 3.642116
TND 3.310645
TOP 2.437202
TRY 38.007086
TTD 7.070035
TWD 34.256801
TZS 2715.727643
UAH 43.218147
UGX 3832.777163
USD 1.040605
UYU 44.262912
UZS 13443.292958
VES 67.016524
VND 26592.648351
VUV 129.125946
WST 2.947075
XAF 657.634583
XAG 0.03338
XAU 0.000363
XCD 2.812286
XDR 0.794126
XOF 657.634583
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.28946
ZAR 19.383758
ZMK 9366.694865
ZMW 29.685726
ZWL 335.074229
  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.39

    -0.51%

  • JRI

    0.2500

    13.02

    +1.92%

  • CMSD

    -0.0615

    23.56

    -0.26%

  • BCC

    1.1100

    103.66

    +1.07%

  • NGG

    0.6600

    62.13

    +1.06%

  • SCS

    0.0100

    12.16

    +0.08%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    8.81

    +0.68%

  • RBGPF

    65.0700

    65.07

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    9.48

    +0.74%

  • RIO

    -0.1500

    60.56

    -0.25%

  • BCE

    -0.2700

    23.12

    -1.17%

  • RELX

    0.7600

    48.37

    +1.57%

  • BTI

    0.2200

    38.93

    +0.57%

  • GSK

    0.2900

    37.59

    +0.77%

  • AZN

    0.5600

    76.21

    +0.73%

  • BP

    0.0000

    33.12

    0%

Turkish stray dog law sparks opposition anger
Turkish stray dog law sparks opposition anger / Photo: Yasin AKGUL - AFP

Turkish stray dog law sparks opposition anger

Turkish opposition parties vowed Tuesday to fight a law authorising the capture -- and in some cases killing -- of the country’s estimated four million stray dogs.

Text size:

The emotive law -- which animal lovers fear will lead to a mass cull despite government denials -- was passed at final reading in the early hours of Tuesday by a margin of 51 votes, in the face of opposition protests.

Deputies against the law wore white gloves stained with fake blood during the debate. "We will challenge this law in the constitutional court as soon as possible. It violates the animals' right to life," said Ozgur Ozel, leader of the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP).

"Today is a dark day. Neither history nor humanity will forgive those who voted 'yes'," protested CHP lawmaker Aliye Timis Ersever.

The government argues that strays considered sick or uncontrollable should be put down to prevent a growing number of attacks and the spread of rabies.

It says the other homeless dogs must be rounded up in animal shelters and put up for adoption.

Critics say relying on animal sanctuaries and adoption is ultimately unworkable because of the numbers involved.

Instead, they advocate a mass sterilisation and vaccination campaign.

The law has revived memories of a 1910 tragedy when the Ottoman authorities rounded up around 60,000 strays in Istanbul and sent them to a deserted rock in the Sea of Marmara.

With nothing else to eat, the dogs tore each other to pieces.

International animal welfare group Four Paws urged President Recep Tayyip Erdogan not to ratify the new law.

- 'Revenge' -

"Four Paws strongly condemns the killing (and) long-term mass sheltering of stray animals as means of population control, not only due to the suffering this causes... but also because this is an ineffective, inhumane and costly way to reduce stray animal numbers," it said.

The most successful method was to catch, neuter and vaccinate the animals and then rerelease them, it added.

Erdogan has said Turkey faces a problem "like no other civilised country".

The president, whose AKP party and its allies have a majority in parliament, said on Wednesday that people wanted "safe streets".

The social-democrat CHP, which took control of Istanbul and other major cities in local elections in March, has said its mayors will not apply the law.

The legislation says dogs will be put down if they "present a danger to the life or health of people and animals, display uncontrollable negative behaviour, have a contagious or incurable disease or whose adoption is forbidden".

It says local councils must build animal shelters and implement the law by 2028. Mayors who refuse could be jailed for up to two years.

The opposition accused the AKP of seeking revenge after its drubbing in the local elections.

"You want to take revenge for March 31. You can pass as many massacre laws as you like but none of our local councils will be your accomplice," said CHP deputy Gokce Gokcen.

Millions of people in Turkey feed and pet the country's strays. The government's plan sparked protests around the country and inside parliament.

Y.Amjad--DT