Frequent harassment
Kiran, a physiotherapist, and Shilpa, a lawyer, moved to Sanjay Gandhi Nagar SRA in Dindoshi in March. The sisters are both registered with the Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI), and they regularly feed stray dogs in the neighbourhood. They allegedly received several threats from the residents for feeding a female stray in the society premises. Matters got worse after the dog gave birth to a litter of pups.

One of the puppies was found dead after Dindoshi society members allegedly dumped them.
From threats to assault
Kiran wrote to the People for Animals (PFA), following which the NGO called the society secretary and issued a warning. However, when the sisters returned home on October 24, one of the residents Rustom Patel and his two sons came to their flat at 10.30 am and threatened to throw them out of the house overnight if they continued to feed the dogs. Kiran and Shilpa rushed to Kurar police station to lodge a non-cognisable (NC) offence.
"In the evening, I found Patel beating the female dog with a bamboo stick. When I stopped him, he called his family members and other residents, who began abusing and slapping me," said Kiran.
She called her sister for help, but the residents allegedly surrounded both women and assaulted them. The sisters then approached the police around midnight, and an FIR was filed against Patel, his son Riyaz and a third person.
Cop speak
"An FIR was lodged against Rustom Patel, his wife Rabia Patel, his son Riyaz and a fourth accused. We immediately arrested all three known accused from the society," said Uday Rajeshirke, senior PI of Kurar police station.
They were charged under Sections 354 (molestation), 452 (house-trespass), 323 (voluntarily causing hurt), 504 (intentional insult), 506 (criminal intimidation), 143 (unlawful assembly), 147 (rioting) and 149 of the IPC.
Society says
Baliraj Yadav, the society secretary, blamed the sisters for the incident. "I warned them several times to not feed the dogs, as they were coming inside the society and creating trouble for other residents. They never came to me regarding the threats from residents. I was about to call a meeting over the warning from PFA, but this dread-ful incident had taken place by then," he said.
NGO speak
"Two women were beaten up and no one tried to save them. They were only feeding animals. It is an individual's fundamental duty to be compassionate towards animals under Article 51 A(g) of the Constitution. There have been such three cases in the last one-and-a-half months alone," said Nirali Karodia, from People for Animals, Mumbai.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)