A PETA spokesperson said an effective sterilization program can help prevent a proliferation of community dogs when they are surgically neutered and then returned to their home area, also vaccinated against rabies.
"Since territories are not left vacant, new dogs cannot enter. Over time, as the dogs die natural deaths, their numbers dwindle. The dog population becomes stable, non-breeding, non-aggressive and rabies-free, and it gradually decreases over time. Sterilising just one female dog can prevent thousands of births by her and her offspring and their offspring, and so on," the spokesperson said.
It is the duty of the municipality to run an effective dog sterilization program under the Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Rules, 2001, the spokesperson added. Apart from managing the population of strays, the Centre's Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Rules 2001 does little to help resolve disputes over dog bites.
To be able to better find solutions to these frequent points of conflict in urban areas, the Centre last year proposed the Animal Birth Control Rules, 2022. Once finalised, these rules will replace the existing ones framed in 2001.
According to the draft, procedures have been prescribed for the immunisation, vaccination and sterilisation of dogs. It also proposes the formation of monitoring committees that will take steps to limit the population of strays in an area through animal birth control programmes.
The incidents of stray dogs attacking and killing their victims have been many. In October last year, for instance, a seven-month-old baby died after he was mauled by a stray in a posh gated colony in Noida.
Before that in September, a 12-year-old girl in Pathanamthitta, Kerala, died of rabies a month after being mauled by a dog. That same month, a video showing a teenage boy left with multiple injuries after being attacked by a stray was circulated widely on social media. Pet dogs are part of the debate too.
In some incidents, pet dogs attacked passers-by. In Haryana's Rewari town in October last year, for instance, a woman and her two children were attacked by a pit bulldog. In another widely reported incident in November, a pet dog bit a six-year-old inside the lift of a building in Greater Noida.
To curb such incidents and resolve the ensuing conflict, the Noida Authority has mandated pet owners to register, sterilise and vaccinate their pet dogs and cats. Gurugram's civic body also issued a notice in November, banning 11 foreign breeds, including American pit-bull terriers, dogo argentino, and rottweilers. The three breeds are also banned by Ghaziabad Municipal Corporation.
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