Toronto Star

New approach to stray dogs

- AMIR VAHDAT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

On a recent cold winter morning in the Iranian capital, a homeless dog lay basking in the sun’s rays for warmth. Suddenly, the canine moaned — it had been shot with an anesthetic dart from a blowpipe. It ran several steps, then fell immobilize­d.

The cream-and-grey coloured dog was collected by a worker for a new shelter where it will be given a medical check, neutered and microchipp­ed — the first such initiative in this country where strays in the street are usually killed.

The Aradkouh Stray Dogs Shelter has been hired by the Tehran city government to take a new, more humane approach to deal with the burgeoning problem of stray dogs in the capital. It’s a sign of changing attitudes among officials in a country where Islamic authoritie­s have long seen dogs as “un-Islamic” and at times still confiscate them from people who have them as pets.

Although there are no official numbers, in some Tehran neighbourh­oods — especially in poorer districts — strays are rampant and a nuisance and the shelter captures 30 to 40 dogs per day. District 18, for example, a poor neighbourh­ood in Tehran’s southwest known for its farmland, junkyards and factories, has some of the most stray dogs in the city.

“This area has a countless number of dogs and sometimes they pass by in hordes,” said Einollah Ardalani-said, a garage owner in southern Tehran who hailed the initiative that began less than a year ago. “I think it is great if these dogs can be collected in a managed way so that neither the dogs nor the citizens are harmed.”

The shelter, located near the small town of Kahrizak, caters to the captured dogs’ needs, including feeding them and examining them for disease. Shelter workers vaccinate the dogs and sterilize them to control the stray population. After about two weeks, the dogs are microchipp­ed and registered in a data bank so they can be tracked down later.

On a recent day, there were 500 mature dogs and145 puppies being looked after by the shelter’s staff. All the dogs are available for adoption.

Urban animal-control vehicles set off in the mornings to hunt for strays, their destinatio­n determined by reports from citizens or places where the population of the animals is conspicuou­sly large. The staff’s hunting tools are blowpipes or guns armed with dart syringes filled with anesthetic drugs.

The workers are trained to try to catch the animals as gently as possible and are advised not to use force.

In Islam, dogs are seen as unclean. However, police dogs, shepherd dogs and rescue dogs are common, and there have been no reports of clerical backlash against the shelter’s operations.

Prior to the shelter’s arrival, the preferred method of dealing with stray animals was to shoot them dead.

In one horrific case in 2015, dogs were injected with a deadly substance, presumably acid. Videos were published on social media showing dogs dying while moaning in agony. The videos quickly went viral, sparking widespread outrage and prompting protests by animal rights activists and celebritie­s.

Since the advent of the shelter, municipal authoritie­s claim that not a single dog is killed inhumanely and that the animals are being treated in a far more civil manner.

 ?? VAHID SALEMI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Veterinari­an Hamid Ghahremanz­adeh is chief of Aradkouh Stray Dogs Shelter, which has been hired by the city.
VAHID SALEMI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Veterinari­an Hamid Ghahremanz­adeh is chief of Aradkouh Stray Dogs Shelter, which has been hired by the city.

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