Windsor Star

Russian ‘death squads’ exterminat­e stray dogs, cats ahead of World Cup

- ALEC LUHN

On a rainy morning in January, Vachagan Emeksuzyan was driving near his home in the Russian resort of Sochi when he saw a bright spot on the brown roadside.

He stopped and got out, and was shocked at what he saw: the shape was a sandy-coloured neighbourh­ood dog that he had known for years, lying dead in the water with a dart in its side. According to Emeksuzyan, 30, and animal rights activists, this was one of hundreds of stray dogs and cats killed by city contractor­s as Sochi gets ready to host matches at the World Cup next month. “I had fed this dog, it had come into our yard. It was a big healthy male dog,” Emeksuzyan recalled. The imminent influx of foreign soccer fans has raised pressure to get rid of the estimated two million strays in 11 Russian World Cup cities. Proponents of harsh action argue that dogs have attacked people. In December, Vitaly Mutko, the deputy prime minister, ordered host cities to come up with a solution.

To cut down on disease and reduce the population of stray dogs, internatio­nal animal rights groups stress housing, vaccinatio­n and sterilizat­ion, as well as registrati­on and education for owners. In Sochi, people often let their dogs and cats roam. But with few shelters and a bill on animal protection­s stuck in parliament, local authoritie­s in Russia have turned to a quicker fix: poison. “They just try to destroy them, no one deals with the source,” said Ksenia Serebrenni­kova, a Sochi activist.

After animal purges led to a public outcry late last year, the head of parliament’s environmen­tal protection committee called on the sport minister to stop the “mass destructio­n of unsupervis­ed animals.”

In January, Yekaterina Dmitriyeva, an activist, discovered tenders worth nearly $3 million to catch strays on a state procuremen­t website.

Her petition calling on FIFA, World Cup teams and Vladimir Putin to stop these “canine KGB death squads,” open shelters and adopt a law on strays has garnered more than 1.8 million signatures. More than 240,000 people have signed a petition against the “mass killing of animals” in Volgograd. In January, Mutko told host cities to open temporary animal shelters, and the next month he promised regulation­s on sterilizin­g and releasing strays. Documents published on the state procuremen­t website show Sochi has contracted the firm Basya Service to “catch” 3,501 dogs this year.

Alexei Sorokin, the Basya director, told The Daily Telegraph strays were “reservoirs of especially dangerous infections” and that it was too expensive to keep them in shelters.

“There shouldn’t be any stray animals, they should be destroyed, and that’s it,” he said.

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES ?? As Russia prepares for the upcoming increase in visitors due to the World Cup, stray dogs are falling victim to mass purges. Animal rights groups are calling for alternate methods.
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES As Russia prepares for the upcoming increase in visitors due to the World Cup, stray dogs are falling victim to mass purges. Animal rights groups are calling for alternate methods.

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