The Weekend Witness

PHILIPPINE­S TRAINS PET DOGS FOR SEARCH AND RESCUE

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With her owner holding her leash, Philippine pooch Hazel sniffs through rubble in a simulated search for survivors of a major earthquake in the capital Manila.

Hazel is taking part in a programme training pet dogs and their owners in search and rescue so they can be deployed in the aftermath of a disaster.

Every Sunday, around 46 mongrels and purebreds of all sizes are put through their paces by volunteer trainers at a facility in suburban Manila where they learn to find people, scale ladders and bound over wooden structures.

Philippine disaster agencies already have search and rescue dogs that are deployed when disasters strike the archipelag­o nation.

But there are concerns that there might not be enough of them if a major earthquake were to hit the sprawling metropolis of Manila.

Hazel, who was a skinny street mutt before she was adopted by her owner Nathalia Chua, lacks the pedigree of some of her classmates. But she shows plenty of enthusiasm as she follows instructio­ns to search rubble, overturned water drums and small wooden huts.

The three-year-old barks and wags her tail when she finds a person hiding in a drum, drawing cheers from trainers and back rubs from Chua.

“My end goal with Hazel is just to be as prepared as possible if the ‘big one’ comes,” said Chua (17), referring to a major earthquake that seismologi­sts predict could strike the city one day.

Manila is vulnerable to quakes due to its location on the West Valley Fault and its proximity to the Manila Trench off the main island of Luzon.

Hazel was malnourish­ed and fearful when Chua found her in 2021 during a family holiday on the western island of Palawan.

The search and rescue training has helped her become calmer and more confident.

Dogs have to complete at least 12 training sessions before they can be deployed in real-life disaster response operations.

American chef Jon Hrinyak (40) regularly takes his German Shepherd Oly to the training in the hope that they might be able to save someone’s life one day. — AFP.

 ?? PHOTO:AFP ?? Nathalia Chua guides her dog Hazel during a search and rescue programme in Taguig, Manila.
PHOTO:AFP Nathalia Chua guides her dog Hazel during a search and rescue programme in Taguig, Manila.

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