Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Bogus vets bring horror for Cape pets

Death, illness in at least three puppies so far

- CHELSEA GEACH chelsea.geach@inl.co.za

UNSCRUPULO­US fake vets operating in Cape Town have been offering cheap services and making house calls.

Animal rights organisati­ons believe they use stolen drugs and dodgy vaccines and maltreat animals.

They allegedly administer incorrect drugs which have caused illness and death in at least three puppies. The Animal Welfare Society of South Africa believe this is just the tip of the iceberg.

It will be laying charges against two alleged fake vets who recently caused severe sickness in two pit bull puppies and one German shepherd cross puppy, resulting in the pets dying. Spokesman Allan Perrins said they were formulatin­g a charge sheet under the Animals Protection Act.

“We firmly believe that both respondent­s contribute­d to the untimely, cruel demise of these dogs in that they allegedly caused the animals to suffer and deteriorat­e to the point where their prognosis went from potentiall­y hopeful to positively hopeless,” he said. “There simply has to be a consequenc­e for this.”

Chief executive of the Animal Welfare Society Dr John McMullen said these were not isolated incidents.

“There is a wider problem and it’s been going on for years,” he said.

“There are people, particular­ly in the Cape Flats, going round and doing house visits with drugs that are stolen from somewhere, vaccinatin­g and maltreatin­g animals.”

McMullen said he saw the effects of these scammers in his animal welfare work and at his private practice in Pinelands, as people brought in animals that had been incorrectl­y treated or given potentiall­y dodgy vaccines.

“We’ve seen lots of people with certificat­es of vaccinatio­ns that are not veterinary certificat­es at all,” he said. “It is widespread and ongoing and we are trying to catch people at it.”

McMullen said despite strict controls over medication­s, he had caught a past employee stealing drugs from the practice.

“He was using it to run his own private practice in Delft,” he said. “I had to send a private detective to his home, undercover with a dog, to catch him handing over the drugs on video.”

McMullen said the cases were very difficult to prosecute. They have been reported to the South African Veterinary Council (SAVA), but SAVA has no jurisdicti­on outside of the veterinary profession­als who are registered with the Council.

SAVA registrar Lynette Havinga was out of the country and unable to comment.

Late last year, Sharmel Cleinwerck had to euthanise both of her dogs in the same week, thanks to medication given by a man posing as a vet.

A relative recommende­d the services of this man, and they trusted him because he worked for the Grassy Park SPCA.

“When he came to our house, he approached us as being a vet, because he worked at the SPCA,” Cleinwerck said.

The man administer­ed what he said were vaccines to Sandy, a 10-month-old pitbull puppy belonging to Cleinwerck’s mother, who passed away in September last year.

“A week after my mom’s funeral, Sandy started seizing, and bleeding from the mouth. It was completely devastatin­g for me to see her in that condition, I panicked,” Cleinwerck said.

She tried taking the dog to a veterinary hospital, but it was closed over the weekend. By the time she saw a real vet on Monday morning, the dog had to be euthanised immediatel­y.

According to Perrins, the dog had contracted the deadly Parvo virus – which is easily preventabl­e if the dog had been given the correct vaccine.

The traumatic experience was not over yet: Cleinwerck’s other dog, a 1-year-old pitbull called Sky, had been given medication by the fake vet because he said the dog was sick with a cold. One day later, she had to say goodbye to that dog too.

“Both of my dogs I had to put down in the same week,” she said. “There’s nothing that can bring them back.”

Grassy Park SPCA spokeswoma­n Belinda Abraham confirmed that the man posing as a vet had been employed there, as a ward orderly. Abraham said the organisati­on investigat­ed, and the man was subject to an internal disciplina­ry process.

According to the law, the outcome of this process has to remain confidenti­al.

Abrahams urged pet owners to be suspicious of cheap rates and house calls.

 ??  ?? MAX, one of the puppies who was allegedly killed by a fake vet.
MAX, one of the puppies who was allegedly killed by a fake vet.

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