Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

SPCA shocked after dog is skinned alive

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THE SPCA has expressed shock over the skinning of a dog in Bloemfonte­in.

The dog, which was hit by a car on Friday night, was still alive on the road when it was skinned, said the SPCA.

“According to eyewitness­es, a car bumped a dog and drove away. The dog was still alive and lay along the road. The owner of the dog came looking for her dog and then came to a very gruesome scene.

“[The suspect] was busy [skinning] her dog alive. She asked him what he was doing, and [the man’s] answer was that he was hungry and wanted fresh meat,” said the organisati­on.

Residents then took the man to the Mangaung police station, where he was arrested and charged with animal cruelty. By the time the SPCA arrived, the dog was dead.

“We were very shocked at what we saw. The dog’s body lay aside and then one leg was also lay skinned aside the road. We asked [the suspect] what he was trying to do, and he acknowledg­ed that the dog was still alive when he started his slaughter,” said Bloemfonte­in SPCA senior inspector Reinet Meyer.

According to the SPCA, the man had food in his backpack, including “bread, polony and chicken nuggets”.

Police confirmed that he had been charged with animal cruelty, and would appear in court on Monday.

National crime statistics do not specifical­ly highlight cases of animal cruelty, but Meyer praised the police for their support of the SPCA’s fight in Bloemfonte­in.

“They are really supportive, because we put our photograph­s in the docket and they were shocked by the photograph­s.”

Meyer said that, while there were a range of animal cruelty cases, the SPCA endeavoure­d to educate people about their pets, rather than prosecute.

“If it [is] really serious, we prosecute. In the past month, there are three cases where we are going to prosecute people for animal cruelty in Bloemfonte­in alone,” she said.

She also linked animal cruelty with domestic violence, saying that inspectors sometimes reported suspected cases of domestic violence to the police.

“Yes, especially with children. If there is animal cruelty, you will also see that children are also being abused. It is a fact that where there is animal cruelty, there is also domestic violence.”

According to Regan Jules-Macquet, project manager for Nicro, there is a strong link between animal cruelty and abuse of humans.

“Animal abuse appears in offences such as domestic violence, where pets of the victim can be injured or killed. There is a significan­t associatio­n between domestic violence and animal abuse, to the extent that animal abuse is regarded as an indicator of potential domestic violence in the home. (KL Thompson and E Gullone Promotion of Empathy and Prosocial Behaviour in Children through Human Education (2003) 38(3) Australian Psychologi­st at 175, as well as Campbell op cit),” Jules-Macquet argues.

“In studies of women at a domestic violence shelter, 71percent of women who owned pets reported that the pet had been a target of violence by the abuser.” — AP

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