The Citizen (Gauteng)

Thousands of hungry stray cats in Cyprus

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Numbers need to be controlled in humane and organised way.

David Fender

Malcom Cat Protection Society

Nicosia – Every day at dawn, as Dinos Ayiomamiti­s’ small truck slowly navigates the pathway of a cemetery, cats quietly emerge from among the surroundin­g tombstones.

“Here you go, Bourekka mou,” he murmurs using a Cypriot term of endearment, as the animals circle his legs and wait for him to scoop food from the back of his pickup for them to eat.

Ayiomamiti­s is one of a number of volunteers struggling to feed the thousands of stray cats on the Mediterran­ean island.

“There has been no official count, but based on our own assessment it’s equal to the number of people, at least,” said Ayiomamiti­s, who feeds up to 200 cats daily at various locations around Cyprus’ capital Nicosia.

“We are looking at a feral cat population approachin­g a million, that’s a rough estimate,” said Ayiomamiti­s, chairman of the Cat Paws society.

Cyprus’ affiliatio­n with cats goes back thousands of years. In 2004, French archaeolog­ists reported what was described at the time as the earliest historical record of cat domesticat­ion, in a 9 500-year-old burial site.

In 400 AD, Helen of Constantin­ople was said to have sent boatloads of cats to the island to hunt venomous snakes.

At a cat sanctuary 80km from the capital, volunteers find abandoned cats and their kittens dumped outside the fence virtually every day.

Malcolm’s Cats, a sanctuary named after its founder Malcolm CP Stevenson, hosts around 200 cats. Here they are kept in a safe, clean environmen­t with access to food and vets.

Around 100 are rehomed every year, but the number of arrivals easily outpaces departures.

“A lot of unsterilis­ed cats, means a lot of kittens every year. People are constantly phoning us, dumping cats outside,” said David Fender, operations manager and chair of the Malcolm Cat Protection Society.

In recent years the state has set aside €75 000 (about R1.2 million) annually for cat sterilisat­ions. This year’s programme started on 1 June but with a ballooning cat population, both Fender and Ayiomamiti­s called it a drop in the ocean.

“The numbers need to be controlled and they need to be controlled in a humane way, in an organized way which is led by the government,” said Fender.

The sanctuary is on the edge of a sprawling peninsula on the southern tip of Cyprus.

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