The Herald (South Africa)

Call for clarity on who funds care for impounded dogs

- Guy Rogers

Organised agricultur­e in the Eastern Cape has called for urgent talks with police and the National Prosecutin­g Authority to resolve the issue of who must fund the care of dogs confiscate­d during illegal hunting.

In a letter to Agri SA, Agri Eastern Cape rural safety committee chair Alfonso van Niekerk said the matter had come to a head a fortnight ago after a major swoop on taxi hunters on a Tarkastad farm during which 38 dogs were confiscate­d.

Farmers were unwilling to see the dogs simply released back into the community as they were trained to hunt and would simply be used again for this purpose so they were impounded at the Komani SPCA.

While Agri EC and the SPCA were together prepared to cover the cost initially, the understand­ing was that the state would take it over. This had not happened, and with the case only beginning yesterday after two postponeme­nts, the matter had to be resolved, Van Niekerk said.

“A non-profit, animal welfare NGO cannot be expected to bear the cost burden of detaining, treating, disposing of, or looking after state evidence with no remunerati­on.

“Likewise, it also cannot be expected of private persons, companies and organisati­ons to fund the SPCA for this service.

“As such, Agri EC is requesting that Agri SA urgently engage with the SA Police Service, the National Prosecutin­g Authority and the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to resolve this issue,” he said.

Van Niekerk said the dog impoundmen­t funding issue was part of a broader problem mushroomin­g in the province.

“Illegal hunting and poaching with dogs in the Eastern Cape are reaching epidemic proportion­s.

“This illegal hunting is conducted not only for own consumptio­n of ‘bush meat’ but is becoming an organised criminal activity conducted for supply on order and as a highly organised gambling activity.”

Apart from the wanton and indiscrimi­nate destructio­n of wildlife, there was also a threat to rural communitie­s.

Farmers had experience­d cases where dog packs had attacked domestic stock and further losses occurred when dogs that had been lost and abandoned by their owners turned feral, he said.

“These dogs are the main ‘criminal instrument’ used in this type of crime and have be treated as such.”

Two taxis and a trailer allegedly used to ferry the 16 suspects and their dogs up to the farm Casperskop between Tarkastad and Hofmeyr on May 24 were also confiscate­d in the swoop by farmers, police and a provincial environmen­t department official.

The suspects appeared yesterday in the Hofmeyr Magistrate’s Court charged with illegal hunting but no news of the trial’s progress was available last night.

Komani SPCA chair Adele Reynders said the feeding of the dogs since they were impounded had been funded by cash donations from the Komani community and farmers.

The most recent donation of 700kg of food from Optimizor had been organised by the Hofmeyer Farmers Associatio­n.

“The dogs were very thin and dehydrated when we took them in and we also had to take some to the vet to check old injuries.”

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