The Scotsman

We owe it to our service animals to give them protection

Law must be reformed to make it a criminal offence to harm or kill a service animal in the line of duty, says Brian Monteith

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Iremember January 1, 1973, well, not just for the football match I was queuing to get into, but for the fact my father got separated from my uncle and I by the police who were managing the crowds. As a ploy to encourage a policeman to let him join us, my dad went up to a police horse and started stroking him and pleading to him to tell the officers he only wanted to join his family. The vision of my rather small father and the giant horse braying at him has always stayed with me. Another is TV sports commentato­r Alex Cameron standing outside Hampden Park speaking live to the camera only for a police horse to swivel round and, with his rear end, send poor Cameron flying.

We probably all have fond memories of police horses or dogs demonstrat­ing their skill and courage, but unfortunat­ely not all interactio­ns with the public are as entertaini­ng or well meant.

When in 2002 Millwall fans rioted after losing a play-off, 26 police horses required treatment after having fireworks, marine incendiary flares, bricks, broken paving and bottles thrown at them. One horse, Alamein, suffered a severed artery in a leg after a thunder-flash was set off underneath him, causing him to rear up and crash down on to a car. Last year, when football fans started fighting in Bristol, a woman threw a punch at a horse, but no arrests were made.

The lack of arrests is not necessaril­y because assailants cannot be identified but because the law does not give sufficient protection to service animals such as horses, guard and sniffer dogs, or guide dogs, being injured while in the line of duty working for the police, fire services and military. A horrific example of how absurd the law is across the UK is the story of doghandler PC Dave Wardell and his German shepherd Finn. In 2016 the pair were chasing a robbery suspect when he turned to attack the officer with a knife. The dog’s instinct and training was to protect his handler and he leapt up, receiving the blows that were meant for PC Wardell, resulting in serious stab wounds to the dog’s face and chest. Finn’s lung was punctured but he held on to the suspect long enough for other officers to arrive and make the arrest.

PC Wardell had received a slash to a hand but his dog – who had undoubtedl­y saved his life – had come off far worse and was not expected to make it through the night. Miraculous­ly, after four hours in the surgery requiring a chest clamp, drains, stitches – and a ten-minute dash from one veterinary clinic to another for a second operation by a specialist – Finn’s life was saved.

Finn’s injuries were not unusual for a police dog. Other recent examples are: police dog Anya – stabbed; Theo – bitten: Ronny – strangled; Theo (again) – set on fire; Canto – stabbed in the chest; and Quantum – stabbed near the eye.

Other examples of attacks on horses include a demonstrat­ion in London in 2015 where vets treated six horses after their legs were “glassed” and cut. Their eyes had been poked with sticks or targeted with high-powered lasers that can blind. Fireworks were also lobbed at the horses to make them bolt, resulting in one police rider being thrown and injured. A student who tried to protect one of the horses was herself attacked. The horses had been deliberate­ly targeted by demonstrat­ors.

Both PC Wardell and his dog recovered and eventually returned to duty, although this took a great

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