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Here here here dog owners


  1. Jiggers
    Member Profile

    Jiggers

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32445930/ns/today-today_pets_and_animals/?GT1=43001

    For decades, most Chinese residents of the southern city of Guangzhou have resigned themselves to the country's strict one-child policy. Now, a similar restriction on dogs has got them howling mad.

    Raising dogs was banned under the rule of late Chinese leader Mao Zedong as a bourgeois pastime, but with China's growing affluence and pursuit of Western trends, greater numbers of middle-class families have become avid pet owners in a booming social trend.

    While pampered pedigree dogs are a regular sight on the streets of major cities like Guangzhou and Beijing, the boom has spiked the number of strays as pets get abandoned. The number of public spaces getting soiled has also increased, as have the complaints from neighbors not partial to canines in crowded districts and tenement blocks.

    On July 1, city authorities implemented the "one-dog policy" seen as a crackdown on the estimated 100,000 unregistered dogs in Guangzhou ahead of the Asian Games in the city next year.

    But so far, many outraged pet owners in the sprawling metropolis have chosen to ignore, or dodge, the new laws.

    "I'll definitely not give up on my dogs because they're a part of my life," said an office worker surnamed Chen with six dogs in a leafy neighborhood in downtown Guangzhou.

    Another owner with two small dogs criticized the policy as discriminatory and poorly thought out.

    "I'm very angry, what's the difference between one dog or two dogs. Will it disturb people more?," said the woman who declined to be named given the sensitivities involved.

    Irene Fung, the Guangzhou-based manager for animal rights group Animals Asia said while it didn't support this new policy, it urged dog owners with multiple dogs to compromise or risk a stiffer police crackdown in future, including raids on homes.

    Getting around the system
    "Many people are saying let's wait and see ... but we would urge all dog owners to deal with the new policy flexibly. If you have two or three dogs you can ask your relatives or friends to help register them instead," she said.

    If caught, authorities say police may seize illegally kept dogs and impose a 2,000 yuan ($293) fine.

    On the Chinese dog lover's website http://www.goumin.com, dog owners are stepping up efforts to find new homes for their pets through online posts, few trusting government-run kennels, which have offered to take in illegal pets.

    While only a trickle of dog owners registered their dogs in the first few weeks of the one-dog policy, Fung of Animals Asia said Guangzhou police had now registered around 20,000 dogs.

    A vast reduction in the dog registration fee from around 10,000 yuan ($1,464) per dog to 500 yuan is seen as a key reason for this. The hefty fees were widely blamed on the proliferation of unregistered dogs in Guangzhou in the past.

    Illegal dog-keeping has been blamed by authorities on a spate of rabies outbreaks across China, but critics say this is merely an excuse for mass cullings. Over 30,000 stray and pet dogs were culled in a city in northern Shaanxi province this year, drawing condemnation from international animal rights groups.

    Other Chinese cities have been subject to strict canine laws and pricey dog-ownership fees including Nanjing, and Beijing which restricts the ownership of large dogs.

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  2. pigeonmom
    Member Profile

    pigeonmom

    Dogs are a hot topic worldwide.

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  3. EmmyJane
    Member Profile

    EmmyJane

    That disgusting. So I assume the increase in homeless dogs (because people can't own multiple dogs) will be "put to sleep." What irritates me the most is that humans domesticated wolves into dogs for our own benefit, and now we're not taking care of them.

    This is an example of the human race that absolutely disgusts me. I wonder how humans would feel if they were on the receiving end of the way we treat all the species that we deem inferior to us. You got me all fired up Jiggers!

    Another solution they could have impleted is requiring dogs to be spayed or neutered.

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  4. pigeonmom
    Member Profile

    pigeonmom

    Cats get the same bad treatment. Before the Olympics, Athens killed all the feral cats in the city.

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  5. vincent
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    vincent

    That disgusting. So I assume the increase in homeless dogs (because people can't own multiple dogs) will be "put to sleep."

    ha ha ha ha ha ha.

    put to sleep! thats a good one. In china they club them to death when they run out of poison.
    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/archive/2006/08/09/notes080906.DTL

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  6. Vincent
    it still comes down to killing dogs because humans can't step up to the plate and be responsible...
    :(

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  7. vincent
    Member Profile

    vincent

    you mean like eating the extra ones? We are talking about china. I think you failed at cultural sensitivity and reading comprehension in one post!

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  8. vincent..

    i read just fine. they don't poison those they eat.

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  9. vincent
    Member Profile

    vincent

    Nope I disagree, you can't read. The dogs still die.

    Posted 2 years ago #         
  10. yes...

    but they don't take clubs to them because they ran out of poison..

    they take clubs to them when they want to preserve the meat for the stew pot:(

    and i suspect the little lap dogs seldom end up in the pot.. not much on them to stew down..

    Posted 2 years ago #         

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