Friday, June 07, 2024

Thousands protest Turkish government’s stray dog cull plan
“We think the cats will be next.”

ByTurkish Minute
June 3, 2024

Animal right activists attend a protest against the ruling AKP's bill aimed at removing stray dogs from the streets, on June 2, 2024 in İstanbul.

 (Photo by Yasin AKGUL / AFP)

Thousands of protesters rallied in İstanbul on Sunday in outrage at the Turkish government’s proposals to put down stray dogs, yelling: “No to the massacre!” Agence France-Presse reported.

Bearing photographs of imploring puppy-dog eyes on their T-shirts and placards, demonstrators rallied on Yenikapı Square on the European side of the city.

The government has drawn up legislation to capture and sterilize strays, before putting them down if they are not adopted within 30 days.

“This is not good for animals. It is a murder law,” one demonstrator, Şule Giritlioğlu, a 27-year-old engineer, told AFP.

“We think the cats will be next.”

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) under President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan says the reform is needed to curb the number of stray dogs in the country and stop them attacking people.

Officials indicate there are four million stray dogs in Turkey.

It is classified as a “high-risk” country for rabies by the World Health Organization.

The government says dogs caused 3,544 road accidents over the past five years, killing 55 people and injuring more than 5,000.

“We have a problem with stray dogs that does not exist in any developed country,” Erdogan said last week.

Haydar Özkan, vice-president of the country’s Animal Rights Federation, argued in the Gazete Duvar media outlet that the government should instead prioritize effective sterilization and animal shelters.

Numerous cases of accidents and attacks involving dogs have circulated on social media in recent months.

Another protester, Emre Onuk, said the law was a case of “bad propaganda” launched just before municipal elections on March 31.

Erdoğan lost İstanbul and Ankara to the opposition in the vote.

Onuk, a 42-year-old engineer, judged the president was now seeking to “reconsolidate his power” by trying to “divide people.”

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