New Delhi to hide street dogs ahead of G20 summit


Let sleeping dogs lie: Street dogs taking a nap as people look on in New Delhi. Authorities are set to relocate the dogs ahead of the G20 Summit, a move that has irked animal rights campaigners. — AFP

The capital will catch, sterilise and hide thousands of stray dogs roaming its streets as part of a campaign to clean up the megacity before it hosts next month’s G20 summit.

New Delhi’s municipal government plans to use nets to trap the canines from dozens of locations including around boutique hotels and some of the city’s most impressive monuments and tourist hotspots, such as the 17th century Red Fort.

On Thursday, authorities directed city employees to begin rounding up dogs for transport to local animal sterilisation centres “due to the G20 summit”.

“All stray dogs picked up from these locations shall be kept ... for their further care and feeding till the programme is over,” the order said.

The Delhi metropolitan area, home to around 30 million people, has been on an intense beautification drive since India assumed the G20 presidency last year.

Authorities have cleared illegal slums near summit venues and revamped major arterial routes on the city’s gridlocked roads ahead of September’s summit, which will host leaders of the world’s top economies.

More than 60,000 stray dogs live on Delhi’s streets according to India’s Livestock Census of 2012, the most recent available government figures.

Sterilisation campaigns have been regularly employed by local authorities to keep the canine population in check, though dog packs remain present in parks and residential neighbourhoods around the city.

“These government people take them away to do sterilisation then bring them back again,” Mohmmad Irfan, a shopkeeper based near the city’s Jama Masjid, said.

“They don’t have a permanent solution.”

Just chilling: A street dog is seen along a roadside in New Delhi. — AFPJust chilling: A street dog is seen along a roadside in New Delhi. — AFP

Many of Delhi’s strays are beloved by their adopted neighbourhoods despite lacking formal owners, with some dogs clothed in special canine jackets to keep warm during the city’s harsh winters.

But they are also a hazard to humans, with local media regularly reporting on the mauling of young children by aggressive dog packs across the country.

In 2018, angry villagers killed 13 stray dogs in Uttar Pradesh state after three children under the age of 12 were mauled to death on the same day.

Roughly 17 million dog bites are reported across India each year and the World Health Organisation says that nearly 20,000 people nationwide die of rabies annually.

Delhi’s relocation plan risked dangerously agitating the dogs, Meet Ashar of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) said.

“They are not used to being handled and picked up with nets and being transported,” he said.

“The next time they are approached by a human being, perhaps they could react in a defensive manner out of fear.” — AFP

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