Volunteers find dogs
poisoned in Sariyer / Turkish Daily News, Friday, February 29,
2008
Volunteers find dogs poisoned in Sariyer Friday, February 29,
2008
Sariyer Municipality's forests are dumping grounds for unwanted
dogs, say certified animal protection volunteers. There, away from
the public eye, dogs are continually massacred. In the last week 15
dogs were found poisoned in the area.
DAMARIS KREMIDA and SENEM SONGÜN
ISTANBUL – Turkish Daily News
Fifteen stray dogs were found poisoned in the forested area of
Istanbul's Sariyer district this week, according to eyewitness
reports from animal protection volunteers in Sariyer and
neighboring Bahçeköy yesterday.
The dogs were found - and then cared for - by the volunteers on the
main road that connects Bahçeköy, Zekeriyaköy and the Black Sea
town of Kilyos.
All of the dogs were shot with poison using the same Blow Pipe
syringe device used mainly by municipalities as a way to clean? the
city of unwanted dogs, the volunteers told the Turkish Daily
News.
Sebnem Aslan, a lecturer at Bilgi University, has been an animal
activist since 2000 and was certified one year ago as an animal
welfare volunteer after taking a course organized by the Greater
Istanbul Municipality. Aslan is a resident of Ariköy. ?This set of
poisonings started last week, said Aslan. They all had the same
injections in their backs.?
"This poison injection device is only used by municipalities", said
Aslan, and she and other volunteers felt this batch of poisonings
is proof the municipality was behind the deaths of the dogs. "But
we are not sure which
municipality used them," she said. "They do this every three months
or so, kill and poison them in Zekeriyaköy. Every day they bring
new dogs from the center of the city, because people complain about
them, and the city just dumps them here," said Aslan. She and the
other volunteers in the area take
care of the dogs that arrive in their neighborhood, giving them
bread and water, and "every two to three months these dogs just
disappear," she said.
"Although they always suspected the dogs were killed, in this case
the evidence is irrefutable," she said.
In her village of Ariköy, there are five volunteers like her to
take care of the village's 20 stray dogs.
"This poisoning is not the first or the last; it has been going on
for years. This is near Sariyer and we think Sariyer municipality
did it," said Bilge Okay, founder of the Homeless Animals and
Environmental Protection
Society (EHDKD).
A new animal protection law that stipulates internationally
accepted practices about how to deal with stray dogs, was passed in
2004. Under Article 5199, municipalities are obliged to neuter and
return stray animals
to where they are taken from so the animals can guard their
neighborhoods from un-neutered ones. Throwing animals out of cities
and into forests is illegal.
However, Sariyer Mayor Yusuf Tülün has been anything but supportive
of the law and animal activists, according to volunteers in the
Sariyer area.
Members of the EHDKD, which has lobbied the Sariyer municipality
for years to help them take care of the stray dog problem by
adhering to the law and working with the volunteers, got a brusque
response from him which they posted on their Web site. (click here
to read the article)
"The animal protection law is disgusting. I have to do what the
citizens say. I get votes from human beings, not dogs. People don't
want dogs in the streets. Why should I take them back to their
territory? I have them
collected, taken to Kisirkaya and then dumped in their natural
habitat, which is the forest. I would prefer poisoning were legal
again. We have so many responsibilities other than dogs. I will not
cooperate with volunteers.
They cannot enter the rehabilitation center in Kisirkaya. This
problem can only be solved by the Metropolitan Municipality and the
local government of Istanbul. All the dogs must be collected by
them and dumped in areas far away from the city. Animal lovers can
go and feed them there if they want to," Tulun reportedly said on
Jan. 24. The mayor was not available to verify whether this
statement was true.
One of Sariyer Municipality's veterinary experts, who asked to
remain unnamed, spoke to the TDN. He denounced the poisonings and
said they were clearly done by people with bad intentions. He is
disappointed, however, that animal protection volunteers accused
the Sariyer Municipality of the cruel acts. "Why are they accusing
us? We had good relations with them," he said. The municipal expert
was aware of the killings of three large dogs and a cat, but he
understood their deaths were from food poisoning.
"The municipality sent one dog for an autopsy to verify the cause
of its death", he said, adding that the municipality was not
involved in leaving stray dogs in the forest. "Our role is to
rehabilitate street animals," he said. "The welfare of animals,
people and society is our job."
When asked whether the municipality intended to find the culprits
who poisoned the dogs on the road from Bahçeköy to Kilyos, he said
that area is outside Sariyer 's borders and is the responsibility
of legal authorities.
Since Sariyer Municipality hired a new head veterinarian, Ahmet
Bolukbasi, the city has seemed at least willing to cooperate with
the animal welfare volunteers, he said.
EHDKD has two court cases open against Sariyer Municipality for
illegally dumping dogs in forests. "We will not give up our legal
struggle until this illegal, inhumane, cruel practice is stopped,"
said Ivan Jimenez, a real
estate finance officer and animal rights volunteer living in
Istanbul, to the TDN. "We will not let animals be tortured like
this."
Met vriendelijke groeten,
Linda Taal
Stichting ActieZwerfhonden
www.actiezwerfhonden.nl