Mauritius: More Than 20,000 PET and Stray Dogs Killed Anually by the Mauritian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals ! – Everyone Agrees That Sterilisation Would Solve Population Problems; but the Government Will Not Consider It.

SO NOW WE WILL INFORM THE WORLD OF WHAT IS GOING ON.

Photo – Roger Allen / North Downs Picture Agency

To see all the photographs associated with this article, please click on the following link:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2127922/The-dogs-death-row-paradise-One-English-womans-battle-holiday-island-cruelly-kills-thousands-pet-dogs-year.html#ixzz1rl7AVmeD
 
The dogs on death row in paradise: One English woman’s battle to take on a holiday island which cruelly kills thousands of pet dogs a year

More than 20,000 pet and stray dogs are brutally slayed annually in Mauritius
Undercover investigation after alarm raised by the British-based charity

Up to 80 per cent are much-loved pets snatched from doorsteps
Pound can only be described as a concentration camp for dogs
By Jane Fryer and Allan Hall

The dog is flat on his back, trussed up with a rough rope, his paws scrabbling frantically in the air as a man in a red baseball cap rams a needle deep into his heart.  There is one last desperate struggle then a monstrous howl that rips through the muggy tropical morning, startling nearby market traders and silencing the birds.
When the howl splutters into a whimper, the dog is dragged and kicked into a kennel to die alongside three others. It is a slow and painful death, the result of a botched lethal injection by a canine-killing squad.

Eighty per cent of the dogs caught and killed are pet dogs not strays
 
And it takes place in the so-called tropical paradise of Mauritius — the palm-fringed holiday destination of more than 200,000 Britons each year.

Away from the white, gleaming beaches — where the sea is impossibly blue and tourists sip cocktails while lazing on luxury sunbeds — more than 20,000 pet and stray dogs are slayed annually in this sickening way.

These horrific images of the slaughter were taken during an undercover investigation by the Mail after the alarm was raised by the British-based charity International Animal Rescue.

The Mauritian government claims it is a humane way of controlling the island’s stray dog population, but it is neither humane nor honest.

Some of the animals are strays but many more — up to 80 per cent — are much-loved pets that have been snatched from their doorsteps, with collars and security tags clearly marking their addresses.
They are captured as part of a ‘clean-up’ campaign, despite pleas from animal welfare organisations across the world.

And they are killed by an organisation with a name so ironic it would be laughable it wasn’t true — the Mauritian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Kitted out in jaunty red caps and wielding giant fishing nets, MSPCA dog-catchers snatch animals wherever they see them — sleeping on street corners, lingering in alleys or lazing on their own doorsteps.
They are scooped up and hurled into cages in the back of roasting-hot vans where they remain — often bleeding and with broken bones — while the officers continue their rounds.

Their destination is a pound that can only be described as a concentration camp for dogs.
MSPCA personnel march around in heavy boots, brandishing sharp metal rods to punish disobedient animals. In the filthy concrete cages, most of the dogs shrink to the back, shivering and terrified.
 
Others edge forward, hopeful and trusting, unable to understand their predicament.
The worst corner is the puppy cage — rusty, squalid with faeces, and utterly desolate.
Only animals with owners have any hope, and even then it is slim. If residents suspect their pet has been snatched by the MSPCA, they can come to the pound and pay a ransom to rescue it. But the charge is £30, which is beyond the reach of most people, as the average worker earns less than £60 a month.
 
Nearly all the dogs spend three days in the cages before a lethal injection and a slow, painful death.
The still-warm bodies are hurled into a mass open grave in a stretch of wasteland. Clumps of fur, tails and ears are visible in the red soil. Skulls and bones create splashes of white.
The MSPCA insists only stray dogs are exterminated but this is a lie.

The truth is that the organisation has a quota of more than 100 stray dogs to capture every day in a bid to reduce the island’s estimated 200,000 population.

And officers will happily take pets to achieve this figure.
 
British woman Alicia Browne can testify to this, after her two dogs were snatched while she was walking them.
 
Alicia, who is staying in Mauritius for nine months to visit a friend, adopted two stray dogs — whom she called Mira and Wanda — on the waterfront near Riv du Rempart in the north-east.

She recalls: ‘I was with them on the beach in December, throwing sticks, just having a nice day, when these two guys ran down with their nets and threw them over Mira and Wanda.
‘I screamed, “What are you doing! These are my dogs!” Mira and Wanda could not have been more than 4ft away from me. But one of the dog-catchers said I was breaking the law: because they weren’t on a leash, they were strays, and that was that.’
 
Alicia, from Redhill, Surrey, adds: ‘I was in tears and ran after them and saw them dumped in the van like trash. Mira’s leg was cut — you can see the scars and she has a limp now.  ‘I followed the van in my car for the rest of the morning while the men scooped up pet after pet then went to the pound where they were unloaded.
‘I had to pay to get my dogs back. Wanda will never be the same again — she was severely traumatised by the experience.’
Jacqueline Woodridge, a British expat living in Mauritius, lost her pet dog in January and went to the Port Louis MSPCA compound to try to find him.

Her search was unsuccessful — and shocking. She said: ‘What I saw was horrific. There were so many beautiful dogs, many, many with collars, including puppies, squeezed into dirty kennel chambers covered with urine and faeces.
 
‘They were trembling, whining, and terrified. There was just one bowl of bread and water in each kennel.’
While the population of strays is undoubtedly large and growing, the dogs are not dangerous: there is no rabies on Mauritius, and the strays shun human contact.

Local and international vets agree that sterilisation would stem the problem — indeed, three years ago French actress Brigitte Bardot offered to pay for a mass sterilisation for all the island’s strays. But the government will not consider it.
 
Yesterday, phone calls to the MSPCA were not returned. German vet Birgit Wellmann, who had to rescue her own dog from a pound, said: Sterilisation is the way forward but no one will listen. It is heartbreaking.’
She claims people on the island won’t criticise the MSPCA for fear of veiled retribution. Foreigners worry about losing residency and work permits, and locals are vulnerable to arrest if they defame the government.
Authorities say the strays are an eyesore and jeopardise the lucrative tourism trade. But as one European vet who used to work on the island points out: ‘For most tourists, these dogs are less dangerous than sunburn.’

 *** ACTION ***  You may wish to send your – of course: polite – comments on this issue to the following:
 
Prime Minister The Honourable Navinchandra Ramgoolam
Ministry of Agro-Industry and Food Security
Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development
Ministry of Tourism and Leisure and External Communications
 
Mail: portaladmin@mail.gov.mu ; menv@mail.gov.mu ; moa-headoffice@mail.gov.mu ; mtou@mail.gov.mu ; pmo@mail.gov.mu 
 
And as well, CC, to Mauritian Tourism representations worldwide (“Authorities say the strays are an eyesore and jeopardise the lucrative tourism trade”)
 
ilemaurice@interfacetourism.com ; carolinel@hillsbalfour.com ; m.tocchetti@aigo.it ; mauritius@aviareps.com ; info@prw.ch ; mtpaindia@tracrep.com ; robolgogiani@aviareps.com ; yvette@bairds.co.za ; GVaca@aviareps.com ; personal@thomascookag.com
 
And, most importantly, to the below mentioned MSPCA (“And they are killed by an organisation with a name so ironic it would be laughable it wasn’t true — the Mauritian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.”)
 
http://www.mspca-mu.org/index.php?option=com_aicontactsafe&sTask=message&r_id=823241055&task=display&Itemid=49&pf=1&lang=en
 
 
Embassies:
 
Of Mauritius to the US: mauritius.embassy@verizon.net
 
Other locations:
 
High Commission of Mauritius in Canberra, Australia – E-mail: mauritius@cyberone.com.au
Embassy of Mauritius in Beijing, China – E-mail: mebj@public.bta.net.cn 
Embassy of Mauritius in Berlin, Germany – E-mail: mu.embln.3@t-online.de
Embassy of Mauritius in Cairo, Egypt – E-mail: embamaur@thewayout.net
Embassy of Mauritius in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – 4.  E-mail: mmaddis@telecom.net.et
Embassy of Mauritius in Paris, France – E-mail: ambassade.maurice@online.fr
Consulate of Mauritius in Mumbai, India – E-mail: consul@bom3vsnl.net.in
High Commission of Mauritius in New Delhi, India – E-mail: mhcnd@bol.net.in
Consulate of Mauritius in Rome, Italy – E-mail: consmaur@libero.it
High Commission of Mauritius in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia – E-mail: maur@tm.net.my
Embassy of Mauritius in Antananarivo, Madagascar – E-mail: memad@dts.mg
High Commission of Mauritius in Maputo, Mozambique – E-mail: mhcmoz@virconn.com
High Commission of Mauritius in Islamabad, Pakistan – E-mail: mauripak@isb.comsats.net.pk
High Commission of Mauritius in Pretoria, South Africa – E-mail: mhcpta@mweb.co.za
Permanent Mission of Mauritius in Geneva, Switzerland – E-mail: mission.mauritius@ties.itu.int
 
Representations of other countries to Mauritius:

London website link (full contact details):    http://mauritius.embassyhomepage.com/
 
High Commission of India in Port Louis, Mauritius – E-mail: hicom.ss@intnet.mu, hicomdhc@intnet.mu
High Commission of The United Kingdom in Port Louis, Mauritius – E-mail: bhc@intnet.mu

 
 
Thanks.

9 Responses

  1. Homo sapiens is harm animal species.That is consequence of his wrong food.He eats meat/milk/eggs/bread, although has not enzymes for using these food,and then he be harm each to others and harm to all sentient beings.

    • My wife and i left Mauritius last week with a heavy heart after witnessing for the first time the mass stray dog population problem affecting the island. My parents are from Mauritius (now living in Australia) and i have many relatives living on the island. A similar situation occurred in respect to a dog catcher entering my Aunties property and stealing her pet dog from the back yard. She chased the dog catcher down the road accompanied by my Uncle and after much heated discussion managed to recover her dog after paying a bribe. Dogs being captured and slaughtered in such a manner has been an ongoing issue in Mauritius for many years. This particular occurrence took place over 20yrs ago. The Mauritian Government obviously does not care about the treatment of its resident dogs and wants them eradicated by whatever means. Shame on the Mauritian government for dealing with this issue in such an inhumane manner!!!

  2. I think its disgusting to just pick dogs up from the street not knowing if they belong to anyone and what they are doing to these lovely dogs is barbaric. They are just animals with nothing else to occupy them. Senceless murder if innocent dogs. I hope Karma gets these murderers and pays them back for what they have done. To not even listen and take advice from charities willing to help is ignorance and they just want to murder an animal. I hope people boycott going there for holidays as they should and I hope these killers get caught up in the biggest tsunami ever for what they have done. No animal should suffer or deserve to die. I am ashamed to be human. God is watching those who have killed these innocent dogs.

  3. I am shocked to have read this article and have sent an email to all those emails supplied (unfortunately many came back as undeliverable) I am very sad to know that people are capable of such cruelty, doing this to innocent dogs is just beoyond words that a human can do this without pity or heart, makes me ashamed to be called a human

  4. Why will de government not consider mass-sterilisation?!?!? What is their problem? Im in Mauritius for 7 weeks now and I hate being here because I have to see these poor dogs every day. If they dont do anything about it I hope people will stop coming to the island until they do. People around the world dont know enough about this problem, since Mauritius is only known as a “paradise”. The problem with all the strays is well hidden. Fuck that, Im gonna make sure this will be wide known.

  5. I have visited the so called MSPCA at their head office in Mauritius where I had a long discussion with the then hear Dr Sugar. The outcome was that they were ordered by the Government to catch all stray dogs in areas frequented by tourists. These dogs were killed by electric shock and their carcases used to feed crocodiles.
    The whole process is very cruel and unnecessary as several parties have offered to sterilise the bitches and round up the strays.
    Mauritius has a dark side to it when it comes to the treatment of animals. Local wild monkeys are caught put in to boxes and exported for experimentation. Many die on the journey. This is the unseen cruelty. When I raised this cruelty with local people, they answered why are you concerned they are only monkeys.
    Tourism is the main stay of the Mauritius economy yet despite hundreds of complaints by tourists to the Government of the shocking cruelty inflicted needlessly on dogs and other animals no change has been seen.

    • This dark side of Mauritius have to be exposed. Im sure the tourists would NOT agree to the way the MSPCA are ordered to treat the dogs if they knew. What can we do to help them? Demonstration? Im in Mauritius for another 6 weeks, let me know if there is anything I can do to make a change to the better for the dogs. Any newspaper we can alert? Like I said, this has to be brought to the light, now.

  6. what is wrong with the world about strays suddenly ..most weird and most damaging in the long run

  7. I was considering to move to Mauritius next month but since I read this article, I am gonna think abt it again. I am French and I have been living in India for the last ten years. I have myself ten stray dogs. Conditions of strays in india is also very bad but at least they are not killed in inhuman conditions. I am shocked and all tourists and foreigners going to Mauritius should know abt it.

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