Bosnia and Herzegovina: Next Parliament Vote 5/12/13 – Update about ‘BOSNIA! IMPLEMENT HUMANE STRAY-DOG AND CAT POPULATION CONTROL AND TREATMENT’.

Bosnia and herzegovina

Subject: Update about ‘BOSNIA! IMPLEMENT HUMANE STRAY-DOG AND CAT POPULATION CONTROL AND TREATMENT’ on Change.org

Please click on the link below (Vucko part six) for lots more information and many further contact e mail details if you wish to write.

On December 5th Bosnia-Herzegovina Parliament will once again vote on the kill-law amendments to their Animal Welfare Act.

Please see our latest post on In Memory of Vucko for what you can do next!

http://inmemoryofvucko.org/2013/11/29/anti-kill-law-fight-how-to-help-part-six/

Thank you,
Animal Welfare Advocates for Bosnia-Herzegovina

Please sign and share. Thanks

View the petition

View the petition

 

16/10/13: With NO Response From the Serbian Government To His Letter of 2/8/13; (UK Green Party) MEP Mr. Taylor Continues To Work With SAV and Serbian Campaigners For Further Action Helping Stray Animals in Serbia.

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Please read our previous post on the dedicated work of Mr Keith Taylor MEP; for South East England,  who has worked with SAV and Serbian campaigners to obtain further information about the situation for Serbian stray animals. – Read our post of 7th August by clicking on the following link:

https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2013/08/07/england-uk-sav-works-with-very-supportive-english-green-party-mep-to-ask-serbian-authorities-about-serbian-animal-welfare-especially-shelter-azil-alex/ 

A copy of the letter sent by Keith to the Serbian government is provided below.  You can also see a copy by accessing Keith’s web site which can be found via the following;

http://www.keithtaylormep.org.uk/2013/08/08/keith-calls-for-action-on-street-dogs-in-serbia/ 

http://www.keithtaylormep.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/Letter-to-Serbian-Agriculture-Minister_Dog-shelters_01082013.pdf 

Keith Taylor MEP letter to Serbian government Pg 1Keith Taylor MEP letter to Serbian government Pg 2

Keith says – “As a candidate country for the EU I am urging the Serbian government to improve enforcement of and introduce stronger animal welfare policy.” –

See more at: http://www.keithtaylormep.org.uk/2013/08/08/keith-calls-for-action-on-street-dogs-in-serbia/#sthash.rJv2bgut.dpuf 

Keith’s letter to the Serbian government was sent on 2nd August 2013.  Over the past few weeks we have been corresponding with Keith’s team regarding further news and updates.  We can confirm that as of 16th October 2013 (16/10/13), Mr Taylor has still not had any response from the Serbian authorities regarding his letter of 2nd August.

As a candidate country seeking membership of the EU, failing to respond to the documented requests of an MEP in the EU Parliament for well over 2 months is not exactly the best way forward for the Serbian governmentPossibly it is that know, like us, that they are breaking the Serbian laws, but they do not wish to show this in a response to Mr. Taylor; and so they refuse to respond.

With all our recent campaign experiences within Romania (already an EU member state); we are continuing to promoter the fact that like Romania, Serbia should not be allowed to join the EU until is has become compliant with the EU membership requirements and shown full compliance with its own (Serbian) legal legislation – the rule of law.  Proving that this is being complied with is a fundamental requirement for any nation wishing to obtain EU accession (membership).

As Romania is also corrupt with its political system, we have no hesitation in calling for a full EU investigation into the current Romanian situation regarding where all the EU money for stray dog and cat management has gone.  We are happy to call for Romania to be removed from the EU is its government do not change and invest the money provided by the EU into animal population management rather than into the back pockets of politicians who then pass laws which allows a frenzied mass killing of all stray animals in the country.

If necessary, we will work with EU MEP’s to ask for a full review to be undertaken regarding the situation in Serbia prior to any EU accession.  As our good friends and fellow campaigners in Serbia are informing us, there is no change to the way stray animals are being treated by the government, despite there being laws which should provide them with protection.

Animals caught by shinters are being kept for just a short time in non adequate city ‘shelters’; which are anything but in reality.  There, animals often kill each other.  Animals are killed in the shelters by the use of T-61 which causes respiratory paralysis – the animals suffocate to death as they cannot breathe.  Public garbage firms continue to take money from the public taxes for catching stray animals – they kill them with no management or population control policy.  It is a very big and profitable business for some to be in, and this includes politicians – who wish to pocket money for animal management programmes and just keep on killing which is now against Serbian national legislation.

There are 25 regions in Serbia each with republic veterinary departments.  They all work on behalf of the Ministry of Agriculture.  Not one of these 25 regions in Serbia has any lawful programme for the humane control and population management of stray dog and cat populations.  Government corruption overrides the welfare of animals as we have seen in some other EU states.  At present, Serbian campaigners are waiting to obtain a verdict from the Constitutional court re the matter of Subotica’s (one of the Serbian regions) programme, or non existent programme for stray animal management.  Any non existent programme is in direct violation of the existing Serbian legislation for stray animal management – Articles 7 and 15 of the Serbian animal welfare laws.

We will inform you of further news when it happens.

Links to just some of our recent past Romanian / EU campaign:

https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2013/09/30/romania-30913-get-romania-out-of-the-eu-video-sample-letter-to-copy-and-send-to-the-european-parliament-additional-petition-at-end/ 

https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2013/10/01/romania-11013-sample-letter-to-send-to-euro-contacts-and-lots-more/

https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2013/10/12/swedish-mep-carl-schlyter-honorary-president-of-the-eu-animal-welfare-intergoup-talks-about-mass-dog-killings-in-romania/

https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2013/10/07/eu-romania-this-woman-is-an-insult-to-the-name-eu-animal-welfare-intergroup-we-want-her-out/

As we say, welfare campaigners in Serbia have now written to the Ministry of Agriculture requesting that they be sent a full listing of / documentation associated with all cat and dogs shelters within Serbia; and as with the requirements of the new legislation, information of the condition of each of these shelters.

It will be very interesting to see what, if any, response, is given back to the campaigners by the Ministry.

https://serbiananimalsvoice.com/2013/08/27/serbia-27813-campaigners-now-ask-agriculture-ministry-for-full-listing-of-serbian-cat-and-dog-shelters-in-accordance-with-the-law/

In the meantime, we are (as of 16/10/13) now moving further with MEP Mr. Taylor, providing him with updates of the current situation in Serbia.  Ashe has had no response from the Serbian government in two and one half months to his original letter, we can thus say that the Serbian government must have something to hide – hence we consider they should not be allowed EU membership until they come ‘fully clean’ on their approach to stray animal management.

Mr. Talor MEP will with our help, will be further writing to the Serbian government on this issue. 

This time, Mr. Taylor will be able to give representation and names of many other MEP’s in the EU who now want to see exactly what is going on for stray animals in Serbia.  We will continue to work with our elected politicians in the EU to find out what we can about the full stray animal situation within Serbia.  At some point, the Serbian government will have to respond or face pressure to keep them out of the EU.  The choice is theirs.

SAV have an obligation to expose corrupt governments who are not protecting stray animals; be it in Serbia, Romania, or anywhere else where we can obtain information.

Mr. Taylor MEP is today (16/10/13) being provided with additional information of the current Serbian government inactivity; something he now knows well due to not having any response to his official letter of 2nd August 2013.

We wish to thank Keith for all his hard work on the issue of Serbian stray animals.

As Serbia is not currently an EU member state, Keith does not have to work on this issue; but he does, as like us, he wishes to see a fair deal for stray animals wherever they may live.

Thank you Keith !

smed5

Diana2

Romania: 8/10/13 – Subject – (RO) Update re. Situation at Botosani.

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ADOR Flyer

Subject: (RO) Update re. Situation at Botosani

https://www.facebook.com/AsociatiaAdor

Asociatia Ador

6 hours ago near Botosani, Romania

My friends…the meeting with the city hall had place today.

Even if the authorities ware pretty unfriendly against Ador

– they said they will not kill the dogs if there are 2 conditions:

1. the dogs will have food, given only by the animal lovers, the city hall will stop feeding them

2. If the dogs are not adopted and the shelter is full the dogs will be killed.

What we need now, and urgent is this:

– 525 bags of 10 kg/month, for the dogs in the Ps (350 dogs) One dog eats 15 kg food in one month.
– adopters
– a big foundation that will help with an neutering campaign for the dogs with owner, so no more dogs will be abandoned on the streets.

Please start donating as soon as possible for food, in: paypal account: asociatiaador@yahoo.com

Euro account: UNICREDIT TIRIAC BANK:
RO02 BACX0000003480143001
SWIFT: BACXROBU

please mention “food the dogs in Ps”

If you can help us please talk to the dry food producers to donate, please talk to anyone that can sponsor with food!

We need your help urgent to keep these dogs alive.

Please share for adoptions the dogs in the Ps.

THANK YOU.

Bosnia and Herzegovina: BOSNIA ABOUT TO IMPLEMENT KILL LAW – Please Take Action Now – Limited Time !

Bosnia and herzegovina

Bos hertz  dog 7Bos Hertz Dog 1

 http://inmemoryofvucko.org/2013/10/04/bosnia-about-to-implement-kill-law/

 BOSNIA ABOUT TO IMPLEMENT KILL LAW!

Posted on October 4, 2013

BOSNIA IS ABOUT TO IMPLEMENT A KILL LAW THAT REPLICATES WHAT IS HAPPENING IN ROMANIA. TO STOP THIS LAW COMING INTO EFFECT THE NEXT TWO WEEKS ARE CRITICAL.

Bos hertz dog 6 

It is crucial that everyone, especially in Europe, lobby their embassy and MEPs. We need to keep the momentum, with press, meetings, lobbying and letters.

On Thursday the 3rd of October the Bosnia-Herzegovina Parliament held a debate on whether or not to change the existing animal welfare law to allow ‘euthanasia’ of dogs held in shelters for more than 14 days without adoption (see below if you think this is an effective means to curb stray populations).

Those opposing the change in the debate (local representatives from Dogs Trust, various pro-animal NGOs, ordinary citizens, veterinary experts from the Veterinary Faculty, professors, lawyers) took more room and were in all ways more articulate. See this article on Klix.ba (Serbo-Croatian, you can google translate The problem of street dogs in Bosnia and Herzegovina: The solution is in registration, sterilization, and Punishment.)

However, the government representatives and in particular SDP representative Nermina Zaimović Uzunović (who originally presented a Bill on changes and amendments to the Animal Welfare and Protection Act at the assembly on July 6 2013) behaved as if they heard none of the facts, explanations of the cause of the problem and how to remedy the problem.

It will be hard to keep the law as is. The next 2 weeks are critical.

 Bos hertz dog 5

We are drafting a new petition on change.org but cannot post final up until early next week. There are existing petitions you can sign below.

But what is important right now is to lobby your embassy representative in Bosnia and at home and your EU Member of Parliament.

Write a PERSONAL, POLITE LETTER asking them to strongly urge the Bosnia-Herzegovina government to not change the law but instead to start actually implementing it! (For a full translation of the existing law, please download this PDF.)

A DRAFT LETTER CAN BE DOWNLOADED HERE (word document). PLEASE PERSONALISE, ADD YOUR NAME AT THE BOTTOM AND THE NAME OF THE PERSON YOU ARE SENDING IT TO AT THE TOP.

See here to find your Embassy in Bosnia-Herzegovina:
http://embassy.goabroad.com/embassies-in/bosnia-and-herzegovina
There is also a listing of some of the Embassies on the
ACTION TO TAKE
page.

Find your MEP and write a personal letter to them as well.
See here to find any MEP in Europe –  
Euromap.

Also on the  ACTION TO TAKE page there are further links and suggestions of particular MEPs to write to. Make sure to end your letter with your name and contact details.

THE NEXT TWO WEEKS ARE CRITICAL.
We need to keep the momentum, with press, meetings, lobbying, letters.

A key member of the animal welfare lobby has stated:

“We need to play this smart, plan good timing for every action and save some ammunition for the days and weeks to come!”

 Bos hertz dog 4

If you are from the UK, you can mention in your letter an incident concerning SDP representative Nermina Zaimović-Uzunović, the Member of House of representatives of Parliamentary Assembly who proposed amendments to the law.  Nermina Zaimović-Uzunovi said she was disappointed the discussion focused on Dogs Trust and their project (spay-neuter of 3000 strays in June 2013 in Sarajevo) which was financed by “the Queen” – and that Dogs Trust only worked in their own interest and this interest was financed by the “Queen”. Instead of acknowledging the good work done by Dogs Trust, and at great expense, she dismisses it, and certainly does not acknowledge that if her changes come into effect, the 3000 dogs sterilised by Dogs Trust will probably be killed. What a waste!

 Bos hertz dog 3

If you have been reading this blog (see in particular this post, and this) you will know that to reverse or change the existing law (which, although not implemented, has an excellent basis for a humane management programme) for a kill law will be a disaster for a number of reasons, not least of which:

  • It will damage Bosnia-Herzegovina’s international image
  • It will fail
  • It will allow wholesale murder of stray dogs and cats

We already have documentation of how ‘shelters’ tend to ‘euthanise’ animals: by clubbing, injections of bleach and so on. So you can be sure that if the existing animal welfare law is changed, such means of ‘euthanisation’ will become commonplace.

 Bos hertz dog 2

Also, the studies on management of stray dog and cat population are unanimous in that euthanisation is NOT the most effective way to control populations. Euthanasia deals only with the symptoms and not the cause of the problem. It is expensive, inhumane and will not provide a permanent solution. Studies have shown that TNR (Trap-Neuter-Return) and CNR (Catch-Neuter-Return) programmes are far more effective (and far more humane) than euthanasia to reduce the street animal population. Please read this post for more information.

 

Please join the Facebook Event for latest news and updates:

STOP BOSNIA FROM IMPLEMENTING KILL LAW

PLEASE SIGN THE EXISTING PETITIONS (AND CHECK BACK NEXT WEEK FOR THE NEW PETITION).

RELATED POSTS ON THIS BLOG:


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DONATIONS
Funds are needed not only to help individual rescues and to help us keep safe the rescued dogs we are sponsoring but also to continue our advocacy work in Bosnia, uncovering the truth about what is happening there.

On our sister site, Animal Welfare Advocates for Bosnia, you can set up a monthly donation via PayPal, or if you want to make a one-off donation, please go to your PayPal account (or set one up, it’s very easy) and send the money to: donations@awabosnia.org  as a ‘gift’.

Bos Hertz Dog 1

EU / Romania: This woman is an insult to the name ‘EU Animal Welfare Intergroup’ – we want her out !

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Subject: This woman is an insult to the name ‘EU Animal Welfare Intergroup’ – we want her out !

 you are fired

buch shelter 5romania 1 oct 4romania 1 oct 1

Regarding the mass killing of strays in Romania;

Petition “The European Parliament’s Intergroup on the Welfare and Conservation of Animals: Daciana Sarbu’s (the Romanian speech self-declared her as being unfit for office.

Please remove her from her position.” on Change.org.

This petition was started by Occupy for Animals on 4th of October, 2013. It is addressed to the Intergroup, the European Parliament, the European Commission, and it aims to have Madame Daciana Sarbu, one of the Vice President’s of the European Parliament’s Intergroup on the Welfare and Conservation of Animals and wife of Romania’s Prime Minister Victor Ponta, removed from her position.

It’s important considering that Romania are killing every dog in the country !. Will you sign it too? Here’s the link:

http://www.change.org/en-GB/petitions/the-european-parliament-s-intergroup-on-the-welfare-and-conservation-of-animals-daciana-sarbu-s-speech-self-declared-her-as-being-unfit-for-office-please-remove-her-from-her-position?share_id=kRIwyefZXs&utm_campaign=signature_receipt&utm_medium=email&utm_source=share_petition

Petition Wording:

This petition was started by Occupy for Animals on 4th of October, 2013. It is addressed to the Intergroup, the European Parliament, the European Commission, and it aims to have Madame Daciana Sarbu, one of the Vice President’s of the European Parliament’s Intergroup on the Welfare and Conservation of Animals and wife of Romania’s Prime Minister Victor Ponta, removed from her position.

The letter that is being send when you sign this petition, as well as the content compiled on our website, at: http://www.occupyforanimals.org/romania—daciana-sarbu-a-head-with-two-faces—one-face-smiling-at-the-death-bringers-the-other-face-smiling-at-the-protectors.html will explain why we believe that Madame Sarbu is not fit for office. 

Thank you, in advance, for signing our petition. 

romania 1 oct 3preg dog rom 1Romania guilty

—————————–

TO: The European Parliament’s Intergroup on the Welfare and Conservation of Animals

Copy to: 
The European Parliament
The European Commission

SUBJECT: Madame Daciana Sarbu’s totally misinformed and erroneous statements self-declared her as being unfit for office as either a member of the Intergroup, let alone as Vice President and we would suggest you remove her from her position. 

Dear Sir / Madam,

The sun is slowly setting on the public’s respect for THE institution of Europe…

A horrified civilized world looks on as the country of Romania whose corrupt re-deployment of assigned public funds has consistently failed to introduce any humane strategy to control the homeless animal population such as has been achieved in every global civilized country.

The result is the legitimization of an ‘eradication’ policy which will result in the destruction of many hundreds of thousands of street animals. Destruction by traditional Romanian methods which include injection of substances, such as injecting with anti-freeze, battering with shovels, ADD TO LIST – like practiced in the past. Since the new “legislation”, the following methods – although not acceptable in any other European country – are now totally legal and even encouraged, such as the use of carbon dioxide, carbon oxide, potassium chloride, nitrogen, electric shocks, penetrating captive gun.

This policy was rapidly implemented due to the EMOTIONAL response of the population because of the death of a child ALLEGEDLY caused by homeless animals.

The civilized world watched in horror as this draconian policy passed through the Romanian parliamentary system. Appeals were made to the EU.

BUT the major body of Europe, whilst disagreeing with the policy… could do NOTHING. But society demands a better response than…. NOTHING! 

Not only did the two press releases from the Intergroup on the subject not impress or inspire anyone, but we listened in abject horror as a Vice-President of the European Parliament’s Intergroup on the Welfare and Conservation of Animals, Daciana Sârbu, during a recent exchange during an Intergroup meeting from 12th of September, 2013, identifies to the world that she is totally misinformed about policies and events over which her position demands knowledge.

The public now questions the expertise of those who represent them in the European Arena. Questions are now asked about what is ‘suitability for purpose’ of these non-elected representatives? Madame Sarbu’s delivery was profoundly unprofessionally uninformed. What qualifications does she have to command respect? In Romania there is an understanding that qualifications can be achieved by corrupt means. Was this the foundation of her acquiring such an elevated position? 

There are also things that just do not go well together, like:

being a Vice President of the Intergroup, a co-initiator of the Written Declaration on Dog Population Management 0026/2011,

the wife of Romania’s Prime Minister Victor Ponta; 

you are fired

– and do NOTHING in her own country to promote and implement a humane management of the stray animals populations like she has so brightly described in the WD 0026/2011;

– and keep a very neutral position when her input is most needed. Her neutral position being probably inspired by the attitude of her husband who also, throughout the scandal caused by the ‘slaughter law’, kept a very neutral position and refrained from openly telling if he was in favor of the euthanasia of stray dogs, or against. It was only in the 13th hour, October 3, 2013 that Mr Ponta made an ‘impressive’ statement: “There are two phases before the euthanasia: the adoption phase and the sterilization and keeping the dogs in the shelters. I would like, if we consider ourselves a civilized country, to use more the first two. This is my message and my signal”:

– and just stand by and watch as the tragedy is unfolding, bringing unnecessary suffering and death not only to animals but also to their protectors. In case you have missed it: three people have died so far and it’s only beginning. One can only stand and watch now and wait while the death count gets higher! We are waiting for the day that we will read with deep sorrow that a Romanian child has died of Carbofuran ingestion, which – as you know best is banned in the EU – but widespread in Romania. Daily are the reports of dogs found poisoned with Carbofuran and there are many necropsy reports that confirm this.

In light of the surprisingly misinformed content of Madame Sarbu’s speech from 12th of September, 2013, and her totally erroneous statements, as well as her continued absence from Intergroup involvement especially when a serious focus is placed on her country, we believe that Madame Sarbu is not fit for office as either a member of the Intergroup, let alone as Vice President and we would suggest you remove her from her position.

We, as the public who are represented, have challenged the ignorance within this exchange. And we would hope that you, who, of course, only want officials who exemplify the highest quality in seeking the best of interest for the animals and people of Europe, would agree with us that, after listening to her historic speech and reading our reflections, Madame Sarbu has no place in the Intergroup.

Madame Sarbu’s speech as well as other interesting information is compiled on our website, at: 
http://www.occupyforanimals.org/romania—daciana-sarbu-a-head-with-two-faces—one-face-smiling-at-the-death-bringers-the-other-face-smiling-at-the-protectors.html 

We thank you, in advance, for the time taken to read our message and for taking the necessary steps regarding Madame Sarbu’s unsuitability for purpose.


Yours,

[Signer’s name]

Bosnia and Herzegovina: URGENT ACTION REQ’D – On 3/10/13 Bosnia Will Vote On Whether To Replicate The Romanian Slaughter Law and Allow The Killing Of Homeless Animals – Sample Letter To Send – URGENT.

Bosnia and herzegovina

Bosnia 3 october

** SAMPLE LETTER TO COPY AND SEND

(ADDRESSES FOLLOW THIS LETTER) **

TO:
The European Commission
The Council of Europe
The European Parliament
The European Parliament’s Intergroup on the Welfare and Convervation of Animals

COPY TO:
The Members of the Bosnian Parliament and the Bosnian Ombudsmen

Dear Sir / Madam,

As if one European animal holocaust were not enough, we are afraid that another one is around the corner, and it’s looming in your potential member-country, Bosnia & Herzegovina. Tomorrow, 3rd of October, 2013, the Parliament of Bosnia & Herzegovina will vote on whether to replicate the Romanian ‘Slaughter Law’ and allow the killing of all stray animals!

On 3rd of October, 2013, the Bosnian parliament will vote on proposed changes to their animal welfare law, some of which include the rounding up of ALL homeless animals and killing them 2 weeks after capture!

Bosnia’s animal protection law is an excellent, very comprehensive law, and there is, actually, no need to change it, unless, of course, one intends to change it for the worse.

Please allow us to resume the situation for you:

During the Bosnian War, Sarajevo was under siege from 1992 to 1995. There was exposed artillery, snipers, cold and hunger clinging on the international humanitarian aid. Having not enough food for themselves, many people abandoned their dogs and cats, while others put their companion animals before themselves – giving them the little food they got from humanitarian aid – and a lot of animals also found themselves all alone because their owners had been killed. Today, an estimated 12,000 abandoned dogs (according to official sources) live on the streets of Sarajevo; nobody knows the number of abandoned dogs in the entire country given that there are no records.

In 2009, the Bosnian government passed a law – which is a prerequisite for Bosnia & Herzegovina’s EU membership that protects straying animals by prohibiting the catching (collecting) and brutal killing of the dogs by municipal workers. Since then, it is prohibited to kill stray animals, except in cases determined by a veterinarian as the only possible measure.

The law furthermore says that owners are required to sterilize and register their pet animals. They must register them at a competent veterinarian, which will have a record of all ownership of dogs and cats – the deadline for registration being seven days after acquiring a dog or cat. For those who already had pet animals, the deadline was 6 months from the entry into force of the law. Thus October 8, 2009 was the deadline by which all owned dogs and cats had to be registered.

One year after the entry into force of the law, that was the deadline for the municipalities, cities, cantons or entities to build shelters for animals. But this part of the law was not applied in practice at all.

Before aggression, Bosnia and Herzegovina was among the middle economically developed countries but today is the poorest country in Europe because of careless corrupted local, regional and central governments that only care about their own pockets and it should be no surprise that some of the few government or municipal shelters are set up mostly as money laundering machines for the government and some private individuals in order to enable them to steel money.

The mentioned law, passed nearly five years ago banning the killing of strays, had actually been passed because the government was alarmed at a sharp rise in canine slaughter as straying dogs proliferated on Bosnian streets. But people ignored the law, largely because authorities failed to provide alternatives such as sterilization and the needed shelters to house the animals and to keep them off the streets… and so the killings continued.

The law from 2009 is actually a very good law, but it was adopted “over night” without anybody providing the conditions for its implementation. And without proper implementation the best laws are useless and not even worth the paper on which they are written!

The Republika Srpska does not even accept the law from 2009 – even though they were obliged to – and they work according to the old law from 2008, which gives them the right to kill dogs after a period of 30 days. They even don’t fully comply to this old regulation and most often kill dogs as soon as possible. This happened at the Hresa-shelter end of 2012 when they killed 52 dogs in one night.

Since the country remains deeply divided along ethnic lines, different parts of Bosnia deal with the problem of strays in different ways. That’s because the 1992-95 war between Bosnia’s three groups, Bosniacs, Serbs and Croats, ended with a peace agreement that divided Bosnia into two semi-autonomous regions, linked by a weak central government. It’s an arrangement that allows some local governments to pass their own dog-killing laws that contradict the nationwide ban.

Today, almost five years after the implementation of Bosnia’s animal welfare law, and given that the government and the municipalities have failed to properly implement the law from 2009, it is no wonder that the problem has become huge and urgent. It can not be denied that 12,000 dogs living on the streets of Sarajevo alone, is a problem.

The culprits – next to careless dog owners that let their animals roam freely and mate as they wish and then simply abandon the puppies on the streets – sit in the government and municipalities.

The state has almost no interest in a humane reduction of stray animals, the prices at the veterinary clinics for neutering are very high considering the standards and the high rate of unemployment in Bosnia. To some people, monthly salary in Bosnia is as nearly as high as the cost of a castration is.

For months, the media is spreading hatred against street dogs, and intentionally causes fear and hatred towards the dogs. Animal lovers advocate for a non-violent solution of the problem, saying that disregard / non-implementation of the law passed in April 2009 caused the problem. Their opponents say that the law is inappropriate for Bosnia and Herzegovina and that killing dogs is the only way to resolve the problem and already in January 2013, Occupy for Animals had warned that many of them are committed to change the law, trying to return to the killing as a legitimate option.

On 3rd of October, 2013 the Bosnian parliament will vote on the proposed “slaughter law”.

It is rare that extremes of behavior challenge an established language, but these events invite depiction as ‘a pandemic speciescidal holocaust’ which will have no long term effect on the stray animals situation.

As you know, Catch-Neuter-Return is the only proven humane and effective method to reduce stray animal populations. Statistical studies indicate that in order to fully control a stray population, you need to achieve a 70 percent sterilization rate of the animals within a particular community. Once you reach the 70 percent threshold, the probability that an unsterilized female comes into contact with an unsterilized male is sufficiently small, and the population stops growing.

Killing stray animals, however, does not stop the problem and only offers a temporary “solution”. The World Health Organization’s “Guidelines for Dog Population Management” (Geneva 1990) and various other academic studies show that killing dogs is ineffective. Despite mass extermination campaigns by misguided municipalities the street dog population grows…

‘Extermination policies” has been proven ineffective as a method of population control because the vacuum left is soon filled by other dogs from surrounding areas (it is technically impossible to catch ALL dogs) who move in to utilize the resources available, or by the existing dogs using these resources to raise more puppies. It only offers a ‘temporary solution’.

In addition to the implementation of a massive spay & neuter campaign for homeless dogs:

– ALL dog owners must be compiled to sterilize their dogs
– the Bosnian government must provide free spay & neuter to those who cannot afford the cost
– the Bosnian government must take serious measures to end puppy mills and backyard breeding
– ALL animals must be chipped and a national register must be put in place
– the abandonment of animals must be severely punished

As long as the above mentioned measures will not be taken, the killing of even ALL homeless dogs (although technically impossible) will be futile and all dogs that will die, will have died in vain because nothing will have changed on the overall situation of Bosnia’s stray animals population. The situation will be exactly the same again in a few months…

It must also be noted that the word ‘euthanasia’ is inappropriate when it comes to Bosnia. People tend to believe that – when reading the word “euthanasia” – the dogs will be put out of their miserable life on the streets “humanely”.

But NOT SO! Euthanasia in Bosnia, like in most eastern European countries, has nothing to do with the merciful ending of an animal’s life as practiced in western societies. In the past we have seen dogs being round up and then killed using axes and iron bars…

The European Union provides the government of Bosnia and Herzegovina with many millions of euros worth of financial aid each year. The provisos attached to these aid packages require the recipient country to abide by EU laws which would include the laws related to animal welfare.

The European Commission has stated that aligning national animal welfare legislation with EU law is a prerequisite for EU membership. Many international animal welfare organisations cite Bosnia as one of the countries with the most instances of horrific animal cruelty and suffering and thus membership should not be obtained by Bosnia until radical changes are made regarding animal welfare.

A number of MEPs have raised and continue to raise the issue about the need for countries seeking to acquire EU membership to demonstrate standards of animal care, and thus it is mandatory that conditions at shelters in Bosnia Herzegovina are drastically improved and that humane stray dog control systems are implemented throughout the country.

Also, and with deep respect to the Bosnian Parliament, a significant body of evidence now exists to show that exposure to animal abuse impacts on children’s psychological health and as the Bosnian Parliament is aware, whereas any strategy affecting homeless animals is not within the EU remit of responsibility, under the Treaty of Lisbon, the EU has a Duty of Care to protect human health. Licensing slaughter on the streets will expose children to health affecting stimuli and would be inconsistent with EU policies. One would expect Bosnia to postpone application for EU Membership until the last animal is killed.

We urge the EU to please remind the Bosnian Government of their obligations to comply with EU-standards on animal welfare, including the humane control of stray animal populations, and to tell them to immediately drop the idea of killing all homeless animals two weeks after captures.

Thank you very much, in advance, for the time taken to read our message, and for taken the necessary measures regarding the matter that we have raised.

Yours respectfully,

 Your name and nationality

 

 

Please send the sample letter above to the following:

darko.babalj@parlament.ba ; mirsad.dugum@parlament.ba ; petar.kunic@parlament.ba ; lazar.prodanovic@parlament.ba ; adnan.basic@parlament.ba ; amir.fazlic@parlament.ba ; mirza.kusljugic@parlament.ba ; nermin.puric@parlament.ba ; denis.becirovic@parlament.ba ; mato.franjicevic@parlament.ba ; niko.lozancic@parlament.ba ; asim.sarajlic@parlament.ba ; beriz.belkic@parlament.ba ; azra.hadziahmetovic@parlament.ba ; bozo.ljubic@parlament.ba ; salko.sokolovic@parlament.ba ; borislav.bojic@parlament.ba ; mladen.ivankovic-lijanovic@parlament.ba ; sasa.magazinovic@parlament.ba ; senad.sepic@parlament.ba ; mladen.bosic@parlament.ba ; zijad.jagodic@parlament.ba ; slavko-slavuj.jovicic@parlament.ba ; zvonko.jurisic@parlament.ba ; emir.kabil@parlament.ba ; drago.kalabic@parlament.ba ; vesna.krstovic-spremo@parlament.ba ; milica.markovic@parlament.ba ; danijela.martinovic@parlament.ba ; bosko.tomic@parlament.ba ; nermina.zaimovic-uzunovic@parlament.ba ; info@ombudsmen.gov.ba ; mmicevska@vijeceministara.gov.ba ; predsjedatelj@vijeceministara.gov.ba ; amela.mulavdic@vijeceministara.gov.ba ; sefkabineta@vlada.ks.gov.ba ; sekretar@ssv.ks.gov.ba ; kab.ministra@mvteo.gov.ba ; kabinet.zamjenika@mvteo.gov.ba ; info@mvteo.gov.ba ; mp@mp.ks.gov.ba ; ministar@mp.ks.gov.ba ; nada.rajkovic@fmpvs.gov.ba ; jasenko.selimovic@sdp.ba ; generalni.sekretar@sdp.ba ; sda@bih.net.ba ; kosdask@sda.ba ; kosdasa@bih.net.ba ; pibeorg@gmail.com ; info@sbbbh.ba ; nasastranka@nasastranka.ba ; pr@nasastranka.ba

Mail the EU Intergroup for the welfare of animals at:

a.erler@eurogroupforanimals.org

info@eurogroupforanimals.org, 

and the Council of Europe at:

private.office@coe.int

bureau.paris@coe.int

cm@coe.int, webmaster.assembly@coe.int, democracy@coe.intwebmaster.legal@coe.int, 

 

bosnia stray

Petition Link:
http://www.change.org/en-GB/petitions/bosnia-implement-humane-stray-dog-and-cat-population-control-and-treatment

Bosnia sterilisation

Above – a dog which has been ‘sterilised’ in Bosnia – disgusting.

If The Situation In Romania Teaches Us One Thing, It Is That Corruption Does Not Work; Nor Does Stray Animal Killing En Masse. Sterilization and Public Education Is The Way Forward To Reducing Sttray Animal Numbers.

SAV Logo Red by Paola

Dogs_Multiply_Pyramid-1

cats_multiply_pyramid-1

Above – The results of non sterilization and bad public education.

Wednesday 2nd – as you can see from our ‘Top Posts’ shown on the right side, we have been giving plenty of attention recently to the crisis for stray dogs and cats in Romania.  We trust that you will agree that due to the numbers of animals involved in this government led killing policy; a short sighted policy because they (as the Romanian government) have not acted and spent EU money allocated to them and this sterilization campaign wisely in the past, we are now in the situation where the grossly corrupt government of Romania really has to be sent a message from EU citizens and other campaigners around the world that their approach to stray animal numbers by simply mass killing is something from the dark ages rather than the 21st Century.

This mass kill is now an ongoing crisis in Romania and we will continue to act on the animals behalf and show up failures in the government approach to successful stray management where necessary.

Obviously, due to coverage of this issue, which changes by the minute every single day, we aim to keep you informed of what is happening.  As a result, many of our other routine campaign issues have been sidelined; so as it stands at the moment, we are now going to attempt to withdraw a little from the Romanian crisis and revert back to covering other global animal issues whenever possible.  Romania, due to animal numbers being killed by this haphazard government, is going to continue to be a major focal point for us in the coming weeks.

We thank you all for any actions that you have taken on behalf of the animals in Romania; and we can say (as Europeans) that this crisis / haphazard situation by a haphazard government is now becoming big news throughout the EU.  MEP’s across Europe are constantly being contacted about the situation, and demands from EU citizens are being made for the EU Parliament to intervene and discuss the corruption that is going on regarding politics and misused funds (intentionally provided for the animals) throughout Romania.  There are even calls for Romania to be thrown out of the EU because of the current situation.  This will not happen, but it will act as an indicator to any EU government of the massive pressure that electronic media can put on governments which are failing in their actions regarding positive animal welfare. 

We trust that member states of Europe who are currently not members of the EU, but who are currently hoping for accession in the next few years; like Serbia, will take note of this crisis in Romania and see that ‘animal people’ will take direct and long term action to expose what is happening and expose the undermined actions of national government officials as necessary; people who have failed big time to implement the finances provided to them for the implementation of stray animal sterilization and management.

romania 1 oct 1

Already in Romania, thousands of animals have been killed and suffered terribly due to this total lack of foresight and adequate stray management planning by a bent and corrupt government.  Regardless, we will attempt to continue to be a voice for the animals; bang drums and work towards a more humane method of stray population management for all strays in the future. 

Sterilisation is the only way to reduce stray animal numbers; killing them is an unfortunate ‘quick / temporary fix by misguided governments, which does not work long term as other stray animals from outside regions then tend to move into new (culled) areas in search of better living conditions and the possibility of finding more food.  They bring with them the risk of introducing new problems and diseases which may not currently exist in a region where strays have been killed en masse.  Regions where these mass killings have taken place may see a reduction in stray numbers for just a few weeks; thinking that their ‘problem’ is now solved, but history and past experience shows that within a very short time, stray animal numbers will return to the same, or even go above the numbers which existed before. 

preg dog rom 1

Until there is a government led programme of sterilization, public education and health controls for dogs and cats currently enduring life on the streets, the situation of growing stray numbers in any particular area of any country will never diminish.  Above all, animals which have been sterilized by international welfare organisations within the EU, and which are clearly identified by brightly coloured ear tags fitted to them to indicate same, must never be targeted for killing.  It is these animals, with their now inability to reproduce and put more strays onto the streets, which must be looked at as the positive way forward in the fight to gradually reduce stray animal populations.

Killing animals does not work – sterilization and public education; to get ‘pet (owned) animals sterilised also by their owners, and to prevent them being turned out onto the streets each day and as a result, mating with un-sterilized stray animals, is the other major factor in reducing stray animal numbers long term.  A government needs to focus on good public education more than anything – they have the funds, they need to act positively and compassionately, by no kill sterilization and a forward looking outlook of reducing stray animal numbers.

This public education should be a government led approach, especially when they (governments) are provided with adequate funding by the EU to undertake this – it should never be a situation where we see politicians ‘bag the money’ and stick it in their back pockets for their own nest feathering, as we have seen in Romania and other non EU states within Europe.  If they decide to go down this road, then they have to pay the consequences; it should not be the animals  that suffer death as a result of bent politicians. 

The money is often provided by organisations such as the EU; if only governments used it wisely and allocated it directly into stray animal management as they are expected, then we would definitely see a reduction in stray animal numbers throughout the EU and the world.

It is only when the money allocated goes into corrupt political back pockets that the situation remains as it is  – corrupt and very non animal welfare friendly.

Mark – SAV founder.

buch shelter 4

romania 1 oct 4