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Beijing cops deny dog slaughter
BEIJING—Beijing police have
rejected claims they are beating to death dogs rounded up under a “one
dog” per household policy in the capital.
China’s capital is also mulling over a scheme for digital-chip-based
canine management, aimed at tightening control over its increasing dog
population and stepping up the fight against rabies which claimed 326
lives nationwide in October.
Local government sources revealed Tuesday that a draft canine management
system proposal has been worked out. The scheme will soon be tested in
Beijing’s eight urban districts, namely Dongcheng, Xicheng, Chongwen,
Xuanwu, Chaoyang, Haidian, Fengtai and Shijingshan, and suburban Shunyi
District.
Beijing is planning to implant dogs with digital chips containing their
individual ID number. To access information about the dog—photo,
species, sex, color, inoculation time, owner’s address— you simply input
the ID number into a device.
In a related development, local police in Beijing Tuesday refuted dog
killing rumors spread by some netizens as totally untrue.
The city is to implement a “one dog per household” policy in nine major
management zones — the eight urban districts and Yizhuang Economic
Development Zone.
Earlier reports said a campaign would begin on November16 to check that
Beijing citizens in the nine zones have licenses for their dogs, do not
have big or dangerous dogs and only have one dog per household. The
campaign will also target illicit pet businesses in the city.
Last Wednesday afternoon, the police made house calls in the city’s
luxury villa areas. The sources said the house calls were mainly aimed
at improving dog owners’ awareness of canine regulations, public
security issues and the legitimate rights of both dog owners and other
citizens.
By Monday, the canine inspection department of the municipal bureau of
public security had rounded up more than 500 stray, unlicensed and
abandoned dogs.
Dog owners are required to hand over pets they want to abandon to local
police. Citizens that meet certain conditions can adopt dogs by calling
the canine inspection department. To qualify, citizens should hold a
valid ID card and having a sufficiently spacious permanent residence
outside the nine major management zones.
More than 110,000 people in Beijing received anti-rabies inoculations
after being bitten or scratched by dogs or cats in the first nine months
of this year. The city has begun a two-month project to inoculate up to
a million dogs in the city, where only 550,000 canines are currently
registered.
The Ministry of Health website shows that 2,660 people died of rabies in
China in 2004, compared with 159 reported fatalities in 1996. In the
first three quarters of this year, the country recorded 2,254 rabies
cases, an increase of 29.69 percent over the same period last year.
Rabies accounted for 46 percent of all fatalities caused by infectious
diseases reported on the Chinese mainland in October, according to the
Ministry of Health.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |