Delhi’s Tuglak Lane stray dog case appeal hears in court latest news

News:

On Monday 4th March, 2024, Stray dog dangerous attack heard in Delhi’s high court, Rahul Kanojiya, the father of a 1.5-year-old child who was allegedly mauled to death by street dogs at Tughlak Lane on February 24, was presenting his appeal to the court. The Delhi High Court stated on Monday that feeding societal dogs has made them too aggressive and taken away from their ability to find food on their own. The court is requesting responses from the Delhi government, New Delhi Municipal Corporation (NDMC), and Delhi Police. The 1.5-year-old girl’s father, Rahul Kanojiya, presented a plea during the court hearing. The toddler was allegedly mauled to death at Tughlak Lane on February 24 by a pack of stray dogs which is becoming too territorial.        

The issue is that residents of these areas are feeding the dogs in the evenings by entering a van. Dogs have grown more territorial as a result, which is why they attack people. People need to take notice of feeding stray dogs since they are becoming to pose a risk to humans. While feeding a stray could be helpful, doing so takes away its ability to search for food. Judge Subramonium Prasad said, “They (dogs) have nothing else to do and have just become aggressive.”

Read previous posts with follow-ups Street dogs kill two-year-olds in Dhobi Ghat, Delhi, Why are street dogs becoming dangerous?

In addition to asking the police to keep the CCTV video from the relevant time period in and around the neighbourhood and asking that the Delhi government produce a status report explaining the efforts taken to prevent such incidents in the future, the high court posted the case for March 13.

The court’s comments match up with the Supreme Court’s current debate over whether the Animal Birth Control (ABC) Rules, 2023—which try to decrease the number of street dogs without turning to cruelty are directly at tension with panchayat local laws.            

 Without a doubt the measures that police can use to manage street dogs are strictly regulated. There are legal restrictions against sending these dogs abroad or killing them. However, some become aggressive and can attack people and small children. This is usually the result of other people abusing them or of them being taken illegally from their local area and placed in an unfamiliar area.

However, animal activists said that dogs, whether or not they are fed, have a territorial character.

“Feeding them just makes them less aggressive and easy to handle for medical treatments. Having wild dogs will just make conflicts better. The bench’s comments are more reflective of their own views than they are of actual science. surprisingly, these results might be at line with the legal system, basic principles, and traditions of India,” said activist Gauri Maulekhi.

The incident in problem happened on February 24, when four or five canines are said to have attacked the teenager as she sat outside her residence in the Dhobi ghat neighbourhood of Tughlaq Lane.

After their meeting with the toddler’s family last week, Delhi Mayor Shelly Oberoi said that the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) and NDMC will talk about controlling the number of street animals in the Capital. 

“We have instructed MCD officials to solve the issue of stray animals in Delhi by having discussions with the NDMC chairperson and the other officials in the NDMC. We’ll focus In his appeal, Kanojia called for the Center’s rules and regulations to be put into action in order to prevent any such horrible incidents. In addition to saying that there has been a rise in dog bite incidents and that city officials have failed to set up a dog shelter, he claimed that the Delhi government should be ordered to catch and handle aggressive and dangerous dogs in keeping with ACB Rules—both the needs of animal lovers and children’s safety,”  

Suggested website  http://Hindustan times

The Incident

A two-year-old infant girl in Delhi is said to have been killed by street dogs in the Tuglak Lane neighbourhood of Dhobi Ghat. The tragedy happened in the evening when the local DJ was playing loud music in the Dhobi Ghar area, and the residents were missing the screams of the girls and the stray dogs.

The incident’s timeframe begins on Saturday. The girl’s family claims that when their child was playing outdoors with her pals in the evening at roughly six, she was fatally dragged around 150 metres down the road by a pack of six dogs. Family members of the girl raced behind a pack of dogs, but they missed because they were so angry.

Suggested website: http://Times of india

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