Malaysia

Tengku Permaisuri Selangor urges MBSA to review SOPs for nabbing stray dogs

Tengku Permaisuri Norashikin objects to ‘catch and kill’ method, urges more holistic approach.

Updated 3 months ago · Published on 01 Apr 2024 6:30PM

Tengku Permaisuri Selangor urges MBSA to review SOPs for nabbing stray dogs
Tengku Permaisuri Selangor Tengku Permaisuri Norashikin has called on the Shah Alam City Council’s planned task force to review the standard operating procedures in catching stray dogs. – Facebook pic, April 1, 2024.

TENGKU Permaisuri Selangor Tengku Permaisuri Norashikin has called on the Shah Alam City Council’s (MBSA) planned task force to review the standard operating procedures (SOPs) in catching stray dogs.

After learning of the MBSA’s plans to “catch and kill” stray canines in Setia Alam later this month, she urged them to opt for a more humane and holistic approach to the problem.

In a statement posted on the Selangor Royal Office Facebook page on Monday (April 1), the Tengku Permaisuri said she was saddened to read about the council’s plans to catch street dogs in the state.

“I have stressed many times that I disagree with the ‘catch and kill’ method and believe there are many other ways we can use to curb this problem.

“As the Royal Patron of the Stray Free Selangor (SFS) campaign run by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA), I want the authorities to detail a new and more holistic approach in managing stray dogs,” she said.

She said she had previously suggested that efforts to preserve the welfare and reduce the number of abandoned animals be intensified, through the Create Caring and Compassionate Communities (CCC) campaign.

“Apart from an extensive neutering programme, I also would like to suggest to the local authorities to build more animal shelters in housing estates with the cooperation of the locals who love animals,” she said.

“Local councils should make it mandatory for housing developers to construct or prepare such shelters,” she said.

She said local councils could also adopt animal birth control or a “trap-neuter-release” initiatives, where dogs within a community or district are sterilised and then released back to their territories, resulting in a population decline.

She also proposed reviewing a circular issued by the Local Government and Housing Ministry in 2014, which outlines the SOPs for the capturing and disposing of stray dogs, to be more relevant to the current best practices.

The current circular requires captured stray dogs to be kept for two days, while licensed dogs must be held for seven days before the animals are culled by injection.

“I truly hope that efforts to manage these strays will continue and not be a case of ‘sekadar melepas batuk di tangga’ (doing a half-baked job),” she added.

It was reported recently that the MBSA was planning a task force to catch and kill 500 stray dogs in the area. It even proposed rewarding volunteers with RM30 for each dog caught during the exercise from April 22 to 24.

According to MBSA’s notice of the operation, dogs caught cannot be claimed and will be brought to the council’s animal shelter to be killed.

Following backlash from animal lovers and rescue groups, MBSA changed its tune and said that the dogs will be sent to the Paws Animal Welfare Society (PAWS) where they will be kept for a length of time to be claimed. – The Vibes, April 1, 2024

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