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Poor Dog!

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tks

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Animal cruelty happens all over the world - humans being the worst animal to inhabit this planet.
Between cruelty involved in factory farming for meat, killing without proper painkillers, and laboratory experiments done in the name of Science but are known to be unnecessary we have a civilization that has lost its sense of compassion. Then there are random acts of cruelty that happens all over the world. Here is one that was forwarded to me that I am sharing - the photos are more telling than any description of what happened!

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source: http://www.indiatimes.com/news/indi...-to-teach-the-dog-a-brutal-lesson-252353.html
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[h=1]Bengaluru Woman Kills 8 Puppies In Front Of Their Mother Just To Teach The Dog A Brutal Lesson[/h]
The intermittent wails of four-year-old Ammu, a female stray dog that grew up among the residents of Lane No. 3, Krishnanagar, off Tumkur Road, have cast a pall of gloom over this locality of mostly ex-servicemen.


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Residents are haunted by the memory of the dog digging her 15-day-old puppies out of their graves and trying to nurse them.
On March 15, her litter of eight was mercilessly flung onto the boulders, allegedly by Ponnamma, the wife of an ex-honorary flight lieutenant, a resident of this Jallahalli West neighborhood. This she did reportedly to "teach the dog a lesson", who had dared to have puppies in a drain under her gate.



While seven of the puppies died the same day, one that survived the brutality succumbed the next day. The outraged residents filed a complaint with Cupa (Compassion Unlimited Plus Action) on March 17, and the same day, the NGO registered a complaint against Ponnamma with the Peenya police.

When we reached her doorstep to inquire about the incident, she refused to comment.
The ghastly incident has outraged the neighborhood which has always been compassionate toward its stay dogs. It isn't uncommon here to spot a pet dog sharing a meal with a stray — such is the residents' love for their animals.


[h=3]Five days since the incident, Ammu still wanders around the site where her puppies are buried.[/h]
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The police have seized crucial footage from a CCTV camera near Ponnamma's house. The Peenya police have registered a case under Section 93 of the Karnataka Police Act (punishment for cruelty to animals) and Section 11 of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, and IPC Section 429. If proved guilty, she could end up in prison for up to five years.
"Cupa has lodged a complaint, but justice is still a long way off for this mother," said, Suparna B Ganguly, honorary secretary at the NGO.

The heinous act had come to light after the residents took up the case on March 15 with Cupa. The complaint explained how "a woman in our street" flung eight pups across the road on to an empty site opposite to her house, killing them all. The impact was such that "some of the pups' intestines were out". The residents wrote that they were distressed by the sight of the mother that wouldn't stop wailing and trying to "wake them up, running around us asking for help, trying to show us."
Residents explained how their request had gone in vain to spare Ammu, who had littered 15 days ago in a gutter, beneath the entry gate of Ponnamma's house.

"My neighbour and I had an argument with the woman. We told her what she did was a grave sin and so cruel. The puppies did no harm to her, and she had no right to kill them in front of the mother," the complaint said.

The twisted logic
When the residents protested the act, Ponnamma went on to say that she was doing this to teach the dog a lesson.

"When we asked her how she could kill innocent puppies, and that she had no right to do that, she said she wanted to teach the mother a lesson so that she doesn't litter or come near her house again," an outraged resident tells, clearly unable to accept the logic.
What's worse is that Ponnamma is remorseless. "When we asked her about it, she just said, achcha nahi laga, fek diya (didn't like it, threw it)," said a resident.

Action taken
"The accused was arrested and released on bail. We have procured CCTV footage and are putting together evidence. The investigation is on and the chargesheet will be submitted," said B Aiyanna Redddy, police inspector, Peenya, revealed.
 
The entire colony mates are singing elegy (funeral song) on the death of eight puppies and showing sympathy for their mother (dog) Ammu.
Killer ( of 8 puppies) lady Ponnama, who took vengeance on the mother dog for littering near her gate, no doubt, is to be punished.
What punishment would be given by the court? A fine of Rs. 1000/ or Rs 2000/ or at the most Rs. 5000/-?

Would Ponnammas in the world, learn lessons ?
 
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Source; Google images
 
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Residents are haunted by the memory of the dog digging her 15-day-old puppies out of their graves and trying to nurse them.
On March 15, her litter of eight was mercilessly flung onto the boulders, allegedly by Ponnamma, the wife of an ex-honorary flight lieutenant, a resident of this Jallahalli West neighborhood. This she did reportedly to "teach the dog a lesson", who had dared to have puppies in a drain under her gate.

OMG!

What a human! How could she do this?

Behaving like Kamsa dashing new borns to death.

This female is evil personified. She took 8 lives..she needs to be given a jail sentence for at least 10 years...to teach her a lesson.


Poor dog..she must be feeling so traumatized and depressed.
 
True, no way the cruelty exhibited by this lady meets any standards of humanity. In the mean time, we need to find some solid solution to control the alarming population of stray dogs. The following report by Times of India is any indicator, we are in for a major crisis on Rabies control front.

Cases of dog bites in state soar to 5.89 lakh

PUNE: The state registered 5.89 lakh dog-bite cases between April 2013 and March 2014, an increase of 1.92 lakh cases as compared to the previous year, when 3.96 lakh cases were reported.

Among the eight administrative circles, Nashik reported 1.15 lakh cases, the highest, followed by Mumbai (83,580), Latur (82,849), Aurangabad (69,701) and Pune (66,562). A total of 40 people have succumbed to rabies infection with Nashik circle reporting 17 deaths, again the highest.

Poor sterilization, more non-vegetarian eateries and dumping of non-vegetarian food in bins and open spaces in expanding cities have contributed to the increase in the stray dog population and consequently dog-bite cases, said healthcare experts.

Epidemiological studies show that more than 70% dog bites take place when victims are walking on the road. More than 97% of the bites are unprovoked and by stray dogs.

A whopping 5.89 lakh dog bite cases have been registered in the state between April 2013 and March 2014, which shows an increase of over 1.92 lakh cases as compared to the corresponding period last year (2012-13) when 3.96 lakh dog bite cases were reported.

Healthcare experts said the figures could be higher as cases reported by the municipal corporations are not taken into account in the state's final tally.

Expanding cities, rapid urbanisation of small towns, population growth, non-vegetarian eateries and increasing instances of non-vegetarian food being dumped in garbage bins and in open spaces contribute to dog bites, they added.

But government officials attributed the rise to better reporting. "The data on dog-bite and rabies cases primarily recorded at state-run hospitals is collated and compiled to arrive at the annual figure. Strengthening of the reporting system is one of the main reasons for the rise in the dog-bite cases across the state in 2013-14," Sadhana Tayade, joint director (hospitals), told TOI on Monday.

On why the state government had not undertaken sterilisation of stray dogs to keep a check on their number, Tayade said, "Conducting sterilisation of dogs is the responsibility of local governing bodies like the gram panchayat, municipal councils and municipal corporations."

Experts said the state health department lacked stringent rules that could spur local self-governing bodies to conduct sterilization. "Earlier, the state government did try to sterilise dogs from areas falling under the jurisdiction of the civil surgeons, but some animal welfare bodies opposed the move," a state health department official said.

Civic authorities must control stray dogs and the possibility of mass immunisation of dogs should be considered seriously, a surveillance official said. "The private sector must also participate. Prevention is the best way to bring down rabies cases," he added.

Dog-bite cases have been reported from far across the state. Akola circle reported 61,615 cases in 2013-14. Of them, 8,250 patients needed hospitalisation. Of the districts under this circle, the highest number of dog bite cases were reported from Amravati district (26,590) followed by Buldhana district (13505).

In Aurangabad circle, 29,641 dog bite cases were reported from Aurangabad district followed by Jalna(15,860) and Parbhani (14,995).

In Kolhapur circle, Satara district reported the highest, 20,300 cases, followed by Kolhapur district (16,406) and Sangli district (14,888). In Latur circle, Osmanabad district recorded highest 25,029 cases followed by Beed district (23,820), Nanded district (17,417) and Latur district (16,583).

In Mumbai circle, Thane district reported the most (60,179) dog-bite cases followed by Raigad district (17,500). In Nagpur circle, Chandrapur district reported the maximum (16,224) dog-bite cases followed by Wardha district (12,756) and Nagpur district (10,525).

In Nashik circle, Ahmednagar district had the highest (40,739) dog-bite cases followed by Nashik district (39,984). In Pune circle, Solapur district reported 426 dog bite cases followed by Pune district (386).


 
Is she a human being? If punishment is not severe, the neighbours should ignore her and should not extend any help at least for one year.

This is the country where an elephant was tortured in the name of religion.
 
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