This Muslim Country plans to kill 3000000 dogs due to…; not Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, Turkey, it is..
Several celebrities, animal lovers, animal rights activists, and political leaders have raised their voices in light of the Supreme Court’s recent judgment to relocate the stray dogs to the shelters in Delhi-NCR. The Supreme Court on Thursday reserved its order on pleas seeking a stay of its August 11 order to remove all stray dogs from the localities in the Delhi-NCR region and put them in shelter homes. A three-judge bench of Justices Vikram Nath, Sandeep Mehta, and NV Anjaria said it will pass an interim order on the August 11 order of a different bench.
Earlier, the Supreme Court on August 11 took a stern view of the stray dog menace and ordered the Delhi-NCR to start removing stray dogs from all localities within eight weeks and house them in dedicated dog shelters to be set up by civic authorities.
Which country is planning this mass cull of dogs?
The discussion on stray dogs continues to spark debate in India. There have been different responses to this decision in public discourse, with some indicating that this is vital to create a hazardous situation for road safety. Meanwhile, others have indicated it is an infringement of animal rights. Meanwhile, reports suggest that another country is planning to slaughter almost 3 million stray dogs, drawing global outrage.
The FIFA World Cup 2030 is scheduled to take place in Morocco, Spain, and Portugal. According to the media reports, about preparations for the event have shaken the world. Morocco reportedly aims to kill approximately 3 million stray dogs to make its cities look clean and nice. Animal rights groups, animal lovers, and social workers across the globe have condemned this news.
When Morocco was chosen to host the 2030 FIFA World Cup, the government was serious about cleaning up its cities. As part of this plan, they intend to eliminate stray dogs.
Media reports indicate that the dogs are ostensibly killed via poisoning, shooting, or sounded to death by electric shocks. Often, they are physically trapped in painful ways, transferred to a strap shelter home, and then killed more inhumanely than simply putting them down. In some areas, they have even been drowned or burned. When this news spread, animal welfare groups and animal rights activists worldwide protested vehemently. Jane Goodall, a well-known wildlife and animal conservationist on a global scale, wrote a letter to FIFA Secretary General Mattias Grafström with respect to the matter.
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