This issue is becoming a main topic. As we become more developed, we should not expect this type of behaviour. We just take severe action as an example no matter whether is cruelty to animals or humans!!
It makes my blood boil, we can do such things to defenceless animals.
Until the next time, cheers.
Tuesday September 6, 2011
Claws out over cat-astrophe
PETALING JAYA: Emotions ran high as pet owners and activists lambasted the abuse of cats at a pet hotel, insisting that action must be taken against the operators.
Pet owner Nur Arieffa
Adlan, 29, said she went to the pet boarding premises at Desa Moccis
and found her cat soaked in its own urine and faeces.
“I gave the
operator food for my cat but they did not even open the package,” she
said at a press conference organised by Malaysian Dogs Deserve Better
(MDDB) and animal rescue group Kucing Terbiar & Anjing Jalanan (Abandoned Cats & Stray Dogs) yesterday.
It
was reported that the cats were rescued after they were allegedly
starved in the locked pet boarding premises in Damansara Damai here and
Desa Moccis in Sungai Buloh.
Nine cats were found dead while the others appeared hungry, dirty and sickly.
Another pet owner, Lydia Ahmad, said the pet boarding operators left her four cats at her doorstep at midnight on Friday.
“All four of my cats were kept in one pet carrier. They were smelly and starving,” said the 29-year-old housewife.
Nur Alysha Noor Azman, 30, said she witnessed her three cats being dropped off by the pet hotel owner.
“Cages were stacked on top of one another in a stuffy van.
“The cats stank of urine and kept scratching their bodies due to fleas,” said Nur Alysha.
Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals chairman Christine Chin urged
the Veterinary Services Department to prosecute the pet boarding service
operators with maximum sentencing.
“We must push for the maximum fine of RM200 for each animal that was mistreated.
“So,
if there are 300 cats, the pet boarding operators would be fined
RM60,000,” she said, adding that they should also be jailed.
MDDB founder Wani Muthiah called the pet owners to lodge a police report immediately as it was a criminal act.
A
volunteer, known only as Nor Sailina, 28, who helped rescue the cats
from the pet boarding premises, was taking care of about 40 cats.
She urged owners who had not found their cats to check the Kucing Terbiar & Anjing Jalanan Facebook page.
Petaling
Jaya deputy OCPD Supt Meor Hamdan said the case had been handed over to
the Selangor Veterinary Services Department for further investigation.
He
said the police had recorded statements from the 29-year-old owner of
the pet boarding premises and a 28-year-old staff member.
In PUTRAJAYA,
Bernama reported that those caught being cruel to animals would face a
fine of up to RM100,000 and a jail term of not more than six months
under the Animal Welfare Act to be tabled in Parliament next year.
Veterinary Services director-general Datuk Dr Abd Aziz Jamaluddin
said the Act covered all animals, including fish and insects, whether
owned by individuals or businesses and would also define the failure to
feed them as cruelty.
No comments:
Post a Comment