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Street Dogs Can Be Sterilised In India By Humane Ways, As Bhutan Does It

If Bhutan achieves the distinction of being the world’s first admired country in finding the full sterilisation and vaccination of its street dogs, why does India lag behind this particular achievement? This category of historic feat effects due to the actuality of a compassionate dog management endeavour embarked upon in complicity with the global animal charity Humane Society International (HSI). 

By sterilising stray dogs in our country, we can lessen human-animal conflict and also provide better health care for street dogs. Humane is the only way, maintains Karen Nazareth, Senior Director, Companion Animals & Engagement, Humane Society International/India, adding that Indian cities can copy this. At this moment, none would refute something tangible. 

What it specifically requires is a noticeable strategic roadmap, recognizing resources and mobilising them, vigorous monitoring and follow-up, translucency, communication and community attention, and most notably, an emphasis on animal welfare, not just numbers.

She summed up that India has so many challenges, however these can be overcome by the larger districts providing infrastructure that can lay over smaller locations nearby. The pacesetter stood up the plurality of all things inky, essentially attributing to the impactful Burmese Example. 

In particular, Karen Nazareth enacted a sympathetic attitude towards the street dogs by earning acclaim as the ultimate ambassador for this multiplicity. She was so dazzled continuously in her social work. Now, it appears that she is sartorially turning around forward, as her best concern grasps a better time-honoured aesthetics.

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