Wednesday, October 27, 2010

WHAT DO WE DO?



A lady from Klang saw a group of men catching a young dog and placing it into a sack while on her way to a shop on Tuesday night. The dog struggled and the man holding the sack swung it and hit a lamp post several times. When they realised they were being watched, the man dumped the sack and left the place with his group. Fearing for her safety, the lady returned home and went back the following day and saw the dog was still lying on the sack without moving. Yesterday evening her daughter brought the dog to us and we have admitted her at one of our panel vets. There was nothing wrong with the young dog except for some swelling around the abdomen - probably due to being whacked against the lamp post. She had refused to move from the spot out of fear and also trauma. Going by the facts given to us, we believe the group of men were Vietnamese and the dog was probably their dinner for the day. How do we tackle a problem such as this? For them, the dog is a food source just like cattle, poultry and pigs - among others. The only way would be to make dog meat consumption illegal here - like how it is in countries such as Taiwan. But would the authorities do this? I am sure most of you would recall a top ranking official from the Department of Veterinary Services who said that dog meat consumption should be regarded as being okay. There are many dog meat restaurants in this country - where do they get their supply? From the pounds? Where?

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

poor little doggie..sad but this is malaysia..

A chinese in M'sia said...

This is disgusting! in fact i've heard a lot about Vietnamese stealing/catching/eating stray dogs esp the young ones. Some of them catch the small naive pupps & keep them till they are bigger only then they slaughter the poor creatures. Even many chinese eat dog meat in this country...
Apart from shedding a few tears...:( what else can we do? this is a very helpless situation!

Anonymous said...

Well...for the vietnamese i think its they culture and also the need for food. Most of them aren't fed properly when they are working here.

I remember years ago when i went to thailand, they say only if you are a very important guest, they will slaughter the dogs that were walking around. How can that be change?

Anonymous said...

How is the dog now?