Posted on 03/29/2016 3:58:26 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Why are Turkeys dogs committing suicide? Turkeys problem of dog abandonment first emerged in coastal summer home communities, with people casting off dogs before heading back to cities at the end of the season. The phenomenon has now spilled over to urban areas as a result mostly of impulse purchases from pet shops often to reward children for good grades or as presents for Valentines Day and wedding anniversaries with little thought about the animals long-term care. The dogs most of them purebred and trained are either left in animal shelters or simply thrown out in Turkey's streets, which are already home to a large population of stray dogs and cats. Distraught and depressed, abandoned dogs often starve to death as they wait in vain for their owners to come take them back. In one extreme incident in 2012, a dog abandoned in a fourth-story apartment in the city of Bursa jumped from the balcony in what the media described as a suicide. Defne Esra Yazicioglu, chairwoman of Turkey's Animal Lovers Society, says many dogs left in animal shelters stop eating and drinking water, effectively committing suicide, once they lose hope and feel unwanted. In some cases, we have failed to save dogs even after putting them on an intravenous drip.
The problem has become so prevalent that local activists have joined hands with foreign peers to send Turkish dogs for adoption abroad, so far flying 145 golden retrievers to the United States.
The Animal Life Rights Confederation recently paid for a television ad to raise public awareness of the plight of abandoned pets and encourage adoption. The ad titled Adopt from shelters, give them a life and shot with the support of Turkish celebrities features a dog named Boza. The dog is first shown seated at a dinner table with its family, who give it a birthday cake with candles. The next moment Boza is seen lonely and disheveled in the streets before ending up in a shelter, awaiting rescue with other abandoned pets. We hope the clip will raise awareness on the adoption of cats and dogs struggling to survive in shelters and contribute, even if a bit, to forestalling [the notion of] buying love with money, said the confederation in a statement.
In Istanbul alone, about 400 street dogs are either killed or injured in traffic accidents each year. Ahmet Kemal Senpolat, the head of the Animal Rights Federation, gave Al-Monitor the figure from the road authorities, saying, Without a backward glance, people drop long-time pets in the street or in shelters. The dogs always expect their owners to return, but after a while they lose hope. Dog suicides are very frequent in animal shelters.
Popular Turkish columnist Bekir Coskun an ardent animal lover who has dedicated a best-selling book, Letters to Pako, to his dog and shot a TV series with the same name explained that abandoned dogs kill themselves unwittingly. They are so devoted to their owners that they expect them to come back. Out of distress, they stop eating and drinking water, and their immune systems collapse. They commit suicide without knowing it, he told Al-Monitor.
The good news is that Turkeys animal rights movement has grown stronger and more vocal in recent years. The governments intention to rewrite the constitution has prompted a drive to enshrine animal rights in the new charter, in addition to efforts to amend existing legislation.
The current law on the protection of animals, enacted in 2004, stipulates only symbolic fines for those who violate provisions on the mistreatment of animals. For a truly deterrent effect, the law needs to have tougher sanctions and provide clearer guidelines for the police and the judiciary.
According to Senpolat, the courts should take an efficient and decisive lead on the issue. There is already a draft on animal rights for the new constitution. This, however, should not be something vague like Turkey is a democratic state based on the rule of law that respects the environment. The constitutional provisions should be applicable, he told Al-Monitor. Yet to stamp out violence against animals and increase awareness, the Law on the Protection of Animals is the one that truly needs to be amended. We have been struggling for this for a whole decade now. People who abuse animals should be sent to therapy and face charges carrying prison sentences. Thats how the civilized world deals with it. There is no reason why we cant do the same.
The activists, Senpolat noted, have taken their campaign to the highest echelons of the state. Weve explained to the president what we demand. Weve met separately with all four parties in parliament. They have promised joint action to legislate a new law, he said. Earlier drafts became void due to the government change [after the 2015 elections], but the incumbent government insists it will stand behind the changes.
In remarks to Anatolia news agency earlier this year, Selcuk Ozdag, deputy chairman of the ruling Justice and Development Party, pledged that the law on the protection of animals would be amended this year in line with the example of European countries.
Meanwhile, a political party is expected to soon formally promote the animal rights movement. Activist Metin Kilic has stated the Freedom for Animals Party will focus not only on pets like cats and dogs, but all animals. In a newspaper interview earlier this month, Kilic grumbled that most pro-animal associations ignored the issue of sacrificial slaughter in Islam, wary of antagonizing religious conservatives. They love cats and dogs but keep silent on the slaughter of other animals, he said. We will be the volunteer advocates of all voiceless animals.
Coskun is optimistic the party will generate strong popular support. When I started writing my columns about Pako, I realized what a great potential Turkey has in terms of animal lovers. There is a pet in almost one in every two homes, he said. In coastal regions and big cities, people have come to react furiously if someone mistreats an animal. When I lived on [the Aegean island of] Cunda, a guy was almost lynched for kicking a street cat.
Ping
This has been done in Italy for a long time. It is savagery.
The Tirkish population will toss their pets to keep from being targeted by the radical Islamic minds now running Turkey. What Attaturk tried to accomplish has been snuffed out by the demon of Islam.
islam
This is one of those things that cause me to hate people.
People who do this to dogs, are less than dogs themselves.
What one does to people or creatures that one considers beneath their station, is a mark of their character.
Horrible people.
I live in a tourist town in the CO mountains. College students do this every year. They get a dog or cat while they’re working the summer here but when summer is over they can’t take them back to school so they dump them in the woods thinking they will fend for themselves over a Rocky Mountain winter. The coyotes thank them for their donations.
Dogs don’t kill themselves. Muzz’s hate dogs. It’s part of their unnatural ideology.
The state of pets in Turkey is quite sad... many chained to posts etc. all quite undernourished. Cats don’t fare much better, but they are natural hunters.
Billy Hayes had it right about Turkey:
“For a nation of pigs, it sure is funny you don’t eat ‘em! Jesus Christ forgave the bastards, but I can’t! I hate! I hate you! I hate your nation! And I hate your people! And I ___ your sons and daughters because they’re pigs! You’re a pig! You’re all pigs.”
This is really good. Next, they need a human rights movement.
I live near Tallahassee. Every time school ends and the students leave a huge number take their dogs out into the country, where I live, and let them go. You see dogs desperately trying to stop cars in the morning and then they are dead when you next drive by. Dozens of cats die within days, many of the on the road. What possesses they kids who take an apartment pet and just turn it loose? Monstrous.
Animals are better than a lot of people in this world.
Our dog, Dub, and BooBoo, our cat are stellar. I love ‘em
and am thankful for them.
Looks like the Turks treat dogs almost as bad as they treat human beings #AskAnArmenian
I think it just shows how uncivilized they are, I’d respect them more if they ate them.
Heartbreaking.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.