Last
week it was the Srikrishna Report. Recording man's
inhumanity against man. This week it is the Brihanmumbai
Municipal Corporation. Resuming the killing of stray
dogs in Bombay. An example of man's inhumanity against
others.
The
Bombay riots are now history. The cruelty has already
happened. It is time to apply the healing touch,
not to open old wounds. The killing of stray, defenceless
animals is another matter. It means restoring a
barbaric, criminal tradition that was stopped under
public protest four years back. It is a wicked,
retrograde step and must be stopped at any cost
because it stands for cruelty about to take place.
And, in this case, we know who the killers are.
In fact, they are going to kill with the authority
of the State. With the money you and I pay as taxes.
So
there is still time to prevent it. It is in your
hands.
If
we keep quiet, we will be endorsing the bloodsport.
For a BMC that is losing Rs 3.76 billion this year
and are yet ready to spend another Rs 50 million
to kill these animals just because they love the
sight of blood on the streets.
Remember,
violence breeds on itself. Those who kill helpless
stray animals are those who can kill helpless old
people. When you desensitise the society you live
in, the violence you spawn will one day turn on
you, enter your own home, destroy those whom you
love. It is like rape, foeticide, bride burning.
It spreads quicker than you think.
In
Brazil, Colombia, Peru they kill stray children
on the streets. By shooting them. Orphans, bastards,
vagrants. Lost kids who have no one to call their
own. The reasons they give are identical. That these
are useless, filthy creatures, a public nuisance.
They spread diseases. They annoy people, put off
tourists, dirty the roads. But behind these excuses,
lies a simple truth: We want strays off the streets
because they keep reminding us how cruel and uncaring
we have become, how inured we are to the homeless
that we are not even ready to suffer them. We want
them dead. Officially murdered.
Today,
the BMC is about to kill dogs. Tomorrow, they will
pick up stray cattle from the streets and kill them,
uncaring about the feelings of millions of Hindus.
After that (who knows?) it may be stray children.
The chain of violence finds its own links. Each
senseless killing, each "encounter" leads
to another. Every violation of rights on this planet
- be it human rights or animal rights -- ends up
by increasing the sum total of violence in our life.
Violence that eventually leads back to your own
home.
Do
not complain, therefore, when your parents are murdered
just because they are old and defenceless, your
sister is set on fire because she took no dowry
with her, your children are ragged to death in colleges
just because everyone loves to watch the bloodsport.
Gandhi said the way we treat animals tells us the
kind of society we are creating for ourselves.
Nowhere
in the world do people kill stray animals as BMC
did for years. Like a Tarantino movie. Sadistic,
criminal, sickeningly inhuman. These were the pets
of the poor. They shared their meagre meals with
them. They kept them as watchdogs, protectors of
their shanty homes, their few belongings, their
wives and daughters. They saved them from the wanton
cruelty of thieves, robbers, cops, thugs, bullies
and corrupt BMC officials.
That
is why the BMC would send these natural born killers,
often at dead of night, to catch them with long
iron tongs and break their necks in front of their
owners. When the owners protested, the animals were
seized and taken away to filthy slaughter houses
to be crudely and painfully electrocuted to death.
Those who keep pets will tell you that it is like
watching the murder of a family member.
If
you do not believe me, come with me. I will show
you the slaughter houses. You will be ashamed that
the taxes you pay are being misused for such filthy,
obnoxious, sadistic purposes. For growing such purposeless
violence in our society, our life.
These
killings on the street shocked some of Bombay's
citizens so much that several non-government organisations
got together and begged BMC to stop. I was among
them. We produced statistics from all over the world
(and Bombay itself) to prove that killings do not
reduce the dog population. Only sterilisations can
do so. We showed them, with facts and figures, that
the more dogs they killed in Bombay, the more the
dog population grew, the more the bites, the more
the cases of rabies. Whereas, in cities where sterilisation
programmes are installed, the dog population has
actually come down. So have bites. This is internationally
recorded with facts and figures.
The
pressure from us was so much that the BMC had to
stop killing. This did not mean that they put the
Rs 50 million they annually spent on killing into
sterilisations. Of course not! The money was pocketed
by them and NGOs were told to find their own funds
to sterilise the dogs. They did. It was not easy
but these NGOs were led by amazing, public spirited
citizens like N W Alimchandani of Welfare of Stray
Dogs, Jigisha Thakur of All India Welfare of Animals,
Sudnya Patkar of In Defence of Animals, Satnam Ahuja
of Ahimsa, Colonel Nageshkar of Society for Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals. They were supported by Jain
bodies, dog lovers, and generous Bombayites who
realised that this cruel, barbaric ritual deserved
a quick burial.
But
this did not please the corrupt BMC officials, who
had for years used the killing programme to make
money and provide jobs to their hoods. So they used
their health officials (and pliant journalists)
to spread lies that the sterilisations had failed,
the stray dog menace was increasing, rabies was
on the rise.
Statistics
show that each is a lie. Municipal records have
been forged to establish this. Even the record of
dog bites does not distinguish between bites by
watchdogs at homes attacking unwelcome visitors
and stray dogs on the streets. In fact, BMC has
no statistics at all. They create and peddle only
falsehoods, to argue in favour of killings.
Even
though the sterilisation programme was not exactly
a raging success, since the BMC pocketed the entire
killings budget, the number of dogs on the streets
actually came down by 38 per cent. Dog bites fell
by 62 per cent. Most important, we stopped seeing
wanton killings on the streets. The shrieks of pregnant
dogs, of pups being murdered by breaking their necks
became a remote, shameful memory that Bombay forgot.
But
those who profited from these killings, whose livelihood
depended on this savagery did not sit still. They
kept campaigning, lobbying, lying and spreading
horror stories so consistently that it gave BMC
the perfect excuse, after four years of ahimsa,
to return to crime. Led by Sardar Tara Singh of
the BJP, who is single-handedly leading the campaign
to bring back killings on the streets.
Even
as you read this column, the killings are about
to start and unless we persuade the courts to see
the corrupt and evil design behind them, it will
not stop. The blood of these innocent strays will
be on your head and mine because we are part of
a savage, brutal, soulless society that believes
all living creatures who cannot afford a home have
no right to stay alive.
If
you believe that we must not kill defenceless strays
on the streets of Bombay, protest against this wicked
step. Stop the killing vans. Beat back the natural
born killers who come to pick up the animals in
your locality. Go to the courts. Tell them of the
illegality of these killings. Talk to your municipal
councillors, your MLAs, MPs. Take out protest morchas.
Adopt a stray. Ask your friends to do the same.
The poor will bless you.
Remember
what Gandhi said. A society that does not protest
when the weak and defenceless are killed suffers
in the hands of the same people who perpetrate the
violence on others. If you allow the State to institutionalise
killing, to enshrine violence, you will find it
impossible to tame the monster in future. You will
also become its victim.
A
bully does not stop unless you slap him hard. So
slap these killers real hard. For they understand
no other language. Show them your power as a citizen.
Tell them we have tolerated their corruption, their
bloodsport for too long. The battle lines are drawn.
We, the citizens of Bombay, will no longer take
things lying down. |