logo
Morocco unveils policies it hopes bolster the care and management of stray dogs

Morocco unveils policies it hopes bolster the care and management of stray dogs

Independent18-05-2025

A mutt with a blue tag clipped to her ear whimpers as she's lifted from a cage and carried to a surgery table for a spay and a rabies vaccine, two critical steps before she's released back onto the streets of Morocco's capital.
The 'Beldi,' as Moroccan street dogs are called, is among the hundreds taken from Rabat to a dog pound in a nearby forest. As part of an expanded 'Trap, Neuter, Vaccinate and Return' program, dogs like her are examined, treated and ultimately released with tags that make clear they pose no danger.
'We have a problem: That's stray dogs. So we have to solve it, but in a way that respects animals,' said Mohamed Roudani, the director of the Public Health and Green Spaces Department in Morocco's Interior Ministry.
Trying to balance safety and animal well-being
Morocco adopted 'Trap, Neuter, Vaccinate and Return,' or TVNR, in 2019. One facility has opened in Rabat and more are set to be launched in at least 14 other cities, aligning Morocco with recommendations from the World Organization for Animal Health. The government has spent roughly $23 million over the past five years on animal control centers and programs.
Roudani said Morocco's updated approach balanced public safety, health and animal well-being. Local officials, he added, were eager to expand TVNR centers throughout the country.
Though population estimates are challenging, based on samples of marked and tagged stray dogs, Moroccan officials believe they number between 1.2 to 1.5 million. Some neighborhoods welcome and care for them collectively. However, others decry their presence as a scourge and note that more than 100,000 Moroccans have needed rabies vaccinations after attacks.
A draft law is in the works that would require owners to vaccinate pets and impose penalties for animal abuse.
Inside the center
On a visit organized for journalists to a TNVR center in El Aarjate, enclosures for dogs appear spacious and orderly, with clean floors and the scent of disinfectant. Food and water bowls are refreshed regularly by staff who move between spaces, offering gentle words and careful handling. Some staff members say they grow so attached to the dogs that they miss them when they're released to make space to treat incoming strays.
Veterinarians and doctors working for the Association for the Protection of Animals and Nature care for between 400 and 500 stray dogs from Rabat and surrounding cities. Dogs that veterinarians deem unhealthy or aggressive are euthanized using sodium pentobarbital, while the rest are released, unable to spread disease or reproduce.
Youssef Lhor, a doctor and veterinarian, said that aggressive methods to cull dogs didn't effectively make communities safer from rabies or aggression. He said it made more sense to to try to have people coexist with dogs safely, noting that more than 200 had been released after treatment from the Rabat-area center.
'Slaughtering dogs leads to nothing. This TNVR strategy is not a miracle solution, but it is an element that will add to everything else we're doing,' he said, referring to 'Treat, Neuter, Vaccinate, Return.'
It's designed to gradually reduce the stray dog population while minimizing the need for euthanasia.
It's a program that Morocco is eager to showcase after animal rights groups accused it of ramping up efforts to cull street dogs after being named co-host of the 2030 FIFA World Cup last year.
Animal rights groups protest
Animal rights groups routinely use large sporting events to draw attention to their cause and similarly targeted Russia in the lead-up to the 2018 FIFA World Cup there.
Citing unnamed sources and videos it said were shot in Morocco, the International Animal Welfare and Protection Coalition claimed in January that Morocco was exterminating 3 million dogs, particularly around cities where stadiums are being built. The allegations, reported widely by international media lacking a presence in Morocco, triggered anti-FIFA protests as far away as Ahmedabad, India.
'These dogs are being shot in the street, often in front of children, or dragged away with wire nooses to die slow, agonizing deaths,' Ian Ward, the coalition's chairman, said in a statement.
Moroccan officials vehemently deny the claims, say they're implementing the very programs that activists propose, including TNVR. They rebuff the idea that any policy is related to the World Cup. Still, critics see their efforts as publicity stunts and are skeptical such programs are as widespread as officials claim.
Instances of mistreatment and euthanasia by gunshot have been reported in local media but Moroccan officials say, despite international attention, they're isolated incidents and don't reflect on-the-ground reality nationwide.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Millions more at risk of world's most infectious disease after patient visits second-largest Texas county
Millions more at risk of world's most infectious disease after patient visits second-largest Texas county

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Millions more at risk of world's most infectious disease after patient visits second-largest Texas county

One of America's largest counties is on red alert after a resident was diagnosed with measles, potentially exposing millions more to the deadly disease. According to Dallas County Health and Human Services in Texas, the patient was a female in her mid-20s who was fully vaccinated but contagious from May 30 until June 7. She is currently a resident of Dallas County, which is the the second-most populous county in Texas and the eighth-most populous in the US, with a population of over 2.6 million people. The infected woman also traveled to the city of Plano, and she visited two businesses. On May 31 between the hours of 9am to noon the infected woman visited Lemma Coffee in the downtown area and the next day, on June 1, she went to the First Baptist church from 1pm to 5:30pm. Health officials said the woman has received care, and they are working to identify and notify individuals who may have been exposed. According to DCHHS, this is an ongoing investigation of an isolated case because the source of the woman's exposure to measles is not known. However, the new case comes as Texas is battling a measles outbreak that has infected nearly 800 people and killed two children. Dallas officials are warning anyone who fears they may have been exposed to contact their health provider and monitor for symptoms in what is the latest in a string of measles scares to rock America's major cities and travel hubs. This is the first case in Dallas County amid a major outbreak across Texas. At this time, 744 cases have been confirmed in the state since late January. Ninety-six of the patients have been hospitalized and there have been two fatalities in unvaccinated school-aged children who lived in the outbreak area. Overall, in the US there have been 1,168 confirmed measles cases reported by 34 states and at least three deaths. Measles is the world's most contagious disease - infecting nine out of 10 people exposed - but those who are fully vaccinated are protected in 97 percent of cases. The illness causes tiny white spots inside the mouth, flat red spots on the neck, torso, arms, legs, and feet, ear infections and a high fever. If severe, it can lead to life-threatening pneumonia. Children need two doses of the measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine: the first at age 12-15 months, and the second dose at age 4-6 years. Babies ages 6-11 months should get an early dose if traveling internationally. Adults should also check to see if they are immune to measles. About one to three in 1,000 people with measles dies of the illness. In an updated advisory, the CDC is warning that people can get infected with measles during travel or at crowded events, unless they are fully vaccinated or have had the disease. The notice reads: 'Travelers can catch measles in many travel settings, including travel hubs like airports and train stations, on public transportation like airplanes and trains, at tourist attractions, and at large, crowded events. 'Infected travelers can bring the disease back to their home communities where it can spread rapidly among people who are not immune.' The government agency recommends that all travelers be fully vaccinated against measles before traveling to an international destination. The last time measles was this rife in the US was in 2019, when there were 1,274 cases reported for the entire year. Measles was officially eradicated in the US in 2000 amid a successful vaccination campaign. At the time, the CDC described achieving measles elimination status in the US as a 'historic public health achievement'. However, a recent study found uptake of the vaccine among children declined in eight in 10 US counties last year, which is being signaled as the cause of the measles resurgence. Overall, vaccine rates fell three percent across the country. It means that 91 percent of children are vaccinated against measles, which is below the 95 percent needed to prevent the disease from spreading and causing deaths. The Johns Hopkins University researchers warned that if vaccination rates continue to fall, measles is likely to return and become a common infection among Americans.

Goal to end AIDS by 2030 'more off-track' after Trump cuts, UNAIDS head says
Goal to end AIDS by 2030 'more off-track' after Trump cuts, UNAIDS head says

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

Goal to end AIDS by 2030 'more off-track' after Trump cuts, UNAIDS head says

JOHANNESBURG, June 13 (Reuters) - Donald Trump's cuts to HIV/AIDS programmes will further derail an already faltering plan to end the disease as a public health threat by 2030, UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima said on Friday. With 1.3 million new infections in 2023, according to the latest data, the world was already "off track," Byanyima told journalists in South Africa, a country with the world's largest number of people living with HIV, at 8 million. "Less funding means we will get more and more off-track," she said in the main city of Johannesburg, after meeting President Cyril Ramaphosa to discuss Africa's HIV/AIDS strategy in light of the U.S. president slashing billions of dollars in foreign aid in February. "We don't know yet what that impact will be, but impact there will be: ... already you see in several countries a drop in the number of people going to clinics," Byanyima said. Before the cuts, prevention programmes had brought down new infections, she said, but they were "not coming down fast enough to reach our target of 2023." Now, with the shuttering of community prevention clinics across Africa, infections would surely rise, though it wasn't clear yet by how much, she said. The administration's decision to axe swaths of U.S. foreign aid has disrupted the supply of life-saving HIV treatments, with some countries facing potentially running out. In South Africa, about a fifth of whose HIV budget was U.S.-funded, testing and monitoring of HIV patients is already falling. Byanyima said even poor, indebted countries were managing to plug funding gaps, but called on other rich nations to step in. "We're saying to the donors: this is one of the diseases ... without a cure, without a vaccine, yet we're seeing progress," she said. "If you've got a good success story, why drop it ... before you end it?"

Calls to ban restrictive pens for pregnant pigs after analysis of footage from Devon farm
Calls to ban restrictive pens for pregnant pigs after analysis of footage from Devon farm

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Calls to ban restrictive pens for pregnant pigs after analysis of footage from Devon farm

The use of restrictive pens to temporarily house pregnant pigs in the UK severely compromises their welfare can traumatise them and should be banned, experts have said. Analysis by Animal Equality UK of footage collected from a farm in Devon, England, showed that three mother pigs in farrowing crates spent more than 90% of their time lying down, with one not standing up at all for a day. On average, between them they bit the bars (a sign of extreme stress) more than once an hour. The farm is part of the Red Tractor scheme, used to mark food produced to a 'high standard' and supplies Tesco. Animal Equality UK says it is illustrative of the wider problem with farrowing crates, with more than 200,000 sows confined in them each year in the UK. Dr Helen Lambert, who is on the stakeholder advisory board for the Animal Welfare Research Network, was one of several experts who analysed the footage, which was collected continuously across five days. She said: 'All three pigs spent most of their time lying down – considerably more time than postpartum pigs, who can move more freely. Throughout the footage, the sows can be seen engaging in two key stereotypic behaviours: sham chewing and bar-biting… They are usually born out of frustration and stress due to an animal's inability to perform normal, instinctive behaviours.' 'The mental state of these three pigs is severely compromised.' Animal Equality UK's report says sows will spend nearly a quarter of their lives (22%) in farrowing crates before, during and after birth when they are lactating. The crates supposedly prevent sows crushing their crushing piglets by restricting their movement, but have been banned in several countries because of animal welfare concerns. Prof Steve McCulloch, fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, also reviewed Animal Equality UK's findings and said: 'The principal 'benefit' of farrowing crates is not to reduce piglet mortality, but to minimise production costs … Breeding sows are very likely to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder once they have been removed from the farrowing crates at weaning.' Animal Equality UK said the footage also showed one pig did not touch the enrichment provided (a plastic stick or wooden block) during the five-day period, none of the pigs were able to walk, root, or nest and the lights were on continuously. The National Pig Association (NPA) and Red Tractor both said they were supportive of producers moving away from conventional farrowing systems towards flexible ones whereby the crate is opened once the piglets are more robust. An NPA spokesperson said: 'This transition must be within a sensible timeframe and supported by the market and/or by infrastructure grants in order to make it viable for producers and not push businesses out of pig production.' But the report says such systems are 'ethically indefensible' in failing to address core welfare issues and piglet mortality is often higher in 'flexible' pens than traditional crates. Abigail Penny, the executive director of Animal Equality UK, said: 'Cages must be banned. Forcing intelligent mother pigs to eat, sleep, and defecate in a highly cramped space is unimaginably cruel. Such extreme confinement takes a terrible toll on the animals, who – unable to escape – inevitably become hopeless and traumatised.' A Tesco spokesperson said: 'We take animal welfare matters extremely seriously and immediately suspended the farm when we became aware of this footage last year. We have worked closely with the supplier and only allowed the farm to return into our supply once both Red Tractor and our specialist agriculture team were satisfied that robust action had been taken. The farm continues to be monitored by our supplier to ensure conditions have improved.' WJ Watkins and Son, which owns Cross Farm in Holsworthy, Devon, where the filming took place, was also approached for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store