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Chennai Animal Lovers Protest In Rain For Street Dogs Amid Top Court's Order

Chennai Animal Lovers Protest In Rain For Street Dogs Amid Top Court's Order

NDTV15 hours ago
Chennai:
Braving showers, more than a thousand animal lovers took to the streets of Chennai today, demanding justice for community dogs.
The protest comes in the wake of the Supreme Court's recent order directing the Delhi administration to move street dogs to shelters, citing a spike in dog bite cases, rabies and human fatalities.
Protesters warned that the order, if implemented, would lead to large-scale deaths of dogs, given the absence of infrastructure or funds to care for lakhs of animals. "Shelters will turn into concentration camps. Dogs will fight, kill each other, and perish. This is inhuman," said a participant.
#WATCH | Tamil Nadu: Dog/animal lovers, animal rights activists staged a protest in Chennai against the Supreme Court order to send all stray dogs in Delhi-NCR to shelters within 8 weeks. pic.twitter.com/iTY3uSRXRq
— ANI (@ANI) August 17, 2025
Instead of implementation of the top court's order, they demanded that governments focus on mass sterilisation and vaccination programmes-the only proven scientific solution to curb the street dog population and rabies.
Many pointed out that sterilisation efforts suffered during the Covid pandemic, leading to the surge in dog numbers. "If we can hold elections across India, we can certainly sterilise dogs too," argued another animal rights activist.
Chennai's marchers also stressed that dogs should not be penalised for the failures of municipalities. "It's human mistakes-poor waste management, lack of sterilisation-that cause dog bites. Why should dogs suffer?" asked Chaya, urging the Supreme Court to reconsider its order.
Several speakers reminded that community dogs are part of the urban ecosystem and provide natural security. "Dogs are loyal citizens of this country. Why should they be thrown out?" said another protester, adding that co-existence, empathy and effective municipal action were the way forward.
Protesters held placards declaring, "Every animal has a right to live," and "Stop calling them strays." They stood in solidarity with dog lovers in Delhi, warning of a "vacuum effect" if lakhs of dogs were suddenly removed from the streets.
With allegations of misused funds under the Animal Birth Control programme and lack of accountability among civic bodies, protesters demanded stricter oversight and investment in scientific sterilisation. "During Covid, we didn't kill human beings who tested positive. Why are we targeting dogs?" one your student activist asked. Antony another activist said "Do we ban vehicles because people die in road accidents ?" asked Antony Rubin, an animal rights activist. A woman activist compared this to HIV spike. She added "India did not ban sex but promoted safe sex. We need to find solutions".
As the Supreme Court continues hearing appeals, animal lovers across India hope their voices will push for a humane, workable solution-sterilisation and vaccination, not mass confinement.
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'List of 65 lakh voters deleted from Bihar rolls uploaded within 56 hours of SC order': CEC Gyanesh Kumar
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'List of 65 lakh voters deleted from Bihar rolls uploaded within 56 hours of SC order': CEC Gyanesh Kumar

New Delhi, Aug 17 (ANI): Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar addresses a press conference on Bihar Special Intensive Revision (SIR), at the National Media Centre in New Delhi on Sunday. (ANI Photo/Jitender Gupta) NEW DELHI: Stating that EC has uploaded the list of 65 lakh voters deleted from Bihar's draft electoral roll within 56 hours of SC's directive, CEC Gyanesh Kumar on Sunday exhorted electors and political parties in the state to file their claims and objections in the remaining 15-day timeframe, saying flagging any errors after Sept 1, shall be pointless. Justifying its decision to undertake SIR exercise in Bihar, EC said all the political parties had, for the past two decades, been demanding that imperfections in electoral roll be corrected. "Acting on this demand, EC decided to take up SIR, starting with Bihar," he told a press conference here, while adding that the timeline for SIR in other poll-bound states will be announced "at the appropriate time". Slamming the "vote theft" allegations levelled by opposition parties and their chiefs, EC said the electors, party representatives and booth level officers on the ground are working in a harmonious and transparent manner, endorsing the exercise with their signatures and video testimonials. "It is a matter of concern that endorsements of district presidents and booth level agents of parties are either not reaching their state level and national leadership, or the latter have chosen to overlook these, and are trying to spread misinformation," said Kumar. Clearing the air on timing of SIR, the CEC said that since the annual summary revision was with respect to Jan 1, 2025, April 1 was too early to start the next revision, while Oct 1 would have been too close to the assembly poll due in Bihar in Nov. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like American Investor Warren Buffett Recommends: 5 Books For Turning Your Life Around Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo As regards allegations of hundreds and thousands of voters being registered on the same address, Kumar said in the absence of proper numbering of houses/addresses by the panchayats/municipalities and also the presence of unauthorised settlements, it has been an accepted norm for EC/BLO to register voters from notional addresses, often carrying 'zero' house number. Electoral roll excerpts shared by EC with TOI, of Assam in 1966, Rajasthan in 1980, UP in 1985, show their house number as either missing or as '01'.

In May crackdown on ‘foreigners', only Bengali-origin Muslims sent to Assam detention centre
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In May crackdown on ‘foreigners', only Bengali-origin Muslims sent to Assam detention centre

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The Assam prisons department informed Scroll that 53 declared foreigners were arrested and admitted in the camp on May 27, 28 and 29and July 8, all of them Muslims. However, the RTI reply has no record of Islam and Bhanu being admitted to the camp in May. Moreover, when Scroll put together an Assam government affidavit in the Supreme Court and the information from the RTI response, it became clear – in the last nearly 12 months, only Muslim declared foreigners have faced arrest and incarceration in Assam. The CAA model Foreigner tribunals are quasi-judicial bodies unique to Assam, which rule on citizenship cases. They have been accused of arbitrariness and bias, and declaring people foreigners on the basis of minor spelling mistakes, a lack of documents or lapses in memory. Many of the appeals to FT orders are pending in the higher courts. In the last five decades, Assam's foreigners tribunals have declared 1.6 lakh people as non-citizens, of whom 69,559 are Hindus. 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After Supreme Court direction, EC publishes list of names deleted from Bihar voter list along with reason for deletion
After Supreme Court direction, EC publishes list of names deleted from Bihar voter list along with reason for deletion

Indian Express

timean hour ago

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After Supreme Court direction, EC publishes list of names deleted from Bihar voter list along with reason for deletion

Bihar's Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) on Sunday published details of 65 lakh names deleted from the draft electoral rolls in the first phase of the special intensive revision (SIR). This comes after the Supreme Court, while hearing petitions against the SIR, had directed the Election Commission to publish the details of those whose names were deleted from the draft rolls and the reasons for the deletion. Bihar CEO Vinod Singh Gunjiyal said in a statement, 'In light of the interim order passed by the Hon'ble Supreme Court on 14.08.2025…, it is hereby notified that the list of such electors whose names were included in the Electoral Roll of the year 2025 (before the draft publication) but are not included in the draft roll published on 01.08.2025, along with reasons (Deceased/Permanently Shifted/Absent/Repeated Entry), has been published on the websites of the Chief Electoral Officer, Bihar, and all District Election Officers of the State of Bihar.' Names can be searched on the Bihar CEO's website using electors' photo identity card (EPIC) numbers. Booth-wise lists can also be downloaded. The list has details such as name, EPIC number, father's name and reason for deletion. The Opposition welcomed the move. RJD spokesperson Mrityunjay Tiwari said, 'The decision came on the day INDIA bloc leaders Rahul Gandhi, Tejashwi Prasad Yadav and others have embarked on a yatra to travel through 22 Bihar districts to make voters aware of their voting rights. We can now analyse data and take up cases of voters whose names are wrongly deleted.' Opposition parties and other activists have raised concerns over potential wrongful deletions during the SIR process. They have claimed that several people declared dead during the process, and have had their names deleted, are in fact alive. Out of 7.89 crore voters in Bihar, 7.24 crore were enrolled in the first draft. Out of the 65 lakh names deleted from the list, 36 lakh were shown to have permanently moved elsewhere, and 22 lakh were said to be dead.

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