Correct. Actually it is done in even more horrible way.
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350 dogs killed in Cochin (Kochi) to prepare for the 2012 ‘Tourist Season’, 12 ABC dogs killed in Princess Street alone. You still want to vacation in Kerala?
Posted on | December 2, 2011
In Oct 2011, 350 dogs were killed in Cochin at the beginning of the tourist season our source reported today. A group of people possibly shopkeepers reportedly of a certain community got together to engage a group of people to kill the dogs. It is not know immediately that the people who killed were from outside Cochin or catchers/ employees of the Cochin Municipal Corporation
Earlier, in Sept 2011, 12 dogs were brutally killed in single busy tourist shopping street in Cochin (Princess Street). There were killed in front of several people our source personally received 7 different calls as the killing was going on. No one on location wanted to intervene out of the fear of the assaulters – who mercilessly killed the dogs in plain view. All the dogs were ABC dogs & were vaccinated by an NGO operating in Cochin.
Kerala Tourism | 350 dogs killed in Cochin (Kochi) to prepare for the 2012 ‘Tourist Season’, 12 ABC dogs killed in Princess Street alone. You still want to vacation in Kerala?
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Extremely human way of killing stray dogs in India
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As many as 56 stray dogs were killed in Mowlivakkam village panchayat, a western suburb near Poonamallee in the past two days.
According to members of Blue Cross of India, they received a call from residents of Mowlivakkam that stray dogs and puppies were being rounded-up and killed by administering lethal injections since Tuesday evening.
Dawn Williams, Residential General Manager, Blue Cross, Chennai, said he visited Mowlivakkam around 9 a.m. on Wednesday and noticed a tractor trailer filled with carcasses of stray dogs. There were 34 carcasses, including 11 pups. The tractor trailer was operated by the village panchayat to collect and dispose garbage as part of its solid waste management project.
Personnel at Mangadu police station, where a case was registered following a complaint from Mr. Williams, told The Hindu that enquiries revealed that the village panchayat's conservancy staff had acted on oral instructions from elected representatives. A total of 22 dogs and pups were killed on Tuesday.
While none has yet been named as accused, police said they were conducting further investigations. The carcasses were sent to Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, Vepery, for post-mortem.
A ‘grama sabha' (village council) meeting of the panchayat was held on October 2 where the elected representatives promised to look into complaints of residents about the problems caused by stray dogs moving around in packs.
Mr. Williams said the animals were captured in a crude manner using rings made from steel strings attached to wooden poles. Once captured, the lethal injections were administered to them and the carcasses were loaded to the vehicle to be taken for mass burial. This practice was a blatant violation of Supreme Court guidelines and punishable under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act and also under Indian Penal Code, he said.
Stray dogs poisoned to death in Mowlivakkam - The Hindu