Indians walk away from family pets amid rumours dogs can spread coronavirus
Indians walk away from family pets amid rumours dogs can spread coronavirus
By South Asia correspondent James Oaten and Som Patidar in New Delhi
3 hrs ago
...
On a warm evening in Delhi's southern suburbs, a white van driving along the near-empty streets is causing a commotion.
The vehicle has attracted a small pack of street dogs, which are bounding beside the vehicle, barking and wagging their tails frantically.
It pulls over, and animal feeder Sonya Ghosh and two other volunteers get to work, serving large piles of chicken, dried dog food and rice into bowls for the hungry animals.
Within minutes the dogs have had their fill and the team drives off to the next location to repeat the process again and again.
"People call me a dog mother," Ms Ghosh says, laughing.
"They also call me Kutte Wali Aunty, which means aunty to all the dogs."
...
A high number of pets have also been abandoned in recent weeks over fears the animals could spread coronavirus.
"We are working approximately double the time because of the number of dogs that have come out on the road," Ms Ghosh says.
Indians walk away from family pets amid rumours dogs can spread coronavirus
By South Asia correspondent James Oaten and Som Patidar in New Delhi
3 hrs ago
...
On a warm evening in Delhi's southern suburbs, a white van driving along the near-empty streets is causing a commotion.
The vehicle has attracted a small pack of street dogs, which are bounding beside the vehicle, barking and wagging their tails frantically.
It pulls over, and animal feeder Sonya Ghosh and two other volunteers get to work, serving large piles of chicken, dried dog food and rice into bowls for the hungry animals.
Within minutes the dogs have had their fill and the team drives off to the next location to repeat the process again and again.
"People call me a dog mother," Ms Ghosh says, laughing.
"They also call me Kutte Wali Aunty, which means aunty to all the dogs."
...
A high number of pets have also been abandoned in recent weeks over fears the animals could spread coronavirus.
"We are working approximately double the time because of the number of dogs that have come out on the road," Ms Ghosh says.