
Under the shade of a leafy green apricot tree on a scorching summer afternoon, Gokcen Yildiz scoops up a squirming ball of light-brown fur.
It licks her all over the face and she breaks out in giggles.
But laughter gives way to a more serious tone as she points to the dog’s back legs, which are missing paws. A sign, she says, of the abuse some of Turkey’s street dogs are subjected to.
Ms Yildiz is a secondary school physics teacher by day, street-dog advocate by night. The canine she’s holding is one of 160 she’s collected on the property where she lives on the outskirts of Turkey’s capital city, Ankara.
Her dogs are a small fraction of the estimated four million that make up the country’s street-dog population.
It’s a problem that has fiercely divided public opinion: are stray dogs a neighbourhood fixture to be looked after and loved?
CoUnder the shade of a leafy green apricot tree on a scorching summer afternoon, Gokcen Yildiz scoops up a squirming ball of light-brown fur.
It licks her all over the face and she breaks out in giggles.
But laughter gives way to a more serious tone as she points to the dog’s back legs, which are missing paws. A sign, she says, of the abuse some of Turkey’s street dogs are subjected to.
Ms Yildiz is a secondary school physics teacher by day, street-dog advocate by night. The canine she’s holding is one of 160 she’s collected on the property where she lives on the outskirts of Turkey’s capital city, Ankara.
Her dogs are a small fraction of the estimated four million that make up the country’s street-dog population.
It’s a problem that has fiercely divided public opinion: are stray dogs a neighbourhood fixture to be looked after and loved?
Continue reading at Turkey’s stray dogs face euthanasia under possible government bill – BBC News
And more on this: Türkiye proposes new bill to control street dogs as UK issues travel warning of ‘aggressive’ packs (msn.com)
Regards Mark
Sterilizing not killing – that is what to do. People, tourists should protest now!
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