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Save the Street Dog's anden hjemmeside

Denne hjemmeside bliver snarest oversat i flere sprog ...
I er mere en velkommen til  at hjælpe os med at oversætte hjemmesiden i fremmede sprog. Da vi hjælper dyr i fattige lande ville det være en fantastisk hjælp at kunne fortælle ude i verden hvem vi er, hvad vi gør og hvilken hjælp vi kan tilbyde...

SCAD organisation i Thailand, street dogs and cats

Established in 2002, SCAD (previously Soi Dog Rescue*) is a not-for-profit organisation with realistic goals: to reduce the number and improve the lives of Bangkok’s strays and, in so doing, create a happier and healthier environment for all to enjoy.

By involving residents and local businesses in neighbourhoods affected by large numbers of strays, we aim to encourage a better understanding of their plight and a readiness to tackle the problem at community level using humane and effective methods. SCAD provides appropriate information on the benefits of animal birth control (ABC), shares the knowledge required to be responsible pet owners and hopes to kindle in people the belief that showing kindness to all the animals that share our world has far better consequences for humankind than apathy or cruelty.

Kathmandu Animal treatment center

The Kathmandu Animal Treatment Centre (KAT Centre) was first conceived after Jan Salter, the founder of KAT, went to visit ’Help in Suffering’ (HIS) in Jaipur, India. Impressed with the way HIS had managed the difficult dog problem in Jaipur by implementing Animal Birth Control and Anti-rabies programmes, creating a rabies free dog friendly city, Jan came back to Nepal convinced that what had been achieved in Jaipur could also be done in Kathmandu. The foundation was registered as non-profit, charitable animal welfare organisation in June 2003 and was formally opened on 9th May 2004.

Thailand street dogs rescue center dog chance

  Introduction

Dog Chance
Offering Thailand's Street dogs a Second Chance
Through Immunzation, Neutering and Adoption Program

Life is tough for the street dogs of Thailand. It is hard for anyone who hasn't visited Thailand to understand the full scale of the stray dog problem .It is not just that hundreds of thousands of dogs are living on the streets [Bangkok alone has a conservative estimate of 150,000 strays] but it is the condition in which they are forced to live. Frightened, riddled with parasites , hairless with mange, most are hungry, many are starving, and hundreds live with fractured bones or are paralyzed because of car accidents. It is a national tragedy, and adding to Thailand's disgrace is the fact there are no humane shelters, no effective SPCA-type organizations as yet where animals can be taken or abuse reported, no well-run Government adoption facilities, no animal rights, no sensible laws governing pet ownership and certainly no animal law enforcement, no educational programmed or Government campaigns, and sadly euthanasia is practiced only rarely due to religious beliefs.

Shamefully, Thailand numbers among those countries labeled internationally as 'cruel to animals'. This label may have stuck due to Thailand's lack of action, funding and know how in tackling animal issues rather than by active abuse, but it is nevertheless harmful to the country's image. Gratefully though,in2001 Thailand's dog-lovers received a large bone from Bangkok's new Governor, Mr.Samak Suntornavej: there were to be no more mass exterminations [Cruelly administered by strychnine poisoning].Instead mass neutering was proposed with an initial target of 100,000 sterilizations per year in Bangkok alone. The policy is well meaning, but in program is rather barbaric. Meeting targets is often the drive behind the daily sterilizations at the Bangkok Metropolitan's Din Daeng Dog Pound, not the welfare and well-being of the dogs.

No funding is available for medicines to aid recovery, no treatment given for illnesses, no isolation facilities for dogs obviously suffering from contagious diseases [distemper, parvo virus, mange] and no vaccinations other than for rabies. The dogs are piled onto wheelbarrows, dumped in holding pens, and left to lie in their own urine, blood and faeces. Many trample over other sedated dogs as they stumble back into consciousness. Not surprisingly, many wounds get infected. Some dogs die. The programme will have to be radically altered before any civilized society can accept it as an effective and humane solution to Thailand's street dogs problem.

Animal rescue Kerala Indien

Our centre's main aim is to sterilise street dogs, on average 50 per month,
at the same time we vacinate against 'rabies'
We also take in sick and injured animals, not just dogs, but any animal requiring medical attention
and we take in abandoned puppies and try to rehome all those we can, and put the street dogs back
in the environment that they came from.

animal rescue center Bangalore Indien

CUPA is an organisation for the welfare of animals. A registered public charitable Trust, CUPA was founded in 1991 by Crystal Rogers, an Englishwoman who made India her home. From two tiny rooms in her house, CUPA today operates from three centres and occupies a total land area of ten and a half acres. More than 10,000 wild and domestic animals pass through its portals, and activities range from urban stray dog control to load bearing animal relief centres; from a veterinary hospital, emergency care centre, and 24/7 animal shelter operation to rehabilitation of wildlife in their indigenous forest zones.

CUPA is also involved with legal issues protecting the interest and welfare of animals, wild and domestic, in the High Court of Karnataka.
It has popularized the compassion for both stray and pet animals through the writing of columns in local newspapers, thus making it acceptable for urban people to adopt homeless animals.


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Vi hjælper gadehunde på Phukét

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Vores mail virker ikke - venligst skriv igen til vores kommende nye mailadresse thaihunde@gmail.com 

Soidog arbejder på at sterilisere/kastrere gadehunde og katte på ferieøen Phuket, medicinere og behandle dem der ellers ville være efterladt syge, fodrer dem der ellers ville sulte!
Vi har neutraliseret 29.292gadehunde og katte indtil august måned 2010.

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Soi dog i Thailand

 
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Soi Dog Foundation - Sponsors

Welcome to the Soi Dog Foundation

Soi Dog Foundation (SDF) is a not-for-profit, legally registered charitable organization in Thailand, Australia and Holland. Soi Dog helps the homeless, neglected and abused dogs and cats of Thailand.  (Charity registration number Thailand:  Phor . Gor . 39/2548. Charity registration number Australia: 58982568831. Charity registration number in Holland: 37120202)

Soi Dog is made up of people like yourself, be they financial supporters, field or shelter volunteers, fundraisers etc. with a common goal of helping neglected and abused dogs & cats.

De-sexing (Sterilization) has  been proven to be the  most effective  way to help the animals. Soi Dog has de-sexed 29,579 dogs and cats up to the end of August, 2010.

Below are pictures of Tai Chi, one dog, among literally thousands that people like you have helped. Tai Chi was found lying in the gutter, severely malnourished and could not even stand. The first photo you see is of Tai Chi when he was first brought to the shelter. The second photo was taken a month later with his new, loving owner Ina.

I f you would like to join Soi Dog either by becoming a sponsor of a dog or cat , or as a local or international volunteer please click on the orange links above.

Soi Dog aims to set an example for the Asian region on how to humanely reduce the number of unwanted dogs and cats through spaying and neutering, and to better the lives and living conditions of the stray dogs and feral cats of Asia.


To this end the Soi Dog Foundation has...

  • Sterilized 29,579 dogs and cats up to August, 2010.

       

  • Thousands more have been treated for injury and disease by providing emergency and ongoing veterinary treatment for abused and neglected dogs and cats.

        

  • Provides free veterinary treatment for those who cannot afford it at its clinic in Mai Khao.

       

  • Feeds hundreds of dogs and cats in temples and other locations.

       


How you can help 

  • Your financial support will make an immediate impact in helping the stray and neglected animals. The most effective way you can make a difference in the lives of these animals is by Sponsoring A Dog Or Cat Today. Soi Dog relies entirely on your donations to continue our work.

  • Shelter Land Appeal 2 - Soi Dog is currently raising money to purchase the remainder of the land on which our Shelter is located. We are appealing to our supporters to help by "purchasing" one or more square meters of the land as a way of helping. Please click here for more details:Shelter Land Appeal 2

  • Soi Dogs - The Movie -  is now available for purchase on high quality DVD. This is an entertaining documentary which follows the lives of the local Soi Dog team in their mission to help the dogs & cats of Thailand. You may wish to consider purchasing a copy for yourself and also copies for your friends and loved ones. To purchase one or more copies today please click here: Soi Dogs - The Movie

  • You may wish to consider one of the above options as a gift to friends or family members. Soi Dog can send gift certificates to friends or family members as a personalized acknowledgement of your gift with a difference.

 Why do we do it?  

                         

                       Glory Before Treatment        Glory After Treatment 

Click here to find out why we do it

(Note: This link contains graphic images.)