STOP the culling of stray cats!

  • av: The Defenders of Stray Cats
  • mottagare: Goh Shih Yong Assistant Director, Corporate Communications for Chief Executive Officer, Goh Shih Yong, Assistant Director,Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority,AVA (Singapore)
No easy solution for strays 
A combination of measures are used to manage animal population here 
11:57 AM January 30, 2009 
Letter from Goh Shih Yong 
Assistant Director, Corporate Communications for Chief Executive Officer, 
Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority: 
We refer to the article “The outspoken doc” (Jan 20). 

Stray animal population control is a complex issue and there are no easy solutions. 

The Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) is fully committed to ensuring animal health and welfare and has adopted a balanced approach in the management of strays. 

For dogs, all must be licensed for the purpose of rabies control. Rabies is a disease fatal to man. It is endemic in this region. AVA culls stray dogs to manage the risk of rabies transmission should the disease be introduced into Singapore. 

As all dogs, whether sterilised or not, are susceptible to rabies, sterilised strays should be properly homed and licensed, and not be returned to the environment. 

For cats, AVA encourages sterilisation as a way to help prevent the proliferation of strays. 

This alone, however, is not enough. It is a fact that stray cats, including sterilised ones, create numerous disamenities to the public, ranging from nuisance to hygiene concerns, even physical threat. 

It is thus inevitable that culling has to be carried out as an additional measure to keep the stray population in check. 

AVA and the Town Councils (TC) are open to working together with the community and the caregivers in looking at keeping the stray cat population manageable. 

In any precinct, caregivers wanting to start a sterilisation programme for stray cats should approach and work with the TC, as the TC is in a better position to understand the concerns of the majority of its residents. 

We believe, above all, that public education on responsible pet ownership is key to reducing the problem of strays. 

To this end, AVA actively promotes and organises campaigns on responsible pet ownership. We are confident that with perseverance, there will be an improvement to the stray animals problem in the longer term. 

We thank Dr Tan Chek Wee for his passion and commitment in helping in the management of stray cats in the community. 

We are equally appreciative of the same effort put in by many other caregivers in their own communities. 

While the AVA and TC will continue to work together with the community and the caregivers, we must also balance the interest of all sectors in the community, including those who are adversely affected by stray cats.
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Stray cats that have been neutered are captured and culled. Why is this so? Then what is he point of sterilizing them if they end up dead anyways? We have a few strays in our area. But most of them are gone now. Please stop this senseless act. The killing stops now!
Stray cats that have been neutered and released to those that claimed them. But in the end, they are captured and culled. Why is this so? Then what is he point of sterilizing them if they end up dead anyways? We have a few strays in our area. But most of them are gone now. Please stop this senseless act. The killing stops now!
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