A flashback of our front-page report last Friday. |
Last year, the local council handled 540 complaints about stray dogs.
However, MPJBT corporate and public relations department administrative officer Salwa Abd Rashid said the NGOs had to be committed if they wished to work with the local council.
"We cannot release a dog once we have caught it, and we cannot provide any allocations. The other local councils have outsourced the work to dog catchers who, we believe, are paid as much as RM100 for the capture of one stray dog.
"MPJBT has its own team of dog catchers which consists of six men. We do not feel that we need to spend taxpayers' money by outsourcing to private dog catchers.
"Our team does not go out to look for stray dogs. We only act when there are public complaints.
"We need to take action or we will be seen as not doing our job," she added.
Salwa did not deny that carcasses of culled stray dogs were dumped into garbage bins near public markets.
"Those were roll-on roll-off (RoRo) bins, which are huge.
"We wrapped the carcasses in plastic bags before dumping them.
"We also instructed that the dogs be dumped only on days when the waste management company (SWM Environment Sdn Bhd) is coming to collect the rubbish.
"As to claims that our dog catchers shoot the dogs or clobber them to death, that is not true," she said, adding that the local council only shot crows.
Salwa said some stray dogs did get hostile in the presence of dog catchers.
However, she added, the council had yet to receive reports of stray dogs turning hostile on the public.
"If the NGOs want to work with us, please also launch a campaign to educate pet owners to be more responsible.
"Pet owners should not discard their dogs when they no longer think the dog is useful.
"If they do not want the dog anymore, they can call us to put it to sleep, instead of taking the dog somewhere far and dumping it and letting it become other people's problem," she said.