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Hello All,

 

This story is absolute nonsense. A team of the Wildlife Friends of Thailand has

been working with animals in the whole Tsunami-affected area including the

temples where the bodies of both Thai and foreigners were kept. All bodies were

kept in cooled containers that were locked at all times. A number of bodeis that

have been buried on another site where buried too deep to be found by the dogs.

 

All dogs around the temples were fed by our team and by Thai people that live in

the area, these tempels were outside the disaster area.

 

Edwin Wiek

Wildlife Rescue Unit

WFFT

 

" yitzeling " <yitzeling wrote:

 

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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2005/1/13/asia/9882361 & sec=asia

 

________________________

 

Thursday January 13, 2005

Starving stray dogs raiding morgues

 

 

PHANG NGA (Thailand): At a Buddhist temple used as a morgue and elsewhere in

tsunami disaster zones, hungry stray dogs have been feeding on victims' corpses,

even managing to get into body bags to do so, relief workers say.

 

It has become such a problem that a group of Thai veterinarians, armed with

tranquilizer guns, has been given the task of capturing the strays. Aid workers

in India have used real bullets.

 

“The dogs are starving and they just eat any meat,'' said Dr Kiartisak

Rojnirandorn of Thailand's Foundation for Stray Dogs.

 

More than 60 dogs have been seized, including 40 around the Yan Yao Buddhist

temple, which has become a makeshift mortuary here, where more than 4,000 people

have died.

 

Some 2,000 bodies are being kept in the temple while undergoing autopsies and

other identification attempts. Most have been kept refrigerated, but some newly

found ones sometimes lay on the open ground pending a post-mortem exam.

 

The vets' goal is to make the area affected by the tsunami a “stray-dog free

zone.'' They plan to send the captured dogs to a sanctuary in western Thailand.

 

Before the tsunami, most probably weren't strays but house pets whose masters

were killed in the disaster.

 

“These dogs are smart. They can unzip body bags and eat the corpses inside,''

said Tohboon Sappasri, a Thai volunteer.

 

David Reinecker, a US-based animal behaviourist and professional dog trainer,

said he was not surprised by the reports.

 

“We must not forget that dogs are carnivore animals and they follow the scent

trails of blood,'' Reinecker said in an e-mail interview.

 

“Put simply, their predatory instinct is pushing them to search for 'food.' The

dogs that survived the tsunami are going through a period of stress, fear and

trauma.”

 

Animal rights activists said dogs would eat human flesh only as a last resort.

 

“There have been instances in the past when dogs have become desperate enough to

approach human corpses when there are no other options left,'' said Susan

Sherwin, of Framingham, Massachusetts-based World Society for the Protection of

Animals. – AP

 

 

 

 

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