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The Bosnian capital city of
Sarajevo and a special unit of local self-government called Brčko1
District were both fought over fiercely during the Bosnian war from
1992 to 1995. During this time, the problem of stray dogs was
severely aggravated because the civilian population was displaced. I
know the situation in Brčko District well, having served from
January 2004 to September 2006 as the US administrator for the
Office of the High Representative, the civilian organization that is
still overseeing implementation of the Dayton Peace Accords that
followed the war. I recently
visited the country to get a firsthand reading of its stray dog
crisis, as well as the immediate hardships facing BaZIL2, a special
model spay and neuter, no-kill dog shelter located in Brčko.
Meanwhile, there were well-founded reports of a planned round of
mass-killing of dogs in Bosnia. Working to save these dogs was a
mission I had to undertake. The four strays I adopted while I was
there in 2004 are now in the United States, and I could not fail to
do something for those who are still in Bosnia.
BaZIL is the heart of a long-term
project to promote responsible dog ownership and
government-supported spay and neuter programs as the only effective
and humane way to break the cycle of dog overpopulation. It was
established by ARKA, a non-governmental organization founded by
Branka and Pavel Pasko, after two years of preparatory work and
initial support from the Brčko local government. Dedicated to the
protection of animals, ARKA also operates out of Novi Sad, Serbia,
where it runs a small but wonderful sanctuary for bears.
With my encouragement and support, the Brčko District government
made public land available for ARKA under a lease arrangement and
several grants totaling about $300,000 Konvertible Marks (KM)—about
$250,000 US—over a two-year period. In addition, a small number of
local private businesses donated about $25,000 KM for the
construction of housing using the communal Dedication & Everlasting
Love to Animals (DELTA) system.
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One of only two full-time
staff persons, Blagoja Maksimovic cares for a dog at BaZIL.
Stray dogs are common in many areas of Bosnia. |
ARKA then began work in Brčko in
2005 with a door-to-door survey of about 2,500 households with pets,
implanting microchips in dogs and registering and establishing a
database of all “owned” animals, plus informing people about
responsible ownership. It posted billboards advocating these
practices and also completed the first humane collection of 100
stray dogs in Brčko in early 2007— then local government support
wavered and stalled.
When funding ended, so did the
public education campaign, the collection of dogs, and the spaying
and neutering. This development was apparently at least partly the
result of a small-but-vocal campaign against ARKA’s spay and neuter,
no-kill shelter project, aiming for a return to old methods of
controlling the stray dog population via the periodic shooting of
dogs for bounty payments, or collecting and killing them through a
variety of cruel means. Sadly, on March 19, the Brčko Assembly
approved a proposal to return to the old inhumane policy of “catch
and kill.”
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Stray dogs
are common in many
areas of Bosnia. |
The BaZIL shelter, however, remains
open. The facility is located on public land leased to ARKA for 10
years, on the site of the former McGovern Base that housed US
National Guard soldiers immediately after the Bosnian war, as part
of the international commitment to oversee full implementation of
the Dayton Accords.
BaZIL is surrounded by a
high-quality fence and consists of 16 completed DELTA shelters and
six partially finished shelters, each enclosed by its own fence.
Three layers of fencing allow the shelter itself to be remarkably
open. Dogs are not chained and have plenty of space and fresh air.
The shelter’s current capacity is about 100 dogs, but plans allow
for expansion to hold 300.
When dogs arrive at the facility, they are spayed or neutered,
evaluated for compatibility and grouped into DELTA dog houses, then
fed and cared for by two full-time staff employees. Adoptions are
running at about 10 percent of the total dog population in the
shelter and could be higher with proper media coverage. Just by
existing, this model shelter demonstrates what can be achieved in
the area.
Now, BaZIL must turn crisis into
opportunity. It is working to stay open and to feed the dogs. It
faces obstacles in the form of a local government that lacks
understanding of the basic cause of the stray dog problem, and of
the need for an effective and humane program to control reproduction
and promote responsible dog ownership. Spay and neuter is not part
of the cultural framework, although thoughtful citizens are quick to
grasp the need for it.
With the continued operation of
BaZIL at stake due to Bosnia’s current political climate, completion
of the physical infrastructure of the shelter has been suspended.
The immediate priority is to use the shelter, with its environmental
and dog-friendly DELTA houses, as a platform for a more effective
public education campaign to promote spaying and neutering as the
most important element of a sustainable and humane animal control
program.
The future is uncertain for now.
This is an election year for Brčko District and other municipalities
in Bosnia. On March 13, a new dog control proposal was put on the
agenda of the local assembly. Little information was publicly
available about its authorship, though it proposes the “catching,
keeping for 30 days and killing” of dogs who are not claimed by
their owners. It seems to call for construction of a city pound, but
no details are provided about the specifications. Many practical
details are not addressed. Those familiar with the situation in
Brčko foresee a brutal mess in the coming months, whether or not the
proposal is adopted.
With the right help, little Brčko
can implement a spay and neuter policy, with all that this implies,
and can maintain no-kill shelters, as well as fund a public
education campaign. This would be easiest to achieve if Sarajevo
also adopted spay and neuter and no kill policies, but Brčko can
take the lead either way. Its small size makes problems endemic to
Bosnia less difficult to resolve. While other non-fiscally
self-sustaining municipalities may need altered approaches, Brčko is
a multiethnic microcosm of Bosnia that can set an example for
innovative solutions.
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Dogs receive
wonderful care at BaZIL. |
On this trip, I also met with
people in Sarajevo who are directly involved in animal protection
efforts. Several Americans assigned to the US Embassy have adopted
local strays and fostered dogs waiting for their turn to be taken
out on the “underground railway” to Austria and Germany. This
railway is the initiative of a group of local and international
dedicated defenders of Bosnian dogs who live in Sarajevo and
organize these convoys. These good souls have saved hundreds of dogs
from being killed by finding them homes outside Bosnia, mostly in
the aforementioned countries.
This active group of individuals in
Sarajevo is doing heroic work, but so far, it has not influenced
public policy. The Sarajevo dog shelter has been struggling. While
it is slowly improving with some international support, it is not
able to accommodate more than a small fraction of the stray dog
population.
According to local activists, the
Sarajevo Cantonal Government 2008 budget includes $850,000 KM, about
$750,000 US, for the stray dog line item. Unfortunately, unless
things change, this money is more likely to be spent on killing dogs
than on anything else. Owned dogs and strays will continue to
reproduce, and the cycle will continue.
So what else can be done? The dogs
and the people of Bosnia need reinforced support, new energy, and
more voices dedicated to this cause, including groups with a
background in establishing successful no-kill communities. Bosnian
animal activists need help to organize for more effective advocacy
to reject the entrenched approach of catching and killing dogs on a
mass scale. They need partnership with international organizations
for better credibility and access to the media.
We can launch a counter campaign
that calls for spaying and neutering as the way to manage dog
populations. BaZIL’s spay and neuter, no-kill model shelter,
preceded by its door-to-door survey of dog owners in the town—as
well as both the positive and negative publicity surrounding Brčko’s
stray dogs—has put the issue before the public, front and center.
An innovative and humane shelter
representing a huge investment of time, effort and money is an asset
not to be wasted. BaZIL can serve as an important public education
and advocacy tool for the practice of spaying and neutering as the
central pillar of a successful animal control policy.
To survive until next year after
the elections and carry out a spay and neuter campaign in the
meantime, however, the shelter needs private monetary and political
support. If you are able to help, financial donations can be made to
the BaZIL Model Shelter Project, care of the Animal Welfare
Institute (AWI), and will be matched by AWI through the end of the
2008-2009 fiscal year. If you would like to contribute to this
effort in some other way, please contact me, Susan Johnson, at
srj4dgs@yahoo.com, or write
ARKA at ARKA@EUnet.yu.
Delta houses: The DELTA housing
system was developed by Leo Grillo, owner of a large animal rescue
organization in California. Constructed of straw bales over a
plywood dog house (1), the entire structure is covered with chicken
wire and concrete (2, 3). These relatively low-cost shelters are
durable, easy to build, and friendly to the environment and the dogs
who inhabit them—providing animals comfort with shade in the summer
and warmth in winter (4,5).
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