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Orphaned Sri
Lanka Dogs Seen as Danger
Many canines were left to fend for themselves
after the tsunami. Fears of deadly rabies trigger
a government plan to exterminate them.
By John M. Glionna
Times Staff Writer
January 16, 2005
ULLE, Sri Lanka They are perhaps the most
overlooked victims of last month's devastating
tsunami, increasingly desperate creatures existing
without shelter and little food or even clean
water. And under a new government program, their
days are numbered.
They're dogs of all sizes, color and character,
former pets that have been left without masters
after the tsunami flooded this eastern Sri Lankan
village, killing at least 1,000 of its 6,000
residents.
For three weeks, hundreds of dogs have wandered
through the rubble of Ulle in search of food,
puddles from which to lap and often just a
reassuring pat on the head.
The animals are too timid to compete with humans
for the food that arrives at refugee camps every
day. Yet in Ulle and across this poor island
nation, some dogs are slowly getting meaner,
howling at night, joining wandering packs,
snarling at one another over the animal carcasses
that wash up along the beach.
Last weekend, Sri Lankan officials began planning
a dog eradication program after one person in
Ampara province, which includes Ulle, reportedly
contracted rabies, presumably after being bitten
by a dog. The victim's condition was not known. In
Ulle, more than half a dozen people including
two foreign relief workers have also recently
been bitten by dogs. None has been diagnosed with
rabies so far.
"We really don't want to do this, but dogs are
becoming a big problem," said Maj. Shene
Gunawadhane, a local army commander. "Our country
is at a critical point
. We simply cannot afford a
major rabies outbreak."
Officials say the canine eradication program will
start in the next few days and could soon be
extended to other regions. They plan to poison the
dogs with cyanide-laced meat, although they've had
problems finding enough cyanide.
Rare in the United States, rabies is a feared
killer in much of the Third World. A vaccine
exists but is not available in many places.
"In most of the world, you get rabies, you're dead
because there is no cure," said Neil Jayasekera, a
San Francisco-area doctor dispensing medical aid
through Relief International. "If you have one
diagnosed case in the Ampara region, that is
really scary. Because if we know about one, there
must be many more."
Rabies is a virus that grows and spreads along
nerve cells. It can bring about an excruciating
death marked by fever, spasms, delirium and coma.
Rabies can be present in animals such as skunks,
raccoons, bats, foxes, coyotes, cats and dogs.
With Sri Lankan officials concerned that stray
dogs may spread rabies, efforts are underway
across the nation to vaccinate many canines left
homeless by the tsunami.
Danajaya Karunaratna, a veterinarian from the
capital, Colombo, heads a team that has traveled
across Sri Lanka since the tsunami to immunize
wandering dogs that are increasingly scorned.
He arrived in Ulle on Jan. 8, when he vaccinated
what he described as 300 "free range" dogs
luring them with food and then injecting them with
a needle attached to a 3-foot stick.
"They need to do something here, because there are
far too many dogs for a community of this size,"
he said.
"In all my travels throughout Sri Lanka, I have
never seen so many dogs."
Karunaratna said that many animals were weak from
malnutrition and others suffered deep gashes and
bruises presumably from fleeing the tsunami,
run-ins with debris or fights with other dogs.
"These dogs are starving," he said. "It's hard
enough for people in these refugee camps to find
food. One can only imagine the plight of these
animals. They rely on the leftovers from humans.
But now there are no leftovers. And the dogs will
get desperate."
The vet, whose efforts are sponsored by the Humane
Society International and other donors, said that
most of the dogs were undoubtedly former pets
because they looked well-fed and had healthy coats
of fur.
"They're very nice dogs, most of them. This is not
their fault that they have lost their owners. It's
very tragic, actually."
The veterinarian said that French Red Cross
doctors in Ulle asked him last Sunday to stop
vaccinating stray dogs and concentrate only on
those that were identified by owners. Many dogs
now wear bright red collars, signifying that they
are not to be euthanized. Officials have spread
the word that people must identify their dogs or
the animals could be killed.
At the Hideaway hotel, a small, brown mutt named
Kella the Sinhalese word for girl lay in the
dust under a towering tree, one of the lucky
animals to wear a red collar.
"She's a good village dog," said hotel owner
Vernon Tissera. "She's not much to look at, but
she certainly deserves to live. So do the others.
But what can we do?"
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times |