Pages

Monday, February 10, 2014

SOCHI OLYMPICS STRAY DOGS THAT WERE GOING TO BE KILLED FOUND A SAVIOR - A RUSSIAN BILLIONAIRE HAS BUILT THEM A SHELTER


  • Dog lover Oleg Deripaska has built a shelter for the animals above Sochi
  • Billionaire said his dog was a 'close friend' for five years
  • Pest control company said animals were 'biological trash'

  • Prowling the Olympic Park in Sochi unwanted and unloved, a large pack of dogs were destined to be put down by organizers who thought the animals were a nuisance and a danger to tourists.  But the pack of mutts have had an unlikely saviour: Oleg Deripaska, a Jewish Russian billionaire.
      
    Pest control company called the animals "biological trash"
    An army of construction workers on the Olympic site in the run-up to the games attracted the dogs, which were fed and looked after.   But after one animal interfered with a rehearsal run for the Olympic ceremony, and others bit children, according to the company charged with catching them, authorities decided to take action. 

    Alexei Sorokin, director general of Basya Services, the company tasked with catching the dogs, has described the animals as 'biological trash' and said Sochi had a 'rabies' problem.  The owner of the company reportedly admitted using poison and traps. The news angered animal rights campaigners who thought Sochi officials had abandoned plans to exterminate the stray dogs following widespread protests last year.
     
    But who can claim dogs could bypass strict security?  The pest control services did.
    Speaking to ABC News, Sorokin has claimed the animals were a realistic threat to the Games.
    ‘Imagine if during an Olympic Games a ski jumper landed at 130KPH (80 MPH) and a dog runs into him when he lands. It would be deadly for both the jumper and the stray dog,’ he said. 
     
    A humane alternative for man's best friend.
    Dismayed that more than 2000 strays would be killed by authorities after a pest control company at the Winter Olympics was handed a contract to rid the area of the animals, Mr Deripaska decided put his hand in his rather deep pockets and fund a dog shelter in the hills above Sochi.  'My first dog I found in the street of my village, the tiny village [where I grew up],” Mr Deripaska told the BBC. “It was a very close friend for almost five years.' 

    Following a string of media reports the billionaire Russian aluminum tycoon decided to intervene and a team of animal welfare workers began to rescue as many dogs as they could.  Some 140 animals have been saved, with many re-homed, but others haven't been so lucky. 
     
    See pictures of the Sochi dogs and their savior here
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2556033/The-2000-stray-dogs-Sochi-faced-DEATH-Russian-billionaire-saved-them.html

    ******************************************************************************

    No comments:

    Post a Comment

    Thank you for visiting my blog. Your comments are always appreciated, but please do not include links.