Akhilesh Yadav's Brother Leads Rally for Street Dogs, Appeals to Supreme Court

Prateek Yadav, brother of Samajwadi Party leader Akhilesh Yadav, participated in a rally in Lucknow advocating for the welfare of street dogs. He appealed directly to the Supreme Court to avoid "inhumane decisions" that would separate dogs from society, arguing confinement is cruel and impractical. Instead, he and other participants urged support for large-scale Animal Birth Control (ABC) programs as a sustainable solution. The Supreme Court has clarified its earlier direction was to treat strays per the ABC Rules, not to remove all dogs from streets.

Key Points: Prateek Yadav Joins Rally for Street Dogs, Appeals to Supreme Court

  • Rally against dog confinement
  • Support for animal birth control
  • Supreme Court direction clarification
  • Call for humane coexistence
2 min read

Lucknow: Akhilesh Yadav's brother joins rally in support of street dogs

Prateek Yadav, brother of Akhilesh Yadav, joins Lucknow rally supporting street dogs, urges Supreme Court against "inhumane decisions" on confinement.

"I would like to request the Honourable Supreme Court not to make any inhumane decision... - Prateek Yadav"

Lucknow, February 22

Prateek Yadav, brother of Akhilesh Yadav, joined a rally in Lucknow on Sunday supporting street dogs while urging Supreme Court to "not make any inhumane decisions", from the Taj Hotel to 1090 Chauraha. He also appealed to the people to support and empower animal birth control programs and organisations.

Prateek Yadav, speaking to ANI, said, "I would like to request the Honourable Supreme Court not to make any inhumane decision that goes against humanity, which would separate dogs, who are part of our society and have been domesticated by humans, from society. This is cruel and inhumane because dogs are social animals. They cannot live in confinement, and confining them is not possible or feasible for the government. It would require too much manpower, space, and shelter, which I don't think is possible. Instead, if we work on animal birth control and aim to reduce their population over the next 10 years, that's what the government should do. Work on animal birth control, not confinement."

"I appeal for people to support and empower animal birth control programs and organisations. Focus on neutering, castration, and spaying and implement these on a larger scale," Yadav added.

Speaking to ANI, Rashmi Singh, who was a participant at the rally, said," I feed street dogs and provide them with medical care. You can say I am an animal lover as well as a humanity lover. The message is simply that this Earth doesn't just belong to humans. The solution suggested by the Supreme Court is inhumane and unjust to animals. We need to find a solution where both humans and animals can coexist safely. What is happening now is like completely blindfolding the animals, which is not right. We just want a solution that isn't unjust to animals."

The Supreme Court has also clarified on January that it had not directed the removal of every dog from the streets, and the direction was to treat these stray canines according to the Animal Birth Control (ABC) Rules.A three-judge special bench comprising Justices Vikram Nath, Sandeep Mehta and NV Anjaria said, "We have not directed the removal of every dog from the streets. The direction is to treat them as per the rules."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While I appreciate the sentiment, this feels like political posturing. Where was this concern when street dog attacks on children were making headlines? We need a balanced approach that prioritizes human safety too.
A
Aman W
The Supreme Court has already clarified its stance. The focus should be on implementing ABC Rules properly at the municipal level. Our local corporation needs more funds and trained staff for this.
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Sarah B
As someone who volunteers with an animal NGO in Delhi, I can say Prateek Yadav is absolutely right. Confinement is not a solution. ABC and vaccination drives are the way forward. It requires public support and government will.
K
Karthik V
In our society, we have a pack of street dogs. They are like our security guards at night. We feed them and they are vaccinated. Coexistence is possible with responsible community effort. Jai Hind.
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Nisha Z
Respectfully, the rally from Taj Hotel to 1090 Chauraha? Could the resources for that rally not have been better used to actually fund an ABC camp? Action speaks louder than symbolic protests.

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