
The case of Dilli-NCR Stray Dogs, in which two judges of the Supreme Court’s bench on 11th August ordered that the animals be moved to the designated shelters, be transferred to the bench, Livelaw reported.
The decision comes in the midst of increasing legal complexity, public debates and contradictory court orders on how to manage the population of the vicious dogs of Delhi-NCR.
Why was the Delhi-NCR crazy dog housing converted to a larger bench?
On 11 August, the two-judges were ordered by the bench including judge JB Pardiwal and R Mahadevan in Dilli-NCR to remove stray dogs from all locations within eight weeks and place them in reserved shelters.
The order was issued after the bench took awareness of the problem of Suo Mot on 28 July after the Times of India’s report called “in the city persecuted by Strays, the payment price of children”.
However, this matter has now been assigned to a bench with the three-justices Vikram Nath, Sandeep Mehta and NV Anjaria-I will be concerned about the conflict directions issued by different benches of the court.
What did the main judge of India say?
The case of Dilli-NCR Stray Dog was mentioned twice before the main judge of India Br Gavai on Wednesday-in the morning and again in the evening. CJI stated that it would explore this matter, especially with regard to irregularities in earlier decisions.
The advocate who appeared in court urged the CJI to urgently mention the case, and notice the confusion caused by a different court approach to the treatment and relocation of community dogs.
What is the position of the Gandhi BJP manek?
BJP MEP and animal rights activist Gandhi welcomed the decision to re -examine the case and trigger an earlier order of justice by Pardiwal “garbage” and “non -functional”.
“We are very promising. The order was so bad, and in the last two days a lot of chaos got there … I don’t think the justice of Pardiwal thought the media would work intelligently; he had to think his word was the last word.
When she spoke with or, she claimed that the violently removal of dogs from Delhi-NCR streets would not solve the incidents of biting or dealing with the basic causes of overpopulation.
“If we remove three animals from Delhi, three more lakh will come within a week of Ghaziabad and Faridabad. The problem will persist if we do not fail illegal mass shops and chicken centers that provide abundant food for dogs,” she said.
Maneka Gandhi also urged the court to hear all the parties involved before he decides, and advocates a solution that promotes coexistence between humans and animals.
(Tagstotranslate) stray dogs