Supreme Court Orders Removal of Stray Dogs from Streets, Citing Children’s Safety After Tragic Rabies Deaths
The streets of Delhi NCR have long been haunted by a silent predator — packs of stray dogs that have left countless children injured, disfigured, or dead after vicious attacks.
Monday’s Supreme Court order marks a turning point for grieving parents who have watched their children suffer unimaginable pain from bites that, in too many cases, led to rabies and death. Street dog menace, it may be mentioned, is not confined to Delhi alone but nearly all cities and streets in the country.
The Supreme Court bench, comprising Justice JB Pardiwala and Justice R Mahadevan, issued a landmark directive: all stray dogs in Delhi, Noida, Gurgaon, and Ghaziabad must be removed from residential localities and shifted to dedicated shelters within eight weeks.
More importantly, the Court ordered that once removed, these dogs must never be released back into the streets — a decision it said was necessary to protect human lives, especially children’s.