Feature: Turkey passes new law to protect animals

Source: Xinhua| 2021-07-03 20:38:31|Editor: huaxia
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A stray cat is seen in Istanbul, Turkey, on July 2, 2021. Turkey will no longer classify animals as commodities under a highly anticipated animal-rights bill presented to the parliament after years of efforts from activists and people involved in animal welfare. (Photo by Osman Orsal/Xinhua)

ISTANBUL, July 3 (Xinhua) -- Turkey will no longer classify animals as commodities under a highly anticipated animal-rights bill presented to the parliament after years of efforts from activists and people involved in animal welfare.

The bill submitted on Wednesday by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) is expected to be enacted into law in the coming weeks after deliberations by lawmakers, parliamentary sources told Xinhua.

The issue of animal rights has been on the Turkish government's agenda over the past decade due to public pressure on politicians to come up with a solution.

The current bill defines animals as "commodities," denying them any rights. Any act of torture or killing of a stray animal in the country is punishable under "damage to commodities" with a small fine.

However, the new legislation will redefine them as living beings and seek jail time for anyone who kills, abuses, or tortures animals.

In recent years cruelty cases against animals, particularly stray dogs or cats, have made headlines, prompting the AKP and other political parties to seek stricter action against perpetrators.

Last month, a man living in Istanbul, Turkey's largest city, was fined for killing and eating stray kittens that residents of his neighborhood were feeding, local press reported.

"The good thing is that their crimes will go on the records of offenders," Pelin Sayilgan, the Ankara representative of the Turkish Animal Right Federation, Haytap, told Xinhua.

"We had demanded the banning of zoos, circus animals, fur farms, and pet stores, but the new legislation doesn't include those facts," she said.

Citizens believe that the new legislation will deter people from engaging in brutality against animals.

Yalcin Boncuk, an IT manager from Istanbul, had an unpleasant experience recently nearby his countryside house which is located outside Istanbul.

"A man, whom I found out later to be a neighbor, lured a stray dog like he was going to feed him and then struck the animal heavily and repeatedly with a stick because it allegedly pounced on his mother," he told Xinhua.

"His explanations made no sense at all. He knew that he was going to get away with what he did," Boncuk said.

"People in our neighborhood are feeding these dogs which are strays," he said, adding that "the new animal-rights law is a relief because from now on we will immediately call the police and ask for their intervention."

The punishment for crimes against animals will be a jail term ranging from six months to four years, which will prevent criminals from getting out on bail or converting the prison sentence to a fine.

Under the new law, local police can establish animal protection squads to respond to any incidents in which an animal is harmed or in danger.

The force will also actively seek out perpetrators of blood sports involving animals, such as cockfighting and dog fighting, popular in some parts of Turkey. Enditem

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