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This is what 48-year-old Rajeev Krishnan, a native of Kannur district in Kerala says, as he begins to speak about the 40-odd stray dogs that he now takes care of.
Rajeev's ancestral home on 68 cents of land in the corporation limits, that bears visible signs of having housed many generations, has now become home to 40 stray dogs.
While Rajeev rescued most of them from the road over the past ten years, some others just strayed into his compound and never left.
But now, the 48-year-old who is into real estate, is waging a battle against people in his own neighbourhood to keep the stray dogs.
On Wednesday, residents of the neighbourhood staged a sit-in protest outside his residence, demanding that Rajeev close the doors of his house for stray dogs. The locality has been facing a threat from stray dogs ever since Rajeev started taking them in, the neighbours alleged.
Calling it an illegal structure, the residents reportedly complained that the constant barks of stray dogs were causing a nuisance to them, especially at night. This was not the first time the neighbours demanded that the stray dogs be relocated, Rajeev tells The News Minute.
He says that although most of the residents did not object to him taking care of so many dogs at his house, it was only recently that they began to protest against it.
Likewise, Rajeev has numerous stories to share, about how every stray dog found its way to his old house.
In the 2000s, Rajeev used to work in a finance company and had not more than six dogs to care for. A few years ago, an animal lovers group called PAW (People for Animal Welfare) approached him and though inexperienced, he joined them to rescue animals in danger.
When protests by local residents first surfaced a couple of years ago, Rajeev fenced his compound. Wounded dogs were then kept in kennels so that they do not wander off.
However, the protests only grew louder, especially in the wake of recent attacks by stray dogs on residents. On Saturday, an 85-year-old was mauled to death by a pack of stray dogs in Thiruvananthapuram.
"There is nothing illegal in what I do. When I applied for a licence, the health inspector denied it without stating appropriate reasons. But they didn't proceed to take the dogs away. After all, who wants to take care of them? Nobody," Rajeev rues.
Rajeev also suspects that certain people who want him to sell off his property are behind the new-formed movement to force him to relocate.
Over the years, the residents' disagreement increased so much so that, not even autorickshaw drivers are willing to take the dogs to the hospital, Rajeev says. Eventually, he had to get a minivan to take them to the hospital, whenever required.
TK Sajeev, President of SPCA (Ernakulam) says that the Municipal Act states that any person who keeps more than 2 dogs at his/her house is required to get a license.
But Rajeev's is not a black and white case, Sajeev, who is also the honorary officer of AWBI says.
"The same municipality is supposed to have the infrastructure to keep stray and injured animals. It is because of the lack of such facilities, that the onus of taking care of stray animals falls on people like Rajeev. In the absence of this, the district administration cannot ask Rajeev to close down," Sajeev argues.
"People's hypocrisy has no bounds," he rues.
Back home in Kannur, Rajeev is back to what he loves doing – looking after the animals.
(The story was first appeared on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)
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