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July 5, 2020

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Animal shelter braces for surge as expats driven to leave Qatar

WHEN stray puppy Izzy was rescued from a stretch of wasteland in Qatar, she was so dehydrated she could barely stand and was close to death.

One of many abandoned and stray animals struggling to survive on the scorched streets of the wealthy Gulf state, she is set to be adopted by a German family, but most others are not so lucky.

Now, Izzy’s rescuers are warning there could be a spike in dumped pets in the country as an economic downturn driven by the novel coronavirus pandemic forces expatriate workers and their families to leave at short notice.

Expatriates make up 90 percent of Qatar’s 2.75 million population.

“We’re expecting a wave of emails and phone calls to say, ‘Help!’ We’ve had a few of those already,” Paws animal shelter co-founder Alison Caldwell said.

Major employers, including Qatar Petroleum and Qatar Airways, have warned of sweeping cuts to staff numbers as the global economy slows. Animals dumped or born on the streets in Qatar face particular hardship.

Summer temperatures touch 50 degrees Celsius, and images of abuse, including animals being shot with airguns, are common on social media. Caldwell said the Paws shelter had already seen an uptick in the number of animals needing help.

“There’s nothing we can do, really,” Caldwell said, adding the shelter has a capacity for just 60 cats and 30 dogs.

There are no statistics on stray animals in Qatar, but Paws estimates they number in the tens of thousands.

The pandemic has also complicated Paws’ efforts to re-home animals.

Izzy, a cream-colored “Doha mix” cross-breed common in Qatar, was rescued in February.

By April, a family in Germany had spotted her story on Paws’ Facebook site and decided to adopt her.

But commercial aviation had ground to a halt as authorities imposed restrictions to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus.

From her home near Bremen in northern Germany, Christina Fuehrer revealed she had been “just sitting there waiting” for flights to resume so she could complete Izzy’s adoption.

“We still have to find a flight,” she said, adding mid-July was the soonest.

Until then, Izzy is with a foster family who, like many others in Doha, found themselves eager for canine company to break the lockdown’s monotony.

“We decided it would be a good thing to do this summer, because we’re obviously not going anywhere,” said Julie Melville, who has taken the puppy in temporarily.

Paws uses “flight buddies” — volunteer passengers who carry animals to their future homes as excess luggage.

It costs just over US$300, compared to US$1,600 to send the pets via air freight — but for the system to work, passengers need to be able to travel freely and frequently.

Founded seven years ago by two British expats, Paws said it saw an influx of animals in the early days of the pandemic from owners who feared their pets could spread the virus.

People have also contacted the shelter for help after some animal owners fell ill and were hospitalized without warning.

Since March, more than 100 people have died and over 3 percent of Qatar’s population has been infected with the novel coronavirus, according to official figures.

Animal cruelty is also a major issue, said Paws co-manager Hester Drewry, due to Qatar’s transient population and a lack of education on the issue.

To raise awareness and deter those unable to care for an animal from acquiring pets, Paws’ partners with local schools and encourages children to volunteer with the rescue animals. But Qatar’s lockdown has seen schools suspended and Paws unable to visit. The not-for-profit depends on donations and a mostly volunteer workforce, as well as revenue from its kennelling service.

The shelter team says their pens are “always full” as they battle to cope with an ever-increasing population of abandoned pets and strays, and volunteers often take home animals to help out.

“We have a huge backlog of animals waiting to fly out to their ‘forever homes,’” Drewry said.

Since opening, Paws has helped re-home 1,000 animals, many of them overseas, where Qatar’s ubiquitous Saluki hunting breed — with their distinctive narrow heads, prominent eyes and dangling ears — is highly coveted. Drewry expressed hope that some animals would begin to leave this month and in August as travel starts to pick up again. “It’s strange times,” Drewry said.




 

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