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Home arrow News arrow Interview of Franco Frattini
Interview of Franco Frattini

Interview of Vice President of Europen Comission, Franco Frattini in the newspaper "Romania Libera" 22.11.2006

Interview in Romanian

1- Are you aware of the situation concerning stray dogs in Romania? How do you personally judge it? Did you find a comparable situation in other countries you have been?

I have heard from the situation of stray dogs in Romania and I have to admit that I am very fond of animals so I don’t like to know that they are mistreated and killed. Maybe the great number of stray dogs in Romania has obliged the Romanian government to take a drastic solution but, according to me, death can never be considered a good solution.
The official laws state that stray dogs are captured and killed by an injection but some videos show us that the methods are more violent and that it is not only the injection they use to kill them. Not only dogs but animals in general don’t deserve to be treated in this way. We should live only few days with them to understand how much affection they could give to us. Personally I don’t have dogs but I have two cats that are part of my family and I’d not like to imagine that they could undergo atrocious massacres. I know that some projects called “Neuter and Release” have just started. Using this technique the dogs are caught, neutered and then released. In this way they can stop the cycle of reproduction and avoid their increase.
Such kinds of projects are surely more efficacious, cheap and ethical but, mainly, they take care of animals’ rights!
I know that also in other States there are similar problems, the latest notice I’ve heard regards Serbia that is having a similar problem caused by the war in Bosnia in 1990 because the domestic animals cannot enter in the refuges, so those dogs have to be killed. It seems that the mayor of Subotica promised to stop these massacres till they have finished constructing places where to kill them. But, at the end, the destiny of dogs is always the same: the death.

2- How does the EU consider our law that rules the stray dogs’ problem? Is it a good one or should it be improved? If so, how?

I can’t judge a national law without knowing all the components that let this law be approved, but I think we always should do everything we can to find any solution alternative to death. The best option, in any case, is to find other solutions.
Dogs are not human beings but are God’s creatures so they deserve to live as ourselves.
Some foreign associations are trying, as I have said before, to control this problem by doing sterilization so that they can control, at least, the increase of dog’s number. It is good to continue this sterilization but the government needs also to find a way to reduce and eliminate the phenomenon of stray dogs. They have to eliminate the problem but, obviously, it does not mean eliminate dogs.

3- Which suggestions would you give to our Government concerning animal rights, based on your knowledge of European laws?

The European Commission is aware of this problem and of the inhumane eradication methods applied to stray dogs in Romania.
Even if inside the EC I am not the responsible of animal welfare issues but this kind of problems concern to Mr. Markos Kyprianou, as Commissioner for health and consumer, I know that upon this matter a European Convention for the protection of pet animals has been signed in Strasbourg on 13th November 1987 and it recognise that man has a moral obligation to respect all living creatures and bear in mind that pet animals have a special relationship with man.
The Convention lays down the obligation for each member to take the necessary steps to give effect to the relevant provisions of that Convention, which includes, amongst others, provisions on the keeping, killing neutering and reduction of numbers of stray dogs and information and education programmes for the public.
Stray animal is defined as a pet animal which either has no home or is outside the bounds of its owner’s or keeper’s household and is not under the control or direct supervision of any owner or keeper and when a country considers that the numbers of stray animals present it with a problem, it shall take the appropriate legislative or administrative measures necessary to reduce their numbers in a way which does not cause avoidable pain, suffering or distress.
The Protocol on Protection and welfare of Animals provides that the Community shall pay full regard to the welfare of animals in formulating Community policies on agriculture, transport, internal market and research.
The European Parliament has banned the use of non-human animals for testing cosmetics after the battle between activists and French perfume producers. This law inhibits the use of mice, rabbits and primates for most tests within six years and all tests within 10 years. The catch is that toxins can still be used on animals until an “alternative” is found. The ban on marketing all cosmetics that rely on animal testing will also make it impossible for firms to have offshore laboratories.
However, issues such as stray dogs remain under the sole responsibility of the Member States. There is any intervention by the Commission in relation to the matter of stray dogs in Romania.
There is also a restriction of pet-animal movements mainly by the introduction of a national system of identification and registration. This requirement in EU REGULATION N:998/2003 also concern Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey (we can’t forget that Romania and Bulgaria - two countries particularly representative of the stray animals’ problem - will become Member States on 1st January 2007).
Finally it is important to say that the 29th October 2004 has been approved the integration of the 9th article of the Italian Constitution according to which the Republic protects the biodiversity and promotes the respect of the animals and, always on the same day, has been signed the European Constitution in which it is written also that the European Union and their Member States have to take care of the needs of animals as sentient beings.

4- You deeply know many countries all around the world. Would you be able to point out a virtuous model regarding animal rights?

I don’t want to indicate which is the virtuous model. All countries treat animals in a different way. In the past, for example, dogs were considered somewhere even a divinity.
Today, for example, in Scandinavian countries and in Netherlands animal rights are very important and animals are well integrated in the family and cities are “constructed” on a pet scale.
In my opinion is also important the role of schools (of every single country). For instance, during civics subjects they have to teach to pupils that also animals have rights and they have to make them understand which is the better relation they can have with animals.
In Italy, for example, we try to control the stray of dogs with a microchip we insert into their body. So, if we find them on the street, we can punish the owner. Can we punish the dog and kill it if it is abandoned from the owner? Certainly not! It’s not dog’s fault but it is owner’s fault.
And then in Italy the stray dogs stay in kennels so that we can avoid having them on the streets.
Obviously also in Italy we have had problems because some people, usually before summer holidays, leave dogs on the street because they consider the dog as a sort of “burden”. So we changed some rules: no more tattoos that can be took away (with a sort of mutilation) but microchip. But we can’t affirm we don’t have, anymore, stray dogs.
We are trying to safeguard a creature that needs our help to live better.

5- There are few foreign organisations working in Romania to protect stray dogs: do you think that dogs (and, generally speaking, animals) deserve funds and human resources to be spent in their favour?

Every day animal welfare organisations receive cries of help relating to the massacres perpetrated on domestic animals. An animal, just like a human being, is capable of suffering. It is our duty to speak out for and protect those who do not have the voice to do so by themselves.
According to this situation, if we want to change something in the Society we must consider very important the work of those organisations. People who work for these organisations usually do this work not because they want to earn money but because they love the work they are doing and they spend all their time and energy to achieve their goal.
Obviously, sometimes they need funds and human resources to make their work and I think it is right. Maybe only those who love animals can understand their work and so can justify the fact that they receive funds also by public authorities.
In this context dogs, but all the animals, are not to be considered as objects but as God’s creatures and so they deserve to be helped, if they need it.
It is wrong to think that animal’s problems are not our problems: all the problems of the society are a problem of every single citizen.
I have been informed about the project of the association “Save the dogs” that wants to help stray dogs in the city of Calarasi, after running neuter and release programs in Cernavoda and Medgidia, and for this project it is looking for funds from Europe. According to me, it is right that Europe helps Romania also because it is becoming a Member State of the EU.

6- Do you think there is a connection between the way a country treats its animals and the progress of its society?
If yes, why?

All countries have their own problems and we cannot judge the progress of the society in connection with their problems. Nevertheless if a country thinks to solve the stray dog’s problem simply and only by killing them in a frightful way, I don’t think that this country gives a good example.
Nobody deserves a similar treatment.
Can the dog be punished only because it doesn’t have an owner who takes care of it?
Can the dog be punished because it doesn’t have a house where to live in and it is obliged to live on the street?
Certainly this problem have to be solved, but in a right way. Maybe after the sterilization, that has just started, we should find them a house where to live. Adoption, perhaps, is the good way. If we want to remove dogs from the streets we should open them some other “doors”….maybe also our own!

 

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