Iran’s regime slaughters over 1,700 dogs in shelter, sparking outrage

The state’s clergy consider dogs to be dirty and recently cracked down on pet owners in Tehran, with police declaring that walking dogs in parks was a criminal offense.

 An Iranian woman holds a dog as she visits the Pallapet boarding house at Palladium shopping mall in Tehran (photo credit: REUTERS)
An Iranian woman holds a dog as she visits the Pallapet boarding house at Palladium shopping mall in Tehran
(photo credit: REUTERS)

The Islamic Republic of Iran brutally killed more than 1,700 stray dogs in an animal shelter, according to video footage posted on Twitter by Iranian journalists and human rights experts.

"The [Ali] Khomeinist regime's main reason for incessant killing and promoting the culture of cruelty to animals is another way of depriving the Iranian people of joy or comfort that animals bring to humans,” Iranian-American journalist and human rights expert Banafsheh Zand told The Jerusalem Post. “It’s the old-fashioned irrational methods of control imposed by the authorities in the USSR or the Chinese Communist Party.”

"The [Ali] Khomeinist regime's main reason for incessant killing and promoting the culture of cruelty to animals is another way of depriving the Iranian people of joy or comfort that animals bring to humans. It's the old-fashioned irrational methods of control imposed by the authorities in the USSR or the Chinese Communist Party."

Iranian-American journalist and human rights expert Banafsheh Zand

The London-based Iran International news outlet recently reported that it received video footage from animal rights activists in the Gandak area of Tehran Province about a “mass killing” of dogs.

Iranian-American human rights activist Marjan Keypour tweeted, “When it comes to Iran, nothing matters. Civil rights leaders don’t care about Iran’s minorities; Western feminists don’t care [about] our women; environmental groups don’t care about our drying lakes & rivers, environment; animal rights activists don’t care [about] Iran’s massacred dogs.”

Shalin Gala, a vice president for the US-based NGO People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), tweeted, “Awful – 1,700 stray dogs apparently shot and killed by authorities in Iran. This woman’s cries are just heartbreaking.”

Zand said, “They [Iran’s regime] have been doing this for decades, like in the case of the poor 60-year-old woman, Sholeh Raoufi, who back in 2015 was burned alive on her property where she lived and where she sheltered 200 cats which she paid for out of her own pocket.”

Sheina Vojoudi, the spokesperson for the Senate of the National Iranian Congress, told the Post, “After slaughtering 1,500 human beings in November 2019, why would the world not expect the Islamic Republic to slaughter 1,600 dogs? Physical elimination has been the Islamic Republic’s way of solving problems since 1979. No living creature in Iran is safe if they don’t fit into the Islamic Republic’s ideology.... It’s time to be willing to see the truth about the murderous regime of the ayatollahs in Iran.”

Iranian-American journalist Lisa Daftari reported on her website, ForeignDeskNews.com, “Regime officials allegedly used war bullets to kill the dogs and then washed away the traces of blood with fire trucks, sources said. Animal rights activists say the roads leading to the shelter were closed during the dog massacre to prevent them from entering the area.”

What's the history here? 

The US government-funded news organization Radio Farda reported in 2019 that Iranian animal rights activists protested against the Tehran municipal authorities for their abuse and killing of stray dogs.

Radio Farda reported at the time that a video showed the “gruesome killings of stray dogs, including puppies, with injections that made them whine and cry in pain before dying. Activists said they believed the dogs had been put down with acid injections.”

Crackdown on dog ownership

The ultra-repressive theocratic state’s clergy consider dogs to be dirty and recently cracked down on pet owners in Tehran. Police declared that walking dogs in parks was a criminal offense and defended the ban to “protect the safety of the public.”

According to a BBC report last week, the Tehran-based veterinarian Dr. Ashkan Shemirani said: "There has not been a solid regulation around owning dogs.”

He noted that "Police forces arrest people for walking their dogs or even carrying them in their cars based on their interpretation of what could be seen as symbols of Westernisation."

Dr. Shemirani told BBC that the authorities built a “prison” for the dogs, adding "We heard loads of horror stories from that place.”