Many people abandoning pets as they leave Hong Kong over COVID rules
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[March 18, 2022]
By Jessie Pang and Sara Cheng
HONG KONG (Reuters) - At Hong Kong Dog
Rescue, Eva Sit kneels and calls over the shelter's most recent
residents, "friendly and goofy" Cassius and "shy" Roxy, two mixed-breed
dogs left behind by their emigrating owner.
Recent weeks have been hectic for Sit and her colleagues, with
government data showing more than 100,000 people have left the global
financial hub this year. While most of the world is learning to live
with COVID-19, Hong Kong residents have been increasingly frustrated
with the city's zero tolerance policy.
As airlines have cut the number of flights to and from Hong Kong because
of its tough quarantine requirements, those who want to fly with their
pets face fewer options, longer waiting lists and costs of up to tens of
thousands of dollars.
Many choose to abandon their pets instead, overwhelming dog shelters,
which are running at full capacity.
"We have seen an increase in the number of dog owners abandoning their
dogs because they are moving out," Sit said. "With COVID, it's harder
than before to travel with your pet."
Cassius and Roxy were brought to the shelter on March 3 by a domestic
helper whose employers flew home to Britain a while back and later
decided not to return to Hong Kong.
"When the helper came to drop them off ... she cried really hard,
because obviously she loved them a lot," Sit said. "She had taken care
of them since they were puppies. And it's not her responsibility, but
her employer's responsibility."
There are no official figures on how many pets are being abandoned.
The number of government-issued animal health certificates, a document
needed for pets to travel but not always given out for that reason,
surged to almost 9,000 in 2021 from about 3,700 in 2020. About 1,500
such certificates have already been issued in the first two months of
this year, the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department said.
The department did not comment on what may have caused the spike.
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Remi, an adopted village dog who is now stuck in Hong Kong as her
owners try to arrange a flight to bring her to Australia, is
pictured at a pet boarding house in Hong Kong, China March 15, 2022.
Picture taken March 15, 2022. REUTERS/Aleksander Solum
Pet Export Vet, a pet travel agency,
said it received three to four times more inquiries in the past two
to three months and has temporarily stopped accepting bookings.
Ferndale Kennels and Cattery, another such agency, is still taking
bookings but says costs are "sky-high" and travel arrangements
increasingly complex due to unstable flight schedules.
Hong Kong has a net outflow of around 40,000 people so far in March,
compared with more than 71,000 in February, the most in a month
since the beginning of the pandemic, government data show. It is not
known how many intend to return.
Sit said Hong Kong Dog Rescue takes in 10 abandoned
dogs a month on average, compared with five before COVID-19, and it
is running out of space now as fewer people want to adopt.
"Every charity has been pretty much overloaded," said Kirsten
Mitchell, founder of Kirsten's Zoo, another rescue centre. "People
surrender their goldfish, their turtles, not just cat and dogs."
Claire McLennan, 48, an Australian who moved back home in December
for family reasons, has been trying to fly her mongrel Remi from
Hong Kong, where she is stuck in a pet boarding house.
"She was meant to fly in January, and then she was meant to fly in
February, and then she was meant to fly in March, and now we are
waiting to hear if Qantas is flying pets in April," McLennan said.
"She's a member of our family. It's very sad. It's hard for the
kids."
(Reporting by Jessie Pang and Sara Cheng; Additional reporting by
Aleksander Solum and Rosanna Philpott; Writing by Marius Zaharia;
Editing by Tom Hogue)
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