Amid rising dog-bite and rabies cases, Delhi-NCR’s stray dogs face mass relocation by Supreme Court order. Residents welcome it, but activists warn of cruelty and ecological risks—who truly bears responsibility, and can safety coexist with compassion?
On August 11, 2025, the Supreme Court of India ordered the relocation of all stray dogs in Delhi-NCR to shelters within eight weeks, citing a rise in dog-bite and rabies cases and prioritising public safety over sentiment. The bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan acted suo motu after media reports highlighted the growing menace. The case was taken up after a Times of India report, “Delhi Hounded By Strays, Kids Pay Price,” detailed incidents, including six-year-old Chavi Sharma, who suffered multiple bites despite repeated complaints, and four-year-old Abhishek Rai, attacked on July 23, 2025, in Alipur, leaving facial injuries and forcing parents to keep children indoors.
The bench announced it would hear arguments only from the Centre, excluding petitions from dog lovers or other parties:
We are not doing this for us; it is for the public interest. So, no sentiments of any nature should be involved. Action should be taken at the earliest.
The amicus curiae Gaurav Agarwal urged permanent relocation of all stray dogs to shelters, citing over 37 lakh dog bites in 2024, including 25,000 in Delhi, and a sharp rise in early 2025. He proposed shelters for 5,000 dogs within 6–8 weeks and adoption drives via welfare groups. Solicitor General Tushar Mehta noted a Delhi relocation site was stalled by an activist-led stay order, which the bench criticised, stressing the need to clear streets entirely. Warning that adoptions could lead to dogs being released again, the court ruled out adoption and ordered all strays to be moved to shelters without exception.
The Supreme Court has ordered Delhi-NCR authorities to build dog shelters immediately, relocate all stray dogs, and report progress. Shelters must have trained staff for sterilisation, immunisation, and containment, with CCTV to prevent escapes. Authorities must also set up a dog-bite helpline and prioritise vulnerable areas, rounding up all strays, sterilised or not. Civic bodies may use any method, including a dedicated force, with contempt penalties for obstruction. The bench called the situation “grim” and directed NCT Delhi, MCD, and NDMC to make clearing localities of stray dogs their top priority.
Residents’ welfare associations (RWAs) have welcomed the Supreme Court’s directive to shift stray dogs in Delhi-NCR to shelters within eight weeks, calling it a long-awaited relief amid rising dog bite cases. Atul Goyal, president of United Resident Joint Action (URJA), said the move would ease the growing menace and urged similar action against stray cattle:
Along with stray dogs, cattle on the roads have also started attacking people and causing traffic jams. The authorities should take similar action for such animals as well.
Animal rights groups condemned the Supreme Court’s order, calling the mass removal of community dogs inhumane and ineffective. PETA India’s Dr Mini Aravindan noted that Delhi has around 10 lakh community dogs, less than half sterilised, and that forced relocation would cause suffering, public uproar, and fail to control population, rabies, or bites. She blamed poor implementation of the 2001 sterilisation and vaccination mandate and urged focus on comprehensive sterilisation, shutting illegal breeders, and promoting adoption instead of displacement drives:
Communities think of neighbourhood dogs as family, and the displacement and jailing of dogs is not scientific and has NEVER worked.
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi criticised the Supreme Court’s directive as a reversal of humane, science-backed policy, arguing on X that shelters, sterilisation, vaccination, and community care can keep streets safe without cruelty. Former minister and animal rights activist Maneka Gandhi called the order “impractical,” warning that it could upset the ecological balance, citing the 1880s in Paris, where mass dog removals allegedly led to a rat infestation.
Mass appeals urge the Supreme Court to revoke its Delhi-NCR stray confinement order, calling it cruel and impractical. Petitioners advocate sterilisation, vaccination, waste control, and community care instead.
An LSR student says,
I’ve cared for strays since childhood and never felt unsafe. Rabies deaths are rare; the Bombay HC says vaccinate, sterilise, and let them live freely. This city is theirs too—they’ve even protected women at night. We have no right to decide how they live.
The protests have also faced criticism from some individuals who view them as selective in focus. According to these voices, many participants come from privileged backgrounds and have not been equally vocal on other human rights issues, such as the treatment of Bangladeshi migrants.
The Supreme Court’s order to relocate all Delhi-NCR stray dogs spotlights a clash between public safety and animal welfare. The debate leaves key questions unresolved: Can humane, science-backed measures protect people without mass displacement? Who is truly responsible for the city’s stray population—the authorities, the community, or the animals? And in striving for safety, can compassion be preserved?
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Image Credits: Hindustan Times
Neeraja Unnikrishnan
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