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Written by Jonathan Lis, Haaretz Correspondent Jonathan Lis, Haaretz Correspondent
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Category: News News
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Published: 19 June 2008 19 June 2008
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Last Updated: 19 June 2008 19 June 2008
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Created: 19 June 2008 19 June 2008
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Hits: 4386 4386
The Jerusalem municipality has refused to send a member of its
veterinary services to the Ras Hamis neighborhood in the northern part
of the city, in order to collect a number of stray dogs captured by
local residents.
Municipal
officials told residents of the Arab neighborhood, located on the
Palestinian side of the separation barrier, that they should bring the
dogs to the Shuafat checkpoint, from where the city's veterinary
services would take the dogs.
"A pack of stray dogs entered
the neighborhood yesterday," said Jamal Sanduka, one of the residents.
"Two [of the dogs] entered the yard of a house and killed almost 20
ducks there. They also chased children in the neighborhood," he
explained.
According to Sanduka, a number of neighbors managed
to capture and cage two of the dogs, but despite repeated calls to
Jerusalem's municipal hotline, the city refused to send its workers to
Ras Hamis.
"We are residents of Jerusalem. We pay all the
taxes, but since they surrounded us with a fence, no one is willing to
come here any more. There are 40,000 people living here, and they do
not receive any services - not from the city and not from the
Palestinian Authority. When a house here caught fire a few days ago, we
called the East Jerusalem fire department but they told us that for
security reasons they cannot enter the neighborhood. If municipal
employees are not willing to come the city must hire a private
contractor to do the work, but no one is doing even that," Sanduka said
yesterday.
Jerusalem municipal spokesman Gidi Shmerling
confirmed the report. "The Ras Hamis neighborhood is on the other side
of the separation fence. According to instructions from the security
authorities, it is not allowed to enter neighborhoods on the other side
of the separation fence except when accompanied by security forces,"
responded Shmerling.
"In this case," he added, "since the
complainant stated that the dogs had be captured and were in his hands,
then in order to save the time required to coordinate with the security
forces - which could possibly take days - he was offered to bring the
dogs to the checkpoint so that the veterinary team could collect them."
City officials claimed yesterday that the last time a
veterinary team entered the neighborhood accompanied by security
forces, they were forced to retreat after an "extremely violent" attack
by local residents.