Less than half urban dog owners in China registered their pets
with local civil affairs departments and about 70 percent of
urbanites thought registration fees are too high, according to a
survey.
"Urban dog owners choose not to register their pet dogs due to
high registration fees, complicated procedures and few services
offered after registration," said a survey conducted by
Horizon-China, covering 1,553 residents aged between 18 and 65 from
Tianjin, Shanghai and Shenzhen cities.
The survey showed that 8.2 percent of urbanites in the three
cities were raising pet dogs.
Residents would register their dogs if the government provided
free dog vaccines, favorable medical treatment fees for dogs and
special public places for dogs, it said.
But the government may not want too many dogs in cities. Last
month a Chinese lawmaker proposed a tax on dog owners to dampen
urbanites' enthusiasm for raising pets, partly because the fear of
rabies is rising with an increasing number of urban pet dogs.
Dog owners should pay taxes to contribute to the expenses city
managers incur for the pet dogs, such as collecting canine
dejections, the lawmaker said.
Rabies, often spread by dogs, attacks the nervous system and is
fatal to humans if not treated prior to the onset of symptoms. With
a death rate of about 84 percent, rabies has been one of the most
deadly infectious diseases in China.
Rabies killed more than 2,000 people across the country in 2006,
according to media reports.
(Xinhua News Agency April 7, 2007)