Stop the Street Dog Massacres in India & Morocco – Brutality Is NEVER the Answer

Recent signers:
M Simons and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

💔 Across India and Morocco, thousands of street dogs are being violently captured, poisoned, beaten, or shot — supposedly in the name of public safety.

But this is not safety. It is sheer brutality — the worst possible solution.

It does not solve the root causes of overpopulation.
It creates more fear and chaos in communities.
It teaches children the most dangerous lesson: that cruelty is acceptable when we are afraid.
🚫 Brutality does not reduce bites.
🚫 Fear does not make streets safer.
🚫 Criminalizing compassion only weakens society.

 
✅ The Humane, Proven Solutions
The world already knows what works:

Sterilization and vaccination programs (proven effective worldwide)
Well-funded, transparent sanctuaries where animals are safe and communities feel secure
Public education campaigns teaching kindness and coexistence
Formal school programs that teach compassion toward animals from childhood
These are evidence-based, sustainable, and humane.

 
🌍 What We Demand
We call on the Governments of India and Morocco to:

Immediately halt all mass killings and violent roundups of street dogs.
Implement sterilization + vaccination as the primary method of population management.
Invest in well-designed, well-maintained sanctuaries for street animals.
Launch public and school-based education programs teaching daily kindness and coexistence with animals.
 
✊ Why This Matters Globally
How a nation treats its animals reflects the heart of its people. Normalizing brutality in the streets teaches children that violence is acceptable — and weakens the moral foundation of society itself.

Sheer brutality is never the solution. Education, sterilization, and sanctuaries are.

 
📢 Add Your Voice
Every signature = more pressure on governments.
Every share = louder global protest.
Together we can stop this. Together we can show the world that safety and compassion go hand in hand.

111

Recent signers:
M Simons and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

💔 Across India and Morocco, thousands of street dogs are being violently captured, poisoned, beaten, or shot — supposedly in the name of public safety.

But this is not safety. It is sheer brutality — the worst possible solution.

It does not solve the root causes of overpopulation.
It creates more fear and chaos in communities.
It teaches children the most dangerous lesson: that cruelty is acceptable when we are afraid.
🚫 Brutality does not reduce bites.
🚫 Fear does not make streets safer.
🚫 Criminalizing compassion only weakens society.

 
✅ The Humane, Proven Solutions
The world already knows what works:

Sterilization and vaccination programs (proven effective worldwide)
Well-funded, transparent sanctuaries where animals are safe and communities feel secure
Public education campaigns teaching kindness and coexistence
Formal school programs that teach compassion toward animals from childhood
These are evidence-based, sustainable, and humane.

 
🌍 What We Demand
We call on the Governments of India and Morocco to:

Immediately halt all mass killings and violent roundups of street dogs.
Implement sterilization + vaccination as the primary method of population management.
Invest in well-designed, well-maintained sanctuaries for street animals.
Launch public and school-based education programs teaching daily kindness and coexistence with animals.
 
✊ Why This Matters Globally
How a nation treats its animals reflects the heart of its people. Normalizing brutality in the streets teaches children that violence is acceptable — and weakens the moral foundation of society itself.

Sheer brutality is never the solution. Education, sterilization, and sanctuaries are.

 
📢 Add Your Voice
Every signature = more pressure on governments.
Every share = louder global protest.
Together we can stop this. Together we can show the world that safety and compassion go hand in hand.

The Decision Makers

Government of Morocco
Government of Morocco

Petition Updates