Dog World news archive - February 2012

Rabies fears grow as Malamute litter ‘enters UK from Bulgaria’

26 Jan 2012 08:02

This article has 12 Comment(s)

A TWO-month-old Alaskan Malamute is in quarantine after allegedly coming into Dover from Bulgaria – where rabies is endemic – with no pet passport.
The puppy was one of a litter of five bought by English residents from a van parked in a lay-by.
The illegal landing of the Malamute came to light because his new owner – who bought him through a website and was told he was 16 weeks old – took him to a vet who discovered that the papers accompanying him were a sham. He was not microchipped and at his age could not have been vaccinated properly against rabies. His fake passport comprised an A4-size sheet of paper which looked like thin Christmas wrapping paper.
Noname, as he has been called, is now in Bayton Lodge kennel in Warwickshire. Its proprietor Dale Groves explained that the unsuspecting purchaser bought the puppy through a website which offers any breed of dog for £250 plus £250 travel costs. He was told the animal would be delivered to a spot just outside Dover and that he was one of several people there to meet the van at about 7pm on a weekend evening. After handing over his money he chose his puppy.
Mr Groves said he has been told that Dover is not manned all the time and that no one was there over night to check vehicles coming in which is why dogs are being brought in during unmanned hours. And the authorities confirmed to DOG WORLD that checks are made ‘typically’ only between 8.30am and 1am on weekdays and not at all at weekends.
Previously, checks were being made 24 hours a day, Mr Groves said.
Noname appears to be in good health, Mr Groves said, and was about to have his second rabies vaccination in addition to the normal inoculations. He should be able to leave the kennel in five weeks’ time when it is hoped a home can be found for him as his owner says he no longer wants him. It is understood that the Bulgarian dealer offered Noname’s owner a substitute puppy from a litter to be brought into Kent ‘next month’. The whereabouts and condition of the other puppies are not known and DW has been unable to contact the purchaser.
“It’s been a nightmare,” Mr Groves said. “Kennels like ours are in the front line – not to say firing line.
“It isn’t the first time that this sort of thing has happened; I know of at least two recent incidents of puppies being brought in to England and dropped off at service stations – including a Yorkshire Terrier and a Shar-Pei – by people who are flouting the rules. Truck drivers can earn extra cash, and there’s big money in it, he added. Puppies are so much cheaper in Europe: French Bulldogs are £75 and in Latvia Siberian Huskies are £150-250.
“You have to remember that four of Noname’s brothers and sisters are still running around out there somewhere,” Mr Groves said. “That’s how rabies is going to be brought into this country.”
“But Noname is a lovely little chap and people have been donating food, bedding and toys for him as we can no longer afford to pay for such dogs now that quarantine’s gone. We’re finding it difficult to keep going. When we were at full capacity we could have ridden the cost but we can’t any more.”
The new quarantine laws which came into force on January 1 have made the UK ‘very vulnerable’ to rabies, according to those in the animal care and welfare industry. The laws have been relaxed in line with European legislation so that animals from the EU and listed non-EU countries such as the US and Australia will no longer need a blood test and will only have to wait 21 days before they travel.
Those from unlisted non-EU countries such as India, Brazil and South Africa will be able to enter the UK after only a three-month wait if they meet certain criteria to ensure they are protected against rabies, including a blood test. Current rules regarding tick treatment have also been relaxed.
DEFRA maintains that the risk of rabies coming to the UK remains ‘extremely low’, but some animal welfare groups say the changes expose Britain to an increased risk. Exhibitor, Kennel Club Committee member and kennel owner Meg Purnell-Carpenter says it is no longer a case of if we get rabies, but when.
Her views – aired fully in DOG WORLD three weeks ago – are supported by many quarantine kennel owners and charities such as Dogs Trust and Battersea Dogs and Cats Home, in addition to an increasing number of DW’s readers. Such was the response to the front page article that Mrs Purnell-Carpenter has launched a new e-petition – the previous one closed in December – which she hopes will make the public more aware of the risks.
“Pets now enter the UK from 26 EU states – nine of them classed as high risk – just 21 days after rabies vaccination. The average incubation period is 35 days,” she said. “These changes affect us all yet they’ve slipped in, unpublicised. People are unaware of the huge threat to the lives of not only their pets but their families too.
“A group of professors, doctors and animal lovers are desperate to raise awareness. Our Government has twice fought and won the right to opt out of these new regulations. We demand that our rabies free status is preserved, so we need to act now before it is too late.”
DOG WORLD contacted DEFRA and the Animal Health and Veterinary Laboratories Agency (AHVLA) in Chelmsford and asked about the puppy and whether Dover was manned on a 24-hour basis every day. AHVLA responded: “Our staff at Dover typically work between 8.30am and 1am, Monday to Friday. Out of these hours we have an on-call officer available. We also have the flexibility to cover other hours if required. 


Approved routes


“It is important to note however that pets can only enter the UK under the pet travel scheme via approved routes and it is the responsibility of the approved carrier to check all pets and their documentation to ensure compliance with the scheme. AHVLA’s role is to carry out audit checks on these carriers.
“The issue of smuggled pets, including fraudulent use of passports, should be separated from the pet travel scheme. This act is illegal under the Rabies Order which is enforced by the Police and Local Authorities.  Anyone with information relating to individuals participating in pet smuggling should inform the police, this can be done via AHVLA.”
He declined to comment on the Alaskan Malamute.
“We can’t comment on individual cases, but the purpose of the pet travel scheme is to keep the UK free from rabies and certain other exotic diseases,” he said. “These rules changed on January 1 when the UK brought its procedures into line with the EU.
“Transport companies wanting to transport pets into the UK need to seek prior approval from the AHVLA to do so. This is because the transport company is responsible for carrying out checks on pets to make sure they meet the rules of the pet travel scheme before they enter the UK. AHVLA also conducts additional spot checks at point of entry into the UK.
“We take breaches of the rules very seriously, and robust penalties will apply to those who do not comply. Trading Standards will investigate and take appropriate action, including prosecution as necessary.”
Mrs Purnell-Carpenter’s petition reads, ‘Due to EU pressure, rules that have kept our island rabies free for over 100 years have been dropped. Must we lower our standards or should the EU be raising theirs?
‘… Change is good but this is madness. We call on our Government to consult all concerned parties, explore all options and ensure the public is fully aware that these changes will affect them’.
Mrs Purnell Carpenter is asking people to sign her petition – closing date October 10 – even if they signed the previous one. Visit http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/27096
Visit the Rabies Alert UK website for more information.

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    1

    Unfortunately it's no surprise, this has been going on for years and it's only a matter of time as to when not if England will see the 1st outbreak of rabies & other 'continental diseases'. A few years ago I travelled with my dog in a car Dover to Dunkirk via ferry. I'd spent the previous week checking everything was in order & that the microchip could be read etc and having nightmares in case I couldn't bring the dog back into the UK with me. I needn't have bothered. Despite sitting in the back of my car barking at various officials who looked through the window at her, me taking her our for a quick walk whilst waiting to board the ferry both ways and having a notice on my windscreen to say there was a dog in the car; NOT ONE single port, ferry, government agency or any other official asked to see any passports - human or canine, vaccination documentation, scan microchips or anything. The vet I went to see for the dog's treatment the day before returning said to me, 'I presume that you have already treated your dog, so what time & date would you like me to enter on the passport? You English dog owners are so careful, we don't need to worry'. And no, I wasn't travelling in the middle of the night; it was mid afternoon in broad daylight on a week day.

    Posted at 10:41 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    overwag | Report as inappropriate

    2

    As usual, I am guilty of stunning naivity. I have only ever spoken with people, like overwag, who have gone about things the correct way (and found the system wanting). When are people going to realise that there is no such thing as a cheap puppy? Whether it's £50 or £5000, the initial outlay is nothing compared to the lifetime expenses. Unless, of course, that life is cut short by diseases that are preventable by not taking short cuts and cheap options. The so-called "owner" who decided not to take the puppy ought to be footing the bill until such time as a new home is found. And what about pressing charges for the illegal importation of a dog?

    Posted at 13:45 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    Spotty Muldoon | Report as inappropriate

    3

    I totally agree - the puppy's new owner shouldn't be allowed to simply walk away from this situation leaving it to others to pick up the pieces. That's shocking. I've signed the Petition, willingly, because it angers me that we should have to 'come in line' with Europe over quarantine rules. We have NO rabies in the UK (yet), Europe does. Bringing into line with ? Makes no sense. Obviously the latest relaxation rules has already meant a reduction in staffing when it comes to dogs/other pets coming into the UK from Europe. And that's tragic. I'm seriously considering having my last 2 hounds in to be vaccinated against rabies. Having lived for some years in a country where there is rabies, I know how it feels. As has been said, it's not IF we have rabies in the UK after all these years, but WHEN. With all that goes with that!!

    Posted at 13:55 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    MamaBas | Report as inappropriate

    4

    I can understand your fears for Rabies, but if people obey the rules and regulations there should be no problems. I breed and show Parsons regularly in the UK - I am British but live in Belgium, all my dogs are in order to come to the UK and have had their titer tests. I recently brought to the UK a pup- it had never left my facility and I abided by all the rules. I think its up to the carriers to check on all transport comming in to the UK. I traveled with the eurotunnel and this is very eficient.

    Posted at 16:10 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    vega | Report as inappropriate

    5

    Hello- I had, until September, the twoi first dogs ever to have passports in Britain, and have crossed the Channel via Dover-Calais over 70 times with these dogs. I would like to state that e very single time at Calais I have had to produce the dogs passports (in the beginning a whole sheaf of papers) and have them stamped. I have also every time been required to read the microship on the dogs and give the numbers to the ferry people., and they generally also lean out to look into my car at the dogs. The last five years there have been 3 dogs as the original pairs daughter also joined the family. I have also travelled to Scandinavia with the dogs, where lots more papers had to be produced and stamped. The dogs always had to see a vet on the continent 24 -48 hours before departure back to Britain. About 15 times the passports etc. have also been checked at Dover by people from Defra I think the travel companies do a good job on the whole. Having gone through the rabies vaccination, bloodtest plus waiting for 6 months several times, I was actually very relieved that these rules are being relaxed. However, stopping the rabies vaccination once a year and making it every third year seems nonsense, as the dogs on the continent have to have a rabies vaccination every year!! Example: what if your dogs is involved in a dogfight - and you are then accused of not having a once-a-year rabies vaccination up to date? It happened to me, and I had to stay back in France for another 3 weeks while my dog had extra rabies checks/vaccinations. I also was bitten, by the other dogs, while trying to separate them, but still had to have 3 separate rabies vaccinations a week apart in big hospitals in France. Not fun. But for all this, I welcome the relaxation, as having to leave a small puppy at home being looked after by strangers, while taking the others abroad for months on end is no fun either - at least now I plan to bring my new, homebred puppy out with me soon after the rabies vacc. here. and on aquiring his passport. So there is always two sides to a story I have in fact learned that many dog breeders in Europe travel to other countries within Europe to obtain new strains in their breed One recently flew from France to Norway, picked up the chosen puppy and flew straight back - this to improve the breed - as so many here in England, where things like that has been prohibitive by time and cost, are starting to become more and more inbred with all the bad that comes from that. Of course I do not approve of smuggling in dogs and the unscrupulous people who do that either for profit or from an "altruistic "I can give it a better home " . But one cannot blame the Defra people - they do the best they can.Remember there are hundreds of cars and lorries on everfy ferry coming in - how on earth are they supposed to find a hidden dog? They can pull in an check cars witch display the "pet in car" sign, but theyt will inevitably be the law-abiding travellers who have checked in their pets properly already in Calais.

    Posted at 16:41 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    Tov | Report as inappropriate

    6

    Hello- I had, until September, the twoi first dogs ever to have passports in Britain, and have crossed the Channel via Dover-Calais over 70 times with these dogs. I would like to state that e very single time at Calais I have had to produce the dogs passports (in the beginning a whole sheaf of papers) and have them stamped. I have also every time been required to read the microship on the dogs and give the numbers to the ferry people., and they generally also lean out to look into my car at the dogs. The last five years there have been 3 dogs as the original pairs daughter also joined the family. I have also travelled to Scandinavia with the dogs, where lots more papers had to be produced and stamped. The dogs always had to see a vet on the continent 24 -48 hours before departure back to Britain. About 15 times the passports etc. have also been checked at Dover by people from Defra I think the travel companies do a good job on the whole. Having gone through the rabies vaccination, bloodtest plus waiting for 6 months several times, I was actually very relieved that these rules are being relaxed. However, stopping the rabies vaccination once a year and making it every third year seems nonsense, as the dogs on the continent have to have a rabies vaccination every year!! Example: what if your dogs is involved in a dogfight - and you are then accused of not having a once-a-year rabies vaccination up to date? It happened to me, and I had to stay back in France for another 3 weeks while my dog had extra rabies checks/vaccinations. I also was bitten, by the other dogs, while trying to separate them, but still had to have 3 separate rabies vaccinations a week apart in big hospitals in France. Not fun. But for all this, I welcome the relaxation, as having to leave a small puppy at home being looked after by strangers, while taking the others abroad for months on end is no fun either - at least now I plan to bring my new, homebred puppy out with me soon after the rabies vacc. here. and on aquiring his passport. So there is always two sides to a story I have in fact learned that many dog breeders in Europe travel to other countries within Europe to obtain new strains in their breed One recently flew from France to Norway, picked up the chosen puppy and flew straight back - this to improve the breed - as so many here in England, where things like that has been prohibitive by time and cost, are starting to become more and more inbred with all the bad that comes from that. Of course I do not approve of smuggling in dogs and the unscrupulous people who do that either for profit or from an "altruistic "I can give it a better home " . But one cannot blame the Defra people - they do the best they can.Remember there are hundreds of cars and lorries on everfy ferry coming in - how on earth are they supposed to find a hidden dog? They can pull in an check cars witch display the "pet in car" sign, but theyt will inevitably be the law-abiding travellers who have checked in their pets properly already in Calais.

    Posted at 16:41 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    Tov | Report as inappropriate

    7

    Tov it is NOT every year the rabies booster is required in all European countries.

    Posted at 17:18 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    14all | Report as inappropriate

    8

    I am a dog groomer and 5 years ago i was told of 3 dogs being imported from Zimbabwe and by travelling first to Germany,& they then came straight into this country on false papers, which stated they had been in germany for several months. I know of one vet who now routinely vaccinates his own dogs just in case. All this started with the pet passport scheme. We may yet come to rue the day.

    Posted at 18:06 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    groomer | Report as inappropriate

    9

    If cross continental travel with pets becomes routine problems like this will inevitably become routine too. The original pet passport scheme seemed like a good and workable compromise between those wishing to take animals across borders and the majority here in the UK who do not take their animals abroad and do want to feel protected from rabies and other diseases. The relaxation of the rules coupled with cut backs in inspection tips the balance too far. It comes as absolutely no surprise that an irresponsible element is importing dogs for profit. Yes, this case is in breach of the relaxed law and the actions can be said to be purely criminal. I’d claim, however, that it’s extremely complacent to think the relaxation of the rules has no bearing on this. I’d argue this “enterprise” can only exist because the relaxation of the rules has created the idea that animals coming in from Europe are “safe”.

    Posted at 18:57 on 26 Jan 2012 by
    convict 225 | Report as inappropriate

    10

    Having worked in quarantine kennels , we had dogs that had been smuggled in, BUT to relax the strict rules we have that has kept our country Rabies free is madness... perhaps 3 months quarantine is better than nothing than just letting dogs come and go. The check points for animals coming and going through Ferries is hopeless and does not work ... I think its obvious to all in the Dog World but unfortunately NOT the Government/EU that the Pet Passport is NOT working...

    Posted at 08:32 on 27 Jan 2012 by
    Teacake | Report as inappropriate

    11

    I don't think that 'a relaxation of rules' or cut backs is the problem. The problem is, like the majority of government legislation regarding dogs, this scheme was thought up & passed without any consideration as to how it was going to be effectively enforced. Unless EACH & EVERY vehicle is searched before it boards a ferry and that means every car boot opened up and all vans & lorries inspected, the problem will persist. The UK border agencies have lost the struggle to stop the influx of illegal immigrants; how high on their agenda is 'dog smuggling'? Yes, they may stop & check a car that has a 'pet on board' sign; but animal smugglers aren't going to advertise what they're doing. Unfortunately the Pet Passport scheme has turned out to be yet another open invitation for criminal enterprise.

    Posted at 11:05 on 27 Jan 2012 by
    overwag | Report as inappropriate

    12

    overwag...for me the changes matter because then in turn change the public's attitude to dogs from overseas. In the quarantine days people knew where they stood. If you tried to sell an illegally imported dog you'd give yourself away as a criminal or at the very least "dodgy". There'd be few buyers and thus no incentive to smuggle dogs in on a large scale. Fast forward to a time of routine travel with pets and the lines are blurred, with the message that dogs from "Europe are safe" cutting over any worries about rabies etc. I believe we should still discouraging routine travel with pets...yes attend overseas shows but don't take your dog on holiday!

    Posted at 01:04 on 28 Jan 2012 by
    convict 225 | Report as inappropriate