Strays Versus Society
A Supreme Court judgment orders the removal of every stray dog from Delhi’s streets into pounds. Animal lovers, Bollywood stars, and activists call it a betrayal of compassion and a blow to India’s soul.
Born To Be Free: TheGlitz Iniatitive
India, land of the free, home to the sacred cow, the soaring eagle, the wandering peacock. For centuries, our streets have echoed with the sound of paws padding alongside our footsteps. From sleepy lanes to Delhi’s roaring heart, stray dogs have been part of our daily rhythm… watchmen, companions, survivors.
In fact, I remember the late evenings when I’d walk my dog Duke way back in 2004. Julie, an old stray who had unofficially appointed herself the guardian of our building, would quietly fall into step beside us. She wasn’t just a companion, she was our protector. Once, she even fended off a leopard that strayed too close. Every night, she walked with us until we were safely home, her silent presence a shield against the dark.
But now, in the wake of rising reports of “dog bites,” a suo moto judgment by a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court has declared that every stray dog in Delhi-NCR must be caught, removed, and locked away in shelters, “pounds”, never to return.
Dog Bytes
Yes, dog bites are a serious issue. But just as not all men are rapists or murderers, not all strays bite. To punish every dog for the actions of a few is to condemn the innocent alongside the guilty.
Aggressive or rabid dogs can and should be tackled, through targeted capture, medical evaluation, and rehabilitation or safe isolation when needed. The Animal Birth Control (ABC) Rules, 2023, already provide for sterilisation, vaccination, and monitoring to keep both humans and animals safe. It’s a plan that works… without tearing apart an entire population.
Strays & The Price of Cages

Animal rights veteran politician Maneka Gandhi calls the order “unworkable, financially catastrophic, and ecologically dangerous.” She warns that history could repeat itself, like in 1880s Paris, where mass dog removals triggered an explosion of rats and a deadly plague. “You can’t just vanish lakhs of dogs,” she says. “It will cost ₹15,000 crore, overwhelm every shelter, and break the natural balance of our streets.”
Even today, shelters are crumbling under pressure. The Dulari Animal Welfare Centre cares for over 300 dogs a month, already bursting at the seams. Now, imagine thousands more. Dogs stacked in cramped cages, illnesses spreading like wildfire, resources vanishing overnight.
Bollywood Backs Strays

The backlash has been swift, loud, and emotional.
John Abraham, known for his deep love for animals, didn’t mince words: “We call ourselves a free nation, yet we’re sentencing the innocent to life in captivity. This isn’t the India I know.”
Sonakshi Sinha shared a photograph of her own rescue dog with the caption: “If this order passes without change, thousands like him will lose their only home.”
Varun Dhawan called it “a death warrant disguised as policy”, while Vir Das wrote: “We’re better than this. We have to be.”
Actress Chahatt Khanna, who feeds over 50 strays daily, pleaded for sanity: “These dogs have names. Faces. Stories. You can’t erase them like they never existed.”

Paws in the Dust
At the corner of a busy Delhi market, an old street dog named Rani limps after the vegetable seller who’s fed her for years. She’s never bitten anyone. She sleeps by the same tea stall every night, guarding it like her own. In eight weeks, if the order stands, Rani will vanish, caged in a concrete pound far from the faces she knows.
She will not understand why.
The Forgotten Law
India already has the Animal Birth Control (ABC) Rules, 2023, a global gold standard for humane stray management. The system is simple: sterilise, vaccinate, and return the dog to its home territory. It keeps populations in check, ensures safety, and preserves harmony.
Why abandon this for a method that history, science, and compassion all condemn?
A Call to Protect the Voiceless

If freedom is only for the powerful, then it is not freedom at all. The true measure of a nation lies in how it treats those who cannot petition, legislate, or protest.
TheGlitz calls upon lawmakers, municipal authorities, and citizens alike: pause this judgment before it becomes an irreversible scar on our national conscience.
Born free. Let them remain free.
…Because when the voiceless are silenced, freedom loses its meaning for us all.
How You Can Help Protect India’s Strays

Turn outrage into action...
- Raise Your Voice
- Share this story on social media with hashtags like #BornFreeRemainFree #ProtectTheVoiceless #StrayLivesMatter.
- Tag lawmakers, municipal bodies, and animal welfare organisations.
- Support Animal Rights Groups
- Donate to shelters already overburdened, such as Friendicoes SECA, PFA India, and Delhi’s Dulari Animal Welfare Centre. Send us more names of shelters and TheGlitz will add them in.
- Adopt, Don’t Shop
- Give a street dog a permanent home. Every adoption frees up space in shelters and saves a life.
- Volunteer
- Offer your time at vaccination drives, sterilisation camps, or shelter care.
- Skills in photography, social media, or logistics can be invaluable.
- Write to Authorities
- Email or petition the Delhi government, urging them to follow the Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023 instead of mass confinement.
- Educate Your Community
- Host awareness events in schools and societies about coexisting with strays and the importance of sterilisation.
Remember: Change starts when citizens refuse to stay silent. The fate of thousands of innocent lives depends on what we do now.