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US-owned security firm slaughters dogs after losing contract in Kuwait

US-owned security firm slaughters dogs after losing contract in Kuwait

Kuwait City, June 25 (IANS) Two dozen bomb-sniffing dogs were killed by an American-owned security firm in Kuwait after its contract with a local oil company expired. The owners say they killed 24 dogs "humanely" because they were sick.

The animals were slaughtered on June 17. There are a further 100 or so dogs at risk of being killed, RT online cited Kuwait Animal Rescue Unit, an animal rights group, as saying.

Earlier this week, the group posted graphic pictures on social media showing bodies of dead dogs piled up in corridors inside the base of Eastern Securities of Kuwait. In one of the pictures, a man was seen resting his foot on a dog's corpse.

 

This US-owned company provided services to Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC).

Kuwait Animal Rescue Unit said the security firm killed 24 of its sniffer dogs after losing a contract with the oil company, which reportedly paid Eastern Securities $9,900 monthly for each dog.

KNPC has denied being involved in the slaughter. In an interview with the Kuwaiti News Agency, official spokesman Khaled Al-Asousi said the contract with Eastern Securities was terminated after the dogs failed to sniff out explosives during a third-party test.

However, the security company maintains that it humanely euthanised the dogs because they were old and sick suffering from conditions such as tumors and hip dysplasia while some were just too aggressive.

"These dogs were suffering in the condition they were in. In my opinion, this should have been done a year ago," an unnamed employee told the Arab Times, adding that the dogs had been diagnosed with those issues two years ago.

He also said the company unsuccessfully tried to put the dogs up for adoption.

The Kuwait Animal Rescue Unit, which made the dog massacre public, is now asking for "animal lovers in Kuwait, USA, and other countries" to give the case greater publicity.

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