ANKARA, Turkey — A Turkish bill aimed at regulating the country's millions of stray dogs moved closer to becoming law Wednesday as animal rights advocates feared many of them would be killed or end up in neglected, overcrowded shelters.
''Although some people persistently ignore it, Turkey has a stray dog problem,'' President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose ruling party proposed the bill, told legislators after a parliamentary committee approved the bill late Tuesday. The full assembly will have a final vote in the coming days.
The government estimates that around 4 million stray dogs roam Turkey's streets and rural areas. Although many are harmless, a growing number are congregating in packs, and numerous people have been attacked in Istanbul and elsewhere. The country's well-known large stray cat population is not a focus of the bill.
Erdogan noted that stray dogs ''attack children, adults, elderly people and other animals. They attack flocks of sheep and goats, they cause traffic accidents.''
The proposed legislation mandates that municipalities collect stray dogs and house them in shelters where they would be neutered and spayed. Dogs that are in pain, terminally ill, pose a health risk to humans or are aggressive would be euthanized.
Municipalities would be required to build dog shelters or improve conditions in existing ones by 2028. Mayors who fail to meet their responsibilities in controlling stray dogs would face imprisonment of six months to two years. Fines on people who abandon pets would be raised from 2,000 lira ($60) to 60,000 lira ($1,800).
Animal rights activists worry that some municipalities might kill dogs on the pretext that they are ill, rather than allocate resources to shelter them.
''Since there are not enough places in the shelters — there are very few shelters in Turkey — a path has been opened for the killing (of strays),'' said veterinarian Turkan Ceylan. ''We animal rights activists know very well that this spells death.''