Thursday, May 26, 2016

Taken from news.asiaone.com
Distraught after being berated by animal activists for euthanising too many dogs, a veterinary doctor and director of an animal shelter in Taiwan has reportedly committed suicide.
The threats started coming in after Jian Zhicheng, the director of the Xinwu Animal Protection and Education Centre, revealed that she was forced to euthanise 700 dogs in just two years due to overcrowding issues at the animal shelter.
Her death on May 12 was confirmed by a staff member from the Taoyuan Office of Animal Care and Control to MailOnline, although they declined to reveal the exact cause of her death.

"Public animal shelters are allowed to carry out mercy killings when they are running out of space, according to Taiwanese law," the staff member told MailOnline.
"Since this is an animal shelter, it cannot refuse to take in stray animals, when there are more coming in than leaving, and in order to maintain the standard of the living quality of animals here, this is allowed," said the article.
410 dogs and 94 cats are currently housed in the Xinwu animal shelter, which has a capacity for 500 dogs and 100 cats.

Colleagues described Jian as a kind-hearted and dedicated person. Reported to be 31-years-old, Jian had been working at the state-run shelter for a couple of years.
She had revealed the euthanisation figures in a news report, leading animal rights activists to brand her as a 'female butcher' and 'butcher with beauty'.

Upset by the name-calling and the woes faced by the animal shelter due to the increasing number of animal abandonment cases, Jian was under immense pressure to solve the problem.
According to People's Daily Online, her husband lodged a police report after she failed to return home on May 5. She was later found unconscious on the same day by the police after injecting euthanasia drugs meant for the animals. She died in the hospital a week later.

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