
Himanshu Prabhakar CSS
3.9K posts

Himanshu Prabhakar CSS
@hprabhakar
Ministry of New & Renewable Energy, Govt of India//Coordination Secretary, CSS Forum




Uncle was going with his daughter on scooty & a 2 unleashed Pet dogs + 2 Stray Dogs were chasing & troubling them so rather than speeding, he stopped & tried to shoooo them away. As soon as Uncle acted in self defence, The walking Pet owners came running & Started b*at!ng Uncle.

Stray dogs maul leopard cub to death in Kadapa district ✍️A.D. Rangarajan thehindu.com/news/national/…

@surya_ardeshir @MintOminty Simply google : A community dog is a street-dwelling or free-ranging dog that lives within a community (neighborhood, campus, or market) and is collectively cared for, fed, and vaccinated by local residents rather than having a single owner. They are considered "community-owned"



Several community dogs live across the three terminals and are being regularly cared for and fed by our team, strictly following veterinary-prescribed guidelines to ensure their health and balanced behaviour. (2/6)





They don’t have a voice. We do. And yet, what we are seeing today is fear slowly turning into anger, and sometimes into cruelty. To be fair, that fear is not unfounded. Incidents have happened. People worry about their children, their families, their own safety. Those concerns are real and deserve to be acknowledged. But cruelty is not a solution. In fact, it often makes situations worse. A street dog is not born aggressive. It becomes that way because of hunger, territory, and the environment around it. When fear is met with violence, it only creates more fear, more aggression, and a cycle that helps no one. This is not about asking everyone to love dogs. That’s not realistic. It’s about asking for a basic line we don’t cross. Because safety and kindness are not opposites. They can exist together. The real solution lies in systems that work quietly in the background. Consistent sterilisation, vaccination, and better waste management are what make streets safer over time. That responsibility cannot sit only with citizens. For us, maybe it starts with a small pause. Not reacting in anger. Choosing not to harm. Letting the system do what it is meant to do. You don’t have to love them. But we can choose not to be cruel. Because how we treat those who cannot speak… says everything about us.



Rising incidents of dog bites are a matter of genuine concern, and ensuring safety—for both people and animals—requires collective responsibility. (6/6)







