A man feeds scraps to his dogs in Harare, Zimbabwe, on Thursday. People are barely able
to feed their pets.
The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said it could not feed surrendered animals or find them new
homes and was being forced to kill them and destroy the corpses.
Animals, like people, are being hard hit by Zimbabwe's economic meltdown, with official inflation of more than 7,600 percent,
the highest in the world. Independent estimates put real inflation closer to 25,000 percent and the International Monetary
Fund has forecast it will reach 100,000 percent by the end of the year.
Vets have run out of the drug used to put down the animals and are relying on intermittent donations from neighboring South
Africa. One veterinary practice was waiting for supplies to destroy about 20 animals, and on Friday could neither feed them
adequately nor fatally inject them.
In its latest bulletin to donors and supporters, the SPCA said it launched an awareness campaign on "the ethical and moral
issues regarding the killing and consumption of trusted companion animals."
"But in the face of starvation and the burgeoning number of stray and abandoned animals, the moral issues become far more
complex and we should not be too hasty in our condemnations when animals and people are suffering equally," it said.
One animal rights activist, who asked not to be named out of fear of arrest, called the situation "too ghastly for words.
"We are accused of giving the country a bad name," the activist said.
Zimbabwe's and international human rights groups accuse the government of intimidating, threatening, harassing and physically attacking
critics or those seen as casting the government in a bad light.
Sweeping media laws have brought the closure of independent and opposition newspapers, speech and gatherings are tightly
controlled, and President Robert Mugabe has applauded police for beating opposition activists.
Animal activists say they have been threatened with arrest for speaking out and SPCA offices were raided by secret police
agents of the Central Intelligence Organization on Thursday. SPCA inspectors said they were ordered not to release details
of surrendered, abandoned, slain or eaten pets.
No comment was immediately available from the government.
Mugabe's critics say corruption and his stewardship of the economy have led to the crisis. They point to the often-violent,
government seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms that began in 2000 and disrupted the agriculture-based economy
in what was once a regional breadbasket.
Meat, cornmeal, bread and other staples vanished from shops and stores. A government order to slash prices of all goods
and services in June worsened acute food shortages and has left stores virtually empty of basic foodstuffs.
Food shortages have also emboldened rats to forage for scraps in homes and far beyond their usual hideaways, pest control
specialists said.
Leftover food that would have been discarded has become too precious to throw away, said a rat catcher in western Harare.
"We are getting rat problems where we never saw them before," he said, asking not to be identified in the mounting climate
of fear of the authorities. "Please, I don't want any trouble."
Illegally slaughtered meat sells for more than 10 times the government's fixed price on the thriving black market. It comes
in plastic bags of 22 pounds and more, containing bone, fat and offal and no indication of types or cuts of meat.
"You're getting brisket, shin, flank, rump and anything else that's available, all lumped together. It's meat, take it
or leave it," the animal protection activist said.
"It is not illegal to eat dog meat in this country, but we have laws on how animals must be humanely slaughtered," he said.
A court case is pending in the eastern city of Mutare, where a pet dog was butchered and eaten.
Police and SPCA inspectors were called to a shopping center in Harare earlier this month, where a man was offering frozen
dog meat for sale from the back of a pickup truck, activists said.
The suspect escaped and the vehicle was not traced.