Multiple head breeding collapse Volunteer protect more than 30 cats Tokyo Edogawa Ward December 27 20:34

"Multi-headed breeding collapse" in which the number of animals kept is too large to keep properly. After the disappearance of the owner, the animal has nowhere to go, and in Edogawa-ku, Tokyo, volunteers are paying for and continuing to protect more than 30 cats.

Volunteers are paying for and protecting more than 30 cats, who are taking care of a warehouse in Edogawa-ku, Tokyo.

These cats were in the apartment of a woman in her 50s, but were forced to leave the apartment last month due to arrears of rent, leaving her with nowhere to go and volunteers rescued.

The room stinked, and some cats were weak and sick due to illness.

Last year, at least about 2,000 complaints were filed with municipalities around the country over multi-breeding in the past year. It is difficult to do that.

A person in charge of the Edogawa Public Health Center said, "I have tried to persuade the owner for more than a year, but the owner did not let go of the ownership and the law became a wall and the situation could not be prevented before it happened."

Currently, volunteers are searching for cats on the internet, etc., but they have no prospects and the deadline for renting a warehouse is limited by the end of this month.

Akiko Sato, a volunteer, said, "If you ask for volunteers, there are limits to both physical strength and economics. If you don't think about how to deal with society and how it works, it will fail."

Atsushi Hosokawa, a lawyer familiar with the issue of animal abuse, said, "In most cases, the owner does not give up ownership, but the government does not have enforcement rights. "No," the animal comes off and there is nowhere to go. It is necessary to develop laws on how to engage in justice and government. "