Santiago, Chile May 14, 2008
National and International pressure
finally forced the government to take action
Military and police personnel rescued more than 100 pets from the Chilean town of Chaiten, which was evacuated and sealed off due to the eruption of the volcano that bears the same name, officials said.
“We’re happy, we were able to go ahead with the rescue of the pets, dogs and cats, that we were able to recover,” Environment Minister Ana Lya Uriarte said.
The rescue team, which was led by Uriarte on Tuesday, included soldiers, airmen, Carabineros militarized police officers and five veterinarians.
Three trucks took the dogs and cats to Villa Santa Lucia, a town near Chaiten, where a temporary animal shelter will be set up.
Uriarte said the animals came up to the rescuers “as if asking to be taken away,” making the operation “tremendously tender.”
Chaiten Mayor Jose Miguel Fritis said the operation was a “splendid” effort and the pets had not been rescued earlier because “in situations like this, you have to be very cautious in the steps you take.”
Interior Minister Edmundo Perez Yoma, meanwhile, said the Chaiten volcano’s eruption could last days, weeks or months, adding that the government would provide assistance to families affected by the natural disaster.
“We will work hand in hand with every family, we will do it case by case and will compensate them for what they end up losing in material terms, they don’t need to worry,” the interior minister said.
In recent days, animal rights activists and residents of Chaiten, located 1,250 kilometers (776 miles) south of Santiago, had demanded that a rescue operation be mounted for pets, who were left behind when the government ordered the town evacuated.
Over the weekend, an animal rights group said it wanted to enter Chaiten to rescue the hundreds of pets left behind.
Alejandra Cassino, a spokeswoman for the Coalition for the Ethical Treatment of Urban Animals, said that due to the government’s lack of action, animal rights activists were willing to rescue the estimated 450 dogs and 350 cats abandoned in Chaiten.
The group, which staged a protest on Saturday in Santiago, went public with its offer shortly after President Michelle Bachelet warned evacuees that Chaiten would be wiped out in six minutes if the volcano erupted.
Before officials established a 50-kilometer (31-mile) security perimeter around the town, pets were cared for by a group of veterinarians brought in by the air force who stayed until last Wednesday.
Cassino said the National Emergency Office offered animal rights activists permission to enter the town for four or five hours, a period of time that she labeled “ridiculous.”
“It’s nothing. We are not dealing with people with whom you can talk, but with animals that have to be found, that can bite you and scratch you. We need 48 or more hours of work to have a positive outcome,” Cassino said.
The animal rights activist said many evacuees had handed over the keys to their houses so their pets could be rescued.
Officials, however, waited until Tuesday to authorize a rescue operation for pets because of the volcano’s unstable situation.
The government’s policy toward the estimated 51,000 head of livestock in Palena province has been in sharp contrast to that for household pets.
Unlike household pets, cattle have been given feed and some herds were moved to Aysen, a region located south of the volcano zone, but officials still fear that many of the animals will die of starvation.
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* Notice this: They only rescued about 200 animals, and there could be 500 of them.
Horses and cattle still remain in Chaiten, without food or water …..
Please send a letter to the president of Chile to let her know that there are still animals to rescue: http://www.gobiernodechile.cl/viewEscribelePresidenta.aspx
or help in anyway you can!…
Thanks!

Photo: “Hey, I’m in Chaiten I’m dying. Government of Chile I’ll be your karma” ![]()

