In a landmark shift, the Supreme Court of India has reversed its earlier directive to permanently confine stray dogs in shelters. The updated verdict, delivered on August 22, 2025, strikes a balanced chord between public safety concerns and the rights of street dogs.Β
What Changed?Β
A three-judge bench headed by Justices Vikram Nath, Sandeep Mehta, and N. V. Anjaria ruled that sterilised, vaccinated, and dewormed stray dogs may now be returned to their original localities, reflecting the principles of the Animal Birth Control (ABC) Rules. Only dogs displaying aggression or signs of rabies must continue to be kept in shelters.Β
Nationwide Framework, Local ImpactΒ
The court widened the scope of the matter, directing all states and Union Territories to develop a uniform stray dog management policy with designated feeding zones and enhanced ABC infrastructure. Authorities must also establish helplines for reporting violations.Β
Backlash, Reconsideration, and ReliefΒ
The reversal comes after widespread criticism of the August 11 directive, which had called for immediate removal and confinement of straysβtriggering protests and logistical concerns due to insufficient shelter capacity.Β
Support from Animal Welfare AdvocatesΒ
- Maneka Gandhi praised the verdict as a βscientific judgment,β noting the first major fund injection in decadesββΉ2,500 crore for ABC programme implementation.Β
- PETA India celebrated the move, saying, βEvery dog has her day,β while urging public vigilance to prevent mislabeling dogs as aggressive.Β
- Rahul Gandhi and other political figures hailed the ruling as βprogressive,β highlighting its humane and scientifically grounded approach.Β
Public and Community ResponseΒ
Supporters and animal lovers celebrated across the country:Β
- At Jantar Mantar, activists cheered the decision and urged swift rollout of sterilisation and designated feeding zones.Β
- Street feeders in Mysuru reaffirmed their commitment; they clarified that penalties wonβt apply to responsible feeding and agreed to monthly coordination meetings to ensure smooth compliance.Β
Why This MattersΒ
India battles one of the worldβs highest rates of stray dogβinduced injuries and rabies cases. With over 50 million strays nationwide, imposing a blanket sheltering order was neither practical nor humane. The current decision aligns with the ABC Rules of ethical and effective population management.