382 DEATH OF BULLMASTIFF

THE DEATH OF A BREED
by   David Hancock

It's the year 2050. The six Bullmastiff clubs are holding their AGMs. These meetings are not to plan the future; they are to wind up the clubs concerned and disperse their assets. The breed of Bullmastiff is no more. Perversely it was not the unmonitored and unchecked increasing incidence of lymphosarcoma, hip and elbow dysplasia or leukaemia which wiped out the breed, that would have taken another fifty years. It was legislation imposed throughout the European Union from 2000 onwards to limit the breeding of dogs deemed to be 'dangerous', by ignorant politicians, indifferent bureaucrats, politically-correct policemen and anti-dog local authorities. The hammer-blow came in 2040 when all Bullmastiffs had to be castrated or spayed. Before that not one of the Bullmastiff clubs had financially supported Pro-Dogs, Justice for Dogs or the Endangered Dogs Association. Pity!

 Bullmastiff owners need to wake up to the fact that there is a pogrom being waged in Western Europe against breeds of dog once intentionally bred and then prized by man for their bravery. These breeds, victims of man throughout their history, are now  being penalised by man purely because they are powerfully built and look formidable. The headlines alone tell the story. The coverage of the Dangerous Dogs Act over the last decade summarises the controversy, the outrage, the injustice: "'Dangerous Dogs' laws attacked"; "BVA joins the fight against Danger Act"; "KC should fight the Danger Act"; "Trying to defend the indefensible"; "Kennel costs soar as the pit bull law turns nasty"; "'Ozzie' free at last after court battle"; "Stafford seized as pit bull"; "'Joker' free after legal nightmare"; "Dangerous dogs law to cost £10m in court battles"; "Rethink by RSPCA man saves dog"; "Stafford put down"; "Dogs are still in danger"; "A protest that must still be registered" and "Man bites wrong dog".

 The Dangerous Dogs Act of 1991 is punishing dogs not because of any offence they have committed but because of their physical appearance. Would we tolerate that in humans? They are prosecuted because of their breed; a human being could shout 'racial discrimination' in those circumstances! The Act makes basic assumptions which are not supported by any research, i.e. that dogs 'bred for fighting' are a menace to humans. Where is the evidence? The Staffordshire Bull Terrier was originally bred for fighting, as was the Bull Terrier. 10,000 Staffords and 2,500 Bull Terriersare newly registered with the Kennel Club each year and are kept, without incident, as family pets.

 If say a Bullmastiff is badly treated by its owner, (one went into 'rescue' a few years ago covered in cigarette burns), gets loose and bites the first human being it meets, does this mean that the other 10,000 Bullmastiffs in the land are suddenly dangerous? In the medieval hunting field such dogs were the 'seizers', prized for their reckless bravery in closing with wild boar and other big game. One of the so-called temperament/behaviour 'judgements' made by the British police forces in deciding 'pit bull' or 'fighting dog' type is "extreme perseverance", an attribute greatly valued in  good soldiers in war! The mastiff group is actually revered the world over for its stable laid-back temperament and tolerance of children. Some German States plan to ban such dogs, using isolated one-off incidents, usually involving other breeds, as a valid excuse.

 Reacting to appalling incidents in which an 86 year old lady was killed by a Rottweiler and a six year boy was killed by two Bull Terriers, crowds in Germany poured petrol over a harmless Bull Terrier and burned it to death. Other Bull Terrier owners were attacked with baseball bats; a Parson Russell Terrier was kicked to death in a separate incident. In the Hamburg area all Bull Terriers were effectively outlawed. The owner of the dogs (not English Bull Terriers) which killed the boy was a gangster, convicted 17 times for robbery, grievous bodily harm and dog-fighting. What will the German authorities do when such a person misuses every breed over 30lbs weight in turn, to the danger of the public? 

 If skinheads or other social misfits misuse dogs once associated with dog-fighting then they are guilty of crimes ahead of anything their wretched dogs may be forced to do. But at present it is the dogs which lose their lives and their owners a few marks, dollars or pounds. THERE ARE FIGHTING DOGS BUT NO FIGHTING BREEDS. Incidents like those in Wales, France and Germany in 2000 involving attacks on elderly citizens and children in a school playground allegedly by 'bullterriers' will never be reduced if the breed of Bull Terrier is then targetted. The depraved individuals favouring savage dogs will turn to other breeds. In Holland, when Pit Bull Terriers were banned in 1997 registrations of similar breeds rose ten fold. Chasing a problem never solves it.

 The Act bans the breed of Japanese Tosa from Britain, a breed bred for fighting in Japan. There is no evidence on record to indicate that a breed can be dangerous. The Tosa is kept by families all over Europe and North America without incident. Tosas can be aggressive with other dogs but this can be 'trained out', as with any dog of any breed. The DDA was not however designed to protect other dogs but to protect human beings from attacks by dogs. Any dog which attacks a person is a candidate for destruction, but surely only because of deed not breed.

 Two particular veterinary surgeons have been allowed to give evidence by magistrates as expert witnesses of 'pit bull type'. But the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons has stated that a vet's training does NOT qualify a vet for breed identification. A local authority so-called 'Animal Welfare Worker' in south-east England specialises in DDA seizures, without any professional knowledge or experience of powerful but placid dogs. This 'welfare officer' advises worried owners of seized dogs to sign a "disclaimer" to avoid prosecution but allow destruction. In June 2000 a case in Thames Valley police area collapsed, despite this 'welfare officer's' efforts, on lack of credible evidence alone.

 One particular police officer in the Met has been allowed to give expert evidence in court because he has examined a lot of dogs. But a Kennel Club-approved Staffordshire Bull Terrier judge, John Branch, who has examined more dogs than this police officer ever could, was over-ruled in a breed decision in court. This police officer seems to be able to bring cases against dog owners in his own right and has carved out a career niche for himself in this way. IS JUSTICE BEST SERVED BY THAT?

 This police officer, a constable, claims to have studied 'pit bulls' in the United States but the real experts there have never heard of him. Is this constable out of control, pursuing a personal advancement agenda to the detriment of the poor old dog? What is especially regrettable is that, despite Home Office guidelines to the contrary,  the police are prosecuting dogs under the DDA, rather than a more appropriate Act (e.g. the 1871 Dogs Act), so that the defendant cannot claim legal aid. This is a disgraceful tactic not compatible with the pursuit of justice in a fair society. One case has already been thrown out because of this "abuse of process". In this case, there was no proof of a 'bite' at all, but the lady owner of the accused dog would have had a criminal record if the police case had succeeded.

 In the first four years of the Act alone, it cost the Metropolitan Police £3,097,200 just to provide kennelling and veterinary treatment for dogs detained under the Act. In the first five years of the Act, Home Office Destruction Orders totalled over 900. All these dogs, incidentally, were taken from working class people, not all of whom are always best able to speak up for themselves or are conversant with legal procedures. This alone casts a shadow over police attitudes and behaviour.  

 In a recent case, a man called the Met's dog-handlers asking for advice on training the American Bulldog he had purchased, a very responsible act. The response? A police constable called on him, drank tea whilst discussing the dog, then seized the dog on the way out, under the DDA. What crime had the dog committed? The Met's so-called expert witnesses claim that they can identify 'pit bull type' by assessing the dog's physical points, or anatomical features. But there are numerous breeds which display such points. And where is the evidence that a dog's physique can affect its temperament? Magistrates are ignoring evidence from distinguished animal behaviourists like Dr Roger Mugford and highly experienced Bull Terrier judges who examine hundreds, perhaps thousands of dogs per year. Who is likely to give the public greater value as witnesses? Two organisations, set out in the Act as advisors, the Kennel Club and the RSPCA, are now disinclined to do so, because of the injustice involved.

 The whole purpose of the Act was to provide protection against bites inflicted by dogs deemed to be dangerous, specifically by Pit Bull Terriers. In fact, as a recent survey revealed (i.e. 'Injury; International Journal of the Care of the Injured'), the number of bites inflicted by Pit Bull Terriers since the introduction of the Act has remained constant and still in the minority; the Act is clearly misdirected as well as  having no effect. Criminals who use powerful protection dogs have moved on to other breeds to avoid police attention. Breeds like the Chinese Shar-Pei and the Japanese Akita, perhaps attracting attention because both were said to have been used for dog- fighting in their native countries, have become more numerous; registrations of both trebling since the DDA came into force. This recent survey established however that on a biting basis, Borzois were seven times more dangerous than Rottweilers!

 This shameful Act, has led to harmless family pets being seized, solely because of their appearance, and kept (sometimes over 50 at a time) in kennels for years (one dog 'Tulip' being incarcerated for 12 years, before she died, still in gaol). The Metropolitan Police, not the most respected police force in the country, the most expensive and least successful force in Britain, with over 200 unsolved murders on its books, leads this pogrom; other forces, like those of Thames Valley and Sussex, copy them. This pogrom has already cost the taxpayer well over £M40 -- with the bites inflicted by dogs remaining the same. The Act is ineffective as well as grossly unfair.

 Other countries, out of misguided respect for British law-making, have copied this legislation which has widened the latent injustice being imposed. The Dutch and the French have introduced laws to prohibit the ownership and freedom of movement of several breeds. The Germans have enacted new state laws to ban some Bull Terrier breeds and to force owners of blameless mastiff-breed dogs and Rhodesian Ridgeback dogs to 'prove' their dogs are not savage; four British breeds are affected, not one German breed, despite the high incidence of Rottweilers and German Shepherd Dogs in biting cases. This is knee-jerk legislation by dishonest politicians not justified carefully-conceived law-making. In some places in North America even Pugs, Golden Retrievers and Labradors are banned. Such hysteria can only undermine respect for the law.

 No one wants to see the public unprotected; savage dogs should be destroyed but only from their deeds not their breeds.  Dogs purposely bred by man in past centuries to fight other dogs, bait bulls or fight lions, bears and even horses for man's base amusement need our greater care not our total indifference to their fate. Breeds bred to be brave at the behest of man now need all fair-minded men to be brave for them. Those who claim to love the breed of Bullmastiff, as well as those clubs formed to further the breed, need to get their collective head out the sand and start doing something. Hand-wringing doesn't win wars. The Bullmastiff fraternity needs to stand up now for the future of its breed -- by supporting those already in the fight. Time is not on our side! Action is needed NOT passing interest. Hard work now is more likely to achieve something than casual concern. What are breed clubs for if they don't protect their breed!