NEWS AND VIEWS: The news media or at least the newspaper I am reading (The Times) indicates that there is some surprise that a stray dog claimed to the top of one of Egypt’s great pyramids but I’m not surprised because there are lots of …
For me, being a former solicitor and on occasions dealing with landlord and tenant disputes, and also reading about them in the newspaper since I retired getting on for 20 years ago, this kind of story which I describe below is not uncommon and points …
Here is an infographic on the laws on hunting dingoes in Australia with some notes below. By its nature is a strict summary. Please check with the authorities but the general drift is that dingoes are pests in most of Australia and can be shot …
“I gave Prozac to rescue dog”. These are the words in The Times newspaper today and they were said by Rory Cellan-Jones, a former BBC technology correspondent, 66. He and his wife Diane struggled for more than a year to settle-in his female Romanian rescue …
NEWS AND OPINION, UK: From a lawyer’s point of view this is a slightly strange story. It is also a story which provides us with a lesson. A banker, a senior executive at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Yigit Onkan Sazak, and his wife Belma, …
The infographic highlights the trend of South Koreans favoring dog companionship over human partners for various reasons, which poses significant challenges for the South Korean government regarding future economic growth due to the country’s lowest birth rate of 0.7 per woman, whereas a rate of …
Click this link to see all articles on the American XL Bully which has been an evolving story to a ban and continuing breaches of the law due to a failure of enforcement. The XL bully dog continues to kill people in England and Wales …
Ratan Tata, 86, is an Indian billionaire and he loves dogs to bits. He really does love them and he does an awful lot to help dogs and it would appear than in India they need help because there are far too many stray dogs. …
The French phrase “va dans ta niche” translates to “go in your kennel” or “go to your place”. It is an idiomatic expression used to tell someone to go away or leave, often in a dismissive or authoritative way. The phrase implies that the person …