English, asked by aryan8410, 11 months ago

how Bishop survived the ordeal on Dog toothpick​

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Answered by ojas1543B
0

Answer:

I don't know search in google

Answered by kingofanime
0

Answer:

A

PITBULL-style dog has died of natural causes, 11 years after its owners took legal action to save it from being put down.

The dog, called Bishop, was featured in the New Journal after he was seized during a 2008 police crackdown on “pitbull-type” dogs under the Dangerous Dogs Act. A campaign was launched in Camden Town to save the dog and, after nine months in kennels and a two-day magistrates’ court hearing, he was released with muzzle conditions.

Owner Sarah Goss, who lives in West Hampstead, said this week she would continue to campaign against the destruction of dogs.

She added: “Bishop is finally free from old age and legislation. My boy made it to a nice age of 13-and-a-half and died not as a result of hurting anyone, but severe arthritis and kidney failure. He is the evidence that it’s the owners not the breed. I wanted everyone to know that Bishop lived a very happy, calm and peaceful life. He could have been killed if we hadn’t fought for him back then, just because he looked a certain way.”

Sarah Goss with Bishop

Breed-specific legislation was introduced 26 years ago as part of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 to restrict the ownership of certain types of dogs deemed to be dangerous to people. Ms Goss said the legislation was unnecessarily “costing millions to enforce”, adding: “In particular, the law prohibits rehoming of a banned type unless the owner has died or is seriously ill. “This means stray dogs that cannot stay with their owners for any other reason may be killed.”

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