Horror in Hooghly: Five Street Dogs Brutally Mutilated in Shocking Animal Cruelty Case
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- Sahanara Sultana
- 22 Oct, 2025
§ 5 Dogs Brutally Mutilated in Chinsurah Mainadanga
§ Unspeakable Cruelty Rocks Chinsurah Neighborhood
§ Dogs Tortured, Mutilated During Kali Puja - Justice Demanded
§ 5 Street Dogs Mutilated in Hooghly, West Bengal Animal Cruelty Shocks India
The quiet locality of Mainadanga in Chinsurah, Hooghly district, West Bengal has been shaken by one of the most horrifying acts of animal cruelty reported in recent months. Five helpless street dogs that had found shelter at the home of a local homeopathy doctor couple became victims of unspeakable torture—ears severed, tails amputated, eyes brutally damaged and in the most disturbing act, genital mutilation.
The dogs had been under the care of Dr. P.K. Ghosh and Dr. Reena Ghosh, a compassionate couple who regularly provided food, shelter and medical care to stray animals in their neighborhood. What happened to these innocent creatures has shocked animal welfare activists across the state and raised urgent questions about humanity’s treatment of voiceless beings.
“Calling it inhuman would be an understatement,” says animal welfare volunteer Sanchita Pal from Chandannagar, who rushed to the scene after receiving distress calls. “These helpless animals were subjected to torture that I cannot adequately describe. Someone removed their ears, cut off their tails, gouged their eyes and mutilated their private parts. This is beyond comprehension.”
Festival Fear Turned into Nightmare
The incident occurred during the Kali Puja festival period when street dogs typically hide indoors to escape the terrifying sounds of firecrackers and explosions. Taking advantage of the animals’ vulnerability and fear, the perpetrator or perpetrators committed acts of barbarism that have left the entire community horrified.
· Dr. P.K. Ghosh, who discovered the mutilated dogs, shared his anguish: “For many years, we have cared for dogs at our home. Wherever I maintain my clinic chambers, dogs stay there too and I bring food for them. Even though they are street dogs, they live at our residence. Yesterday, I saw that the dogs had been tortured. I don’t know who or what kind of people could do this to helpless creatures. Humans cannot do such things.”
The doctor’s voice trembles with emotion as he describes the scene that greeted him—animals who trusted humans, who depended on human kindness for survival, betrayed in the most cruel manner imaginable.
Rising Wave of Animal Abuse Across Bengal
This horrific incident in Mainadanga is not isolated. West Bengal has witnessed a disturbing surge in animal cruelty cases over recent months, revealing a deeply troubling pattern of violence against voiceless creatures.
Just weeks ago in Chandannagar’s Lalbagan area, someone deliberately threw acid into a puppy’s eyes. The investigation later revealed that a local resident committed this heinous act. In Siliguri earlier this year, a man was caught on camera throwing a stray dog into a roadside sewage drain, laughing as he walked away.
In August 2025, the city of Asansol was gripped by horror when 15 stray dogs were found poisoned to death, their bodies scattered along roadsides. Police arrested one suspect, but the incident exposed the fatal consequences of human-animal conflicts in urban areas.
· Sanchita Pal, who has been working with street animals for years, expresses her despair: “Day after day, torture against these helpless creatures continues to increase. We try to make people aware, educate them about compassion, yet the abuse keeps rising. This cannot be accepted under any circumstances.”
Legal Framework Exists But Enforcement Weak
India has comprehensive animal protection laws on paper. The Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (PCA) Act, 1960, explicitly prohibits cruelty toward animals and prescribes penalties for violations. Sections 428 and 429 of the Indian Penal Code provide for punishment in cases of animal torture.
Section 11 of the PCA Act defines “cruelty” and makes infliction of unnecessary pain or suffering upon any animal a punishable offense. Under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023, which replaced the IPC, Section 325 categorizes maiming or killing of any animal as a cognizable offense with punishment extending to five years imprisonment, fine or both.
Yet despite these legal protections, enforcement remains tragically weak. Animal welfare activist Priya Chopra laments, “Even when we file an FIR, the penalty under the PCA Act is just Rs 50 for first-time offenders and accused persons get bail immediately. The law exists but lacks teeth.”
The Parliamentary Committee’s reports have repeatedly highlighted the inadequacy of penalties under animal welfare legislation. Maximum fines of Rs 50 and three months’ imprisonment for convicted first-time offenders under the PCA Act are grossly insufficient deterrents for such heinous crimes.
Medical Treatment Underway for Survivors
The injured dogs are currently receiving medical care from Dr. P.K. Ghosh and the team of volunteers who responded to the crisis. The doctor, who maintains a medicine shop and laboratory, is personally treating the wounded animals using his expertise in homeopathic medicine.
· “We are providing all necessary medical attention to these suffering animals,” Dr. Ghosh confirms. “Their physical wounds will heal with time but the psychological trauma they have endured is immeasurable.”
Sanchita Pal’s organization, which specializes in caring for sick and injured street animals has mobilized resources to support the treatment. “We mainly work with sick street dogs requiring medical intervention. When I received information about this case, I immediately came here. These five dogs in the Chunara Mainadanga area were subjected to inhuman torture—ears and tails cut off, eyes gouged out, private parts mutilated. We are doing everything possible to help them recover.”
Link Between Animal Abuse and Human Violence
Research has consistently shown that individuals who commit acts of cruelty toward animals often progress to violence against humans. A study published in the Forensic Research & Criminology International Journal states that “those who engage in animal cruelty were three times more likely to commit other crimes, including murder, rape, robbery, assault, harassment, threats and drug/substance abuse.”
PETA India has long advocated for mandatory psychiatric evaluation and counseling for perpetrators of animal abuse. “Abusing animals indicates a deep psychological disturbance,” their reports emphasize. “These are not isolated acts but indicators of broader violent tendencies that pose risks to society.”
· The Kerala High Court, in the landmark case Re: Bruno vs Union Of India (2021), acted suo motu on reports of a violent killing of a Labrador dog, ordering comprehensive measures to sensitize the population about duties and responsibilities toward animals. The court emphasized that “the poor conditions of veterinary hospitals and allied infrastructure” require immediate government attention.
Constitutional Duty Forgotten
India’s Constitution under Article 51A(g) makes it a fundamental duty of every citizen “to have compassion for living creatures.” Article 48A directs the state to protect and improve the environment, including safeguarding forests and wildlife.
These provisions, introduced by the 42nd Amendment in 1976, reflect India’s ancient cultural values of ahimsa (non-violence) and reverence for all life forms. Yet the gap between constitutional ideals and ground reality remains distressingly wide.
“The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated,” Mahatma Gandhi famously said. By this measure, incidents like Mainadanga reveal a troubling moral crisis that demands urgent societal introspection.
Read More: Zubeen Garg Death Protests: Is Assam CM Himanta Sarma Facing His Biggest Political Crisis.?
Community Demands Justice and Action
Local residents and animal welfare organizations are demanding immediate police action to identify and prosecute the perpetrators. “We need to register an FIR immediately and ensure thorough investigation,” insists Sanchita Pal. “Whoever committed these barbaric acts must face the full force of the law.”
· Animal rights activists are also calling for systemic reforms. These include,
o Strengthening Legal Penalties: Updating the outdated PCA Act with significantly higher fines and longer prison sentences to create genuine deterrence.
o Improved Enforcement: Training police officers to take animal cruelty cases seriously and ensuring swift investigation and prosecution.
o Public Awareness Campaigns: Large-scale educational initiatives to foster compassion toward animals and highlight the illegality of cruelty.
o Mental Health Interventions: Mandatory psychiatric evaluation for animal abuse offenders to prevent escalation to human violence.
o Better Infrastructure: Establishing well-equipped animal shelters, veterinary facilities and rescue networks.
Social Media Amplifies Awareness
The Mainadanga case has gained attention across social media platforms with thousands expressing outrage and demanding action. Hashtags calling for justice and stricter animal protection laws have been trending across Instagram, Facebook and X (formerly Twitter).
The Social Media Animal Cruelty Coalition (SMACC), a network of 34 animal protection organizations, reports that public submissions of suspected animal abuse content exceeded 80,000 links in 2024 alone. “We are seeing increased public awareness, which is positive, but we need social media platforms to take more proactive steps in removing cruelty content,” they emphasize.
Celebrity activists and influencers have also amplified calls for stronger animal protection measures. The visibility of cases like Mainadanga on digital platforms has mobilized wider public support for animal welfare causes than ever before.
Path Forward Requires Collective Action
The torture suffered by five innocent dogs in Mainadanga is not just a local incident—it reflects a national crisis that demands immediate, comprehensive response.
Animal welfare organizations stress that individual acts of compassion, while valuable, are insufficient. What’s needed is systemic change: stronger laws with real penalties, dedicated enforcement mechanisms, public education campaigns and a cultural shift toward viewing animals not as property but as sentient beings deserving protection and respect.
“These helpless creatures depend entirely on human mercy,” Sanchita Pal reminds us. “When we fail them so catastrophically, we fail ourselves. A society that tolerates such cruelty toward its most vulnerable members has lost its moral compass.”
As medical treatment continues for the five survivors in Mainadanga, their suffering stands as a stark reminder of humanity’s capacity for both compassion and cruelty—and of the urgent choice we must make about which path to follow.
The dogs of Mainadanga cannot speak for themselves. But their wounds speak volumes about the kind of society we have become—and the kind we must strive to be.
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