‘We write because our neighbor is never home, sometimes up to a month.
But anyway she has a cat, which is within alone.
It does not have the ability to get food or fresh water. It has no human contact.
She has, however, opened the window in the month of december, where there is sub-zero temperatures.
the Window is good enough, but not enough that the cat can get out.’
so begins Maja and Katrine, who lives in a medium-sized town in west Jutland, a worried letter to the nation! on their neighbor’s cat. The two women – who dare not stand forth with the address, as they fear the neighbor and the neighbor’s girlfriend – ancestors namely not their living council, for they can hear the cat meowing, and the sound cuts in their hearts. Their letter – which the local police is the equivalent of below – continues namely as follows:
‘We have contacted the police and dyreværnet up to several times, but police say they can’t anything.
The caller, however, for her, where she then comes home the next day in a few hours and then slips she again in several weeks then.
We write to Ekstra Bladet, because we hope to get the message out to a dyrepoliti is greatly missed, and that the police must take to fit their job, which we pay for’, ends the letter, which the police have sent this reply to:
‘What a citizen should do if they suspect that an animal has fallen depends on the situation.
If the citizen even have the mod on it (and the situation is not acute), the person may contact the owner of the animal and ask if it has the good.
citizens can also apply to an organization (for example, the Cat’s Protection or the Protection of Animals).
If the situation is acute, or the citizen has to contact the owner or an organization, the police can always be contacted on tel. 114′, writes Anne Kirkegaard, communications consultant, Mid – and Vestjyllands Police. What do you say?