Saturday, August 1, 2015

Guided Theft

From the MT:
"Police, Muscovites Search for Guide Dog Stolen From Distraught Owner"
 
Moscow police are investigating the theft of a guide dog that was stolen from its owner near a busy metro station in broad daylight earlier this week, Russian media reported Friday. “Police have opened a theft case over a guide dog that was stolen from a blind girl,” TASS cited an unidentified local police spokesman as saying. He said a search for the animal was under way. The dog, a golden labrador named Diana, was stolen at about 6 p.m. Wednesday outside Papa Carlo, a pet store near Profsoyuznaya metro station in the city's south, Anna Arkhangelskaya, an employee of Moscow State University who launched an appeal to find the dog, wrote on her Facebook page early Thursday morning.   “The dog is a part of me, she's very dear to me — she's my friend, my companion and my eyes,” Diana's owner, Yulia Dyakova, told Moskva24 news channel in an interview aired Thursday.  “It's hard for me because I don't know how the dog is, what kind of conditions she's being kept in, whether she's being fed, looked after. Even if they won't return her, I'd like to know how she is,” Dyakova said, choking back tears.  Several hours after Diana's disappearance, Dyakova received a phone call saying Diana's collar, which had Dyakova's phone number on it, had been found near the metro station, Arkhangelskaya wrote. In a follow-up post the next day, Arkhangelskaya wrote that several people had contacted her to say they had seen a woman get on a suburban train with Diana at Paveletsky Train Station, and that once on the train, she had been overheard telling a fellow passenger that people who beg with animals in underpasses should not be trusted and that she had saved the dog from a blind person who had been exploiting the animal.  Dyakova, who has won awards for her singing and been featured on TV, sometimes sings on the street or in city underpasses, Arkhangelskaya said.  The woman suspected of having taken Diana got off at Domodedovo station, Arkhangelskaya said, after which she was met by a man and her further movements are unknown. A photo of the suspected abductor taken on the metro was included in the same Facebook post.    Dyakova has had the guide dog for nearly two years, and is completely dependent on her, Arkhangelskaya added, calling on Facebook users to spread the word and notify her or the police if they thought they had seen the missing dog or her suspected kidnapper.


^ Being disabled is hard enough anywhere in the world. Being disabled in Russia adds more difficulties. Being disabled in Moscow has its own hardships. Most Russian people with disabilities never leave their homes because life is too hard. To be blind and able to go around the over-crowded city with a guide dog probably gave Dvakova a sense of normalcy. The majority of Russians see a disability as the outward sign of shame and of sin (ie that it is deserved for some wrong-doing) and so there is very little care or compassion to the disability. I have seen that attitude when I was in Russia (I went to an institution for the disabled)  as well as from Russians around the world. Of course not every Russian discriminates against the disabled, but the large majority do. I believe this theft was done by someone who sees the disabled as sinful and that they deserve to be punished. Not only is this a theft, but it is also a human rights issue. That person is not only stealing a beloved dog, but also the means of sight. This guide dog is the eyes to the person who uses them and has been trained, at great expense, to do its job. I only hope the dog is found and returned and that the Russian media continue to show the state of affairs of the disabled within Russia. ^ 


http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/police-muscovites-search-for-guide-dog-stolen-from-distraught-owner/526565.html
 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.