Restrictions, criticism faced by dog owners
Questions raised over problematic animals being kept in large cities
Zhang Lei held back tears as she recalled the day early last year she brought Maomao, a small black mongrel, home from a truck full of strays standing by the roadside in Beijing.
The dogs were on their way to a pound between the Fifth and Sixth Ring Roads in Changping district in the north of the capital, where some strays are sent every week.
Zhang, 25, who was a university student at the time, loves to take care of stray dogs, especially those around her former college campus in Haidian district.
In recent years, the number of dogs in Beijing has risen rapidly, in line with the situation nationwide.
According to the 2018 Chinese Pet Industry White Paper, there were 50.85 million dogs in China last year and the number of owners reached 33.9 million.
However, the burgeoning canine population has raised questions over how owners in large cities can get along with people who don't have dogs.
Dog lovers have criticized strict local restrictions on the size of animals they can own and the hours during which they can be walked. Others have blamed savage dogs which, in some cases, have been responsible for fatal attacks.
- Foreigners check-in to China for hospital expertise
- Forum underlines cross-Strait exchanges
- China, Uruguay vow to deepen ties
- Hunan achieves record grain output in 2025
- Thai students to train in China as universities expand high-speed rail cooperation
- China unveils world's fastest full-size humanoid robot
































