Animal-rights volunteers in Sai Kung slam lame way of catching strays
Hound trapped by the agriculture department chewed off part of paw to escape a snare, Sai Kung volunteers say

Dog traps set by the government to catch strays should be banned because they inflict too much pain, campaigners of animal rights say.
One dog had to chew off part of its paw to escape a trap in Sai Kung, they say.
The dog, now in a kennel on Tai Lam Wu Road near Ho Chung, was first seen limping around with a trap and metal chain near the Clearwater Bay Equestrian Centre in March, according to the Sai Kung Stray Friends group.
It then stepped into a second snare set up by the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department a few weeks ago.
A volunteer who found the dog criticised the department for aiming at "easy targets". She tried to catch the dog to remove the snare, but failed.
"Obviously the dog was in pain," she said. "He disappeared for a few days, and then he came and part of his leg was missing."