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Cyprus Parliament Approves Dog Law Amendments After Decade-Long Debate

Published March 26, 2026, 20:16
Cyprus Parliament Approves Dog Law Amendments After Decade-Long Debate

The House of Representatives has approved the Dogs (Amendment) Law of 2026, following ten years of discussions. The new law consolidates government bills and proposals previously debated in the Parliamentary Environment Committee, aiming to revise and update the legal framework for dog ownership, management, and protection. Key focuses of the legislation are promoting responsible ownership, reducing stray populations, and improving the enforcement of existing regulations. Three proposals formed the basis of the consolidated text. The first, from the Citizens’ Movement – Cooperation, aims to address dog abandonment and uncontrolled breeding, with stricter death declaration procedures, a lower registration age limit, and increased ownership fees. The second, from MP Kostis Eustathiou, introduces criminal offenses for walking dogs without a leash and failing to collect waste. The third proposal, from ELAM, extends the timeframe for handling stray dogs and replaces euthanasia with transfer to a shelter. Simultaneously, the government bill seeks clearer allocation of responsibilities and the introduction of preventive and repressive measures, including out-of-court settlement procedures. During the debate, amendments were made, such as ensuring that dog trapping is carried out by authorized personnel (police officers, game wardens, trained veterinarians), modifying the definition of a "dangerous dog", establishing uniform annual ownership fees, and adding provisions for the protection of assistance dogs.