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A Chinese man walks a dog in Guangzhou, which may be trying to reduce strays before next year's Asian Games.
A Chinese man walks a dog in Guangzhou, which may be trying to reduce strays before next year’s Asian Games.
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GUANGZHOU, China — Mrs. Chen can’t imagine abandoning one of her two best friends: her scruffy terrier mutt and a white fluffy Pekingese mix with buggy eyes.

But that’s what the government in this southern Chinese city wants the housewife to do when a one-dog policy takes effect in Guangzhou. Beginning July 1, each household can raise only one pooch. The regulation won’t be grandfathered in, so families with two or more dogs will apparently have to decide which one gets to stay.

“It’s a cruel regulation. These dogs are like family. How can you keep one and get rid of the others?” said Chen, who declined to give her full name because she feared the police would track her down and seize the dogs.

Police and city government officials appear to be aware of the issue’s sensitivity. None agreed to discuss it.

The regulation appears to be part of an effort to control stray dogs in Guangzhou, once known as Canton. Guangzhou is also preparing to host the Asian Games next year, and crews have been sprucing up the city.

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