Mum who almost lost arm in horrific dog attack calls for licences to be brought back in the UK
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A woman who almost lost her arm after being savaged by a dog says bringing back licences would make the country "safer for everyone". Mum-of-two Rachel Anderson was babysitting for a friend back in 2018 when their pet Husky, Storm, sunk its teeth into her face before savaging her arm in a brutal 45-minute attack.
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Hide AdThe 43-year-old was left with gaping wounds and needed nearly a dozen operations to repair her arm - which she claims surgeons feared would need to be amputated. Four years on, Rachel’s wounds have now healed but she is still unable to use her hand properly and she says the psychological scars remain.
To this day, Rachel says she "cries from fear" whenever she hears a dog growl and that she would like tighter regulations on dog owners. In the wake of the death of a woman in Surrey, who was attacked by a pack of dogs last week, Rachel said she welcomes the suggestion dog owners should have licences.
Rachel, a stay-at-home mum from Lincoln, said: "I believe dog attacks are down to the owners, not the dogs. It’s down to the environment they live in. Dog licences would make the country safer for everyone - it would stop people having too many or having them for the wrong reasons.
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Hide Ad"Any normal person who genuinely cares for their dog wouldn’t mind getting a dog licence. If you’re at the park and you know everyone else has a dog licence, you know you’ll be safer and so will your dog.
"Dog licences will make sure people who shouldn’t have dogs, don’t have them. What’s stopping that woman who owned the dog that attacked me from going and buying another puppy?"
Rachel, who lives with husband Wayne Anderson, 46, had been looking after her friend’s two children on December 26, 2018, when she was attacked. Her friend’s Siberian Husky, which she said would normally be kept outside, locked its jaws on Rachel’s face before biting her arm.
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Hide AdRachel said: "I could see blood everywhere. I could see my face out of the corner of my eye. My arm was all ripped open. I could see skin and fat everywhere. I remember it dragging me side to side, by the arm. At one stage I thought it was going to release me, but it was treating me like a chew toy."
It was only when one of the children stabbed the hound with a knife on the counter, she was able to get free - and call police who shot the dog dead, she claims. Former hairdresser Rachel needed nearly a dozen operations to repair the gaping wounds, and surgeons feared they’d “have to amputate her arm”.
But the limb was saved when medics sewed it inside her stomach for four weeks to get new skin to grow back. Although Rachel’s physical wounds have now healed, the damage done to her arm means she’ll likely never return to hairdressing.
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Hide AdAnd the mental scars she has been left with are far from healed - and she says four years on she still experiences "a wave of fear" whenever she hears a dog growl. She said: "I never take my own dog to the park in case other dogs come over and want to play. Whenever I hear a growl, I start to cry."
People are calling for a system of licensing for dog owners to be reintroduced in the UK in the wake of reports of a dog attack in Caterham, Surrey, where a woman, 28, died in hospital and another woman was injured. Rachel added: "That woman who died the other night, I would dread to think what was going through her brain as she was being attacked."
Rachel says she is in favour of a licensing system, which has not been seen for dog owners in the UK since 1987, when they were abolished. She reckons that "most dogs don’t naturally want to attack - it’s either what they’re shown to do, or they don’t know any better."
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Hide AdRachel feels a licensing system would allow this to be better monitored and for owners to be held accountable for their dogs’ actions. Rachel said: "Everyone should have a dog licence.
"I don’t see how a normal person who owns a dog would ever mind getting a dog licence. A genuine dog lover won’t be worried about a licence. It would just make sure people who shouldn’t have dogs, don’t have them - and if they do, they should be held responsible for them.
"If your child does something wrong at school you as a parent have to deal with that, they’re under your protection. You’re the one that took on the responsibility - you have to take consequences for its actions. It shouldn’t be any different with owning dogs.”
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