A Ludhiana-based pet owner, Balbir Singh, has accused Indian Railways of severe negligence and insensitivity after one of his four certified-fit Labrador Retrievers died of heat and distress, and three others fell severely ill during a journey to Pune on the Jhelum Express on April 19, 2026. The family alleged that the dogs were confined in cramped, unhygienic cages inside a non-air-conditioned brake van and that railway staff handled the deceased animal disrespectfully at Jhansi station. Railway officials have denied the allegations, stating that standard procedures were followed and that rules prohibit transporting a dead animal further. Following intervention by animal rights activist Maneka Gandhi and public outrage amplified by People For Animals (PFA), the Jhansi division has launched an official probe into the incident.
A family trip meant to celebrate a wedding turned into a devastating ordeal for Balbir Singh and his family from Ludhiana. Travelling to Pune to attend his sister’s wedding, Singh decided to bring along their four pet Labrador Retrievers. Instead, alleged administrative lapses, poor transit conditions, and insensitive handling by railway personnel left one dog dead and the remaining three critically ill.
Broken Assurances At The Start
Before the journey, Singh said he approached railway officials at Ludhiana station for guidance on safely transporting the dogs. According to him, he was redirected to an intermediary and a private animal transporter, who assured the family that the pets would either travel in separate cages or in a spacious, ventilated enclosure inside the train’s brake van.
However, upon boarding the Jhelum Express, the family allegedly found no such arrangements. There was reportedly no air-conditioned facility, and videos from the journey showed two large Labradors tightly confined inside a small cage. Singh also claimed the compartment was unhygienic and unsuitable for transporting living animals.
Tragedy Near Jhansi and Accusations of Apathy
The true scale of the crisis unfolded mid-journey. Travelling in a separate passenger coach, the family routinely checked on their pets during scheduled station halts. During one such check near Jhansi station, they discovered that one of the Labradors had died.
Singh alleged that the onboard railway staff failed to alert the family to the animals’ deteriorating health, despite employees later admitting that the dog had been barking continuously in distress for a prolonged period.
Compounding the family’s immense grief was the handling of the situation by railway personnel at Jhansi. Singh asserted that staff aggressively insisted on removing the carcass immediately, flatly denying the family’s emotional pleas to let them carry their pet’s body to Pune for final rites. The family alleged that the deceased dog was handled disrespectfully and thrown onto the platform, forcing them to disembark at Jhansi under immense emotional duress to make independent arrangements for the body. The remaining three dogs eventually reached Pune suffering from high fevers and required urgent veterinary medical attention.
Escalation and Official Responses
Frustrated by a lack of initial accountability from local authorities, Singh reached out to animal rights activist and former Union Minister Maneka Gandhi. Gandhi took up the cause, officially writing to the Union Railways Minister to demand a formal inquiry. The incident gained widespread public momentum after the animal welfare organisation People For Animals (PFA) highlighted the family’s ordeal on social media, prompting official responses from various railway divisions.
In response to the growing public pressure, the Jhansi division of North Central Railway initiated a formal probe. Manoj Kumar Singh, the Public Relations Officer for the division, explicitly denied the allegations of physical disrespect, stating that the animal’s body was handled per prescribed procedures. He clarified that under commercial railway regulations, a deceased animal cannot legally be transported further under the same luggage booking. Meanwhile, spokespersons from the Firozpur division maintained that all standard operating procedures and legal formalities for loading the livestock were followed correctly at the station of origin, while the Pune division confirmed that the surviving pets were safely returned to the family upon arrival.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
This tragic incident brings to the forefront a deeply concerning lack of empathy and systemic care in how companion animals are treated during transit in India. Pets are not merely “luggage” or inanimate cargo; they are living, sentient beings and cherished members of our families who experience fear, distress, and physical suffering. Forcing animal owners who cannot secure a private First Class AC Coupe to relegate their pets to dark, suffocating, and non-air-conditioned brake vans is fundamentally inhumane.
True social progress relies on a collective commitment to kindness, coexistence, and a shared responsibility toward the vulnerable, including animals. We urge Indian Railways to look beyond rigid, outdated commercial protocols and implement comprehensive, compassionate policy reforms such as dedicated pet-friendly coaches and mandatory sensitivity training for transit staff to ensure that no other family has to endure the heartbreaking loss of a loved one.












