UAE Portrait of a Nation: The real life Dr Dolittle who helps Abu Dhabi's animals in need

Dr Susan Aylott established Animal Welfare Abu Dhabi two and a half years ago and the group now has hundreds of volunteer helpers

ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - JULY 18, 2018. 

Animal Welfare Abu Dhabi was set up two and a half years ago to improve the lives of animals in Abu Dhabi. The group was started by, and is still run by, Dr Susan Aylott.


(Photo by Reem Mohammed/The National)

Reporter: Gill Duncan
Section: NA
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The biog:

From: Wimbledon, London, UK

Education: Medical doctor

Hobbies: Travelling, meeting new people and cultures 

Favourite animals: All of them 

Dr Susan Aylott jokes that every time she went out looking for a job when she arrived in Abu Dhabi 10 years ago, she came home with a kitten.

The doctor, who once specialised in ear, nose and throat research, fully intended to work but could not find any roles at the time – just a lot of sick cats. So she filled her days with caring for animals.

“I would have liked to have become a vet, but it just wasn’t possible for me: I would have ended up mortgaged to the hilt and in financial difficulty. So I ended up becoming a doctor,” said Dr Aylott, from the UK.

From her very earliest days in Abu Dhabi, she did what she could for stray cats, but around two and a half years ago she stepped up her game.

“I was on Lulu Island one day and I saw a cat walking on the beach and it was very sick. It was dragging its back legs, so I went to investigate. And I found 27 other cats there,” she said.

“So that got me started. We set up a feeding station and sterilisation programme on Lulu Island and then realised that these things could benefit the mainland, too.”

And Animal Welfare Abu Dhabi was born.

Her group now has hundreds of helpers who help take care of some of the city’s estimated 100,000 stray cats via a network of feeding stations. She has found many, if not most, of them through word of mouth.

ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - JULY 18, 2018. 

Dr Amir, left, and Dr Louise, volunteers with Animal Welfare Abu Dhabi, treat a stray cat.

Animal Welfare Abu Dhabi was set up two and a half years ago to improve the lives of animals in Abu Dhabi. The group was started by, and is still run by, Dr Susan Aylott.


(Photo by Reem Mohammed/The National)

Reporter: Gill Duncan
Section: NA
The group's volunteers carry out a trap and neuter scheme, as well as feed strays. Reem Mohammed / The National

“When people see someone going to feed a cat they come over and wonder what you are doing, and when you explain they say 'goodness, I would love to join'. People see what we do on the streets, because we have a big presence there," said Dr Aylott.

There are five volunteers for each feeding station to ensure that it remains sustainable.

“What we had before was one person responsible for feeding 25 cats. And because of the transitional nature of [the UAE], people would disappear off and then contact us and say that there are 25 cats that need feeding,” she said.

Because the group does not accept donations, it means that the helpers can all share the cost of the food and with so many the burden is minimal.

“The government has a great initiative of trap, neuter and release, which is an internationally-recognised way of dealing with population control,” she said.

“We liaise with these government programmes and also we do them ourselves to be sure that we have healthy and stable colonies all across Abu Dhabi.”

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Animal Welfare Abu Dhabi does not, as a rule, rehome cats as there are too any to help. So Arabian Maus, the breed of cat most often seen on the streets, are often left there if they have access to food, water, safety and shelter.

And she has also helped establish special feeding centres for cats at the Etihad Headquarters, where the entire community of cats have been sterilised. A number of centres have also been established at hotels, including Danat Jebel Dhanna Resort in Al Ruwais.

“The hotels get positive trip adviser reviews and it is starting to change the mindset of people, which is good,” she said.

“There seems to be a slight competition between hotels about who can create the best feeding stations, which is nice. Capital Grand has a fantastic feeding station – that’s one of the biggest. Now we have Ruwais coming up with a new design. But it’s nice because it creates healthy competition for the right reasons. It really works,” she said.

The group has also established mobile clinics staffed by volunteer vets to check the health of cats and sterilise them to ensure the colony does not grow further. It held one of its mobile clinics recently in Al Ruwais.

“We saw 50 cats in two days — they have a big problem. There is no veterinary practice there. The fields clinics really help in these remote areas,” said Dr Aylott.

“We take our vets to the animals, which is better than the other way around because it’s less stressful for the animals. The hotel sponsored us and kindly accommodated us so we were able to neuter 50 of their cats in the field clinic.”

Although cats are a big feature for Animal Welfare Abu Dhabi, they are not the only animals the group helps. It has dealt with many more exotic creatures, including ostriches, baboons, African grey parrots and a giant African tortoise, which was in need of a new home.

“We deal with some abuse cases as well. We always report to the relevant authorities for things like that,” she said.

Education is a big part of Dr Aylott’s vision for the group. And it works with companies and schools regularly to that end.

“We have a schools’ programme where the children have feeding stations. We have a mosque programme where the imams assist the children to feed the cast, and they also have the animals sterilised,” she said.

“It brings communities together.”

The biog:

From: Wimbledon, London, UK

Education: Medical doctor

Hobbies: Travelling, meeting new people and cultures 

Favourite animals: All of them