Two separate incidents, reported within the same window, point to the same underlying issue: not what the law says, but what happens in the moment and after.
Çorum Turkey Impact, Departure, Death
In Çorum, a cat named Duman was struck by a motorcyclist in the street. The rider did not stop.
CCTV footage shows the impact. The cat, injured, made it to a nearby workplace before dying shortly afterwards.
A complaint has been filed. An investigation has reportedly been opened.
On paper, this is a traffic incident followed by a failure to stop.
Bursa Turkey Allegation of Intent
In Bursa, a separate case is circulating based on eyewitness accounts. The claim is not that a cat was struck.
The claim is that a driver deliberately drove into the cat and ran over it.
A licence plate has been cited. Calls have been made for identification of the driver and for proceedings under:
Law No. 5199 on the Protection of Animals
Highway Traffic Law No. 2918
The distinction here matters. In Çorum, the question is why didn’t the driver stop?
In Bursa, the allegation is: the vehicle was used as the method of harm.
One is framed as negligence. The other is being framed as intent.
The Same Outcome
Despite the difference in framing, the outcome converges:
An animal is hit
No immediate protection or intervention follows
Death occurs without response
The point of failure is not only the act itself. It is the absence of interruption.
What the Law Actually Provides
Turkey does not lack legal structure in this area.
Law No. 5199 on the Protection of Animals allows for criminal penalties where harm to an animal is intentional.
Highway Traffic Law No. 2918 governs driver responsibility, including the expectation that a driver stops after an incident and responds appropriately.
In practice, this creates two different legal pathways:
If intent is proven - criminal offence
If not - often treated as a traffic violation or administrative matter
That distinction is decisive, and often difficult to establish.
Where the Gap Sits
The law provides a route to action. What it does not guarantee is:
that a driver will stop
that intervention will happen in the moment
that cases will be pursued beyond administrative handling
So the sequence becomes predictable, impact - no intervention - delayed process - uncertain outcome
The First Link Argument
The Bursa case introduces a wider claim: that violence towards animals is the first link in a broader chain of violence. That framing shifts the issue beyond welfare.
It raises a different question, if acts like this carry limited consequence in practice, what exactly is being deterred?
Two Incidents, One Question
Çorum shows what happens when a driver does not stop. Bursa raises the possibility of what happens when a driver does not intend to.
Both lead to the same place. An animal in the road. A moment where intervention could exist. And nothing that interrupts the outcome.
The laws are written. The footage exists.
The identification, in one case, is already being pushed publicly. The question is no longer what happened.
It is what happens next and whether enforcement exists beyond the page.



Recently in UK an ambulance( not on emergency call, ) hit and killed a cut, did not stop. Some people said the driver should have stopped to check on the cat, others said the driver probably did not see the cat, either way only the driver knows the truth.