Dog fighting is often spoken about as though it is a thing of the past. It isn’t.
Across multiple countries this form of organised cruelty continues to operate quietly, deliberately, and with increasing sophistication. It is not random violence. It is structured, profit-driven, and sustained by networks that understand exactly how to avoid detection.
At its core, dog fighting is the deliberate breeding, conditioning, and exploitation of dogs for violent entertainment and gambling. But that definition barely scratches the surface of what is actually happening.
This is not just cruelty. It is an industry.
What Dog Fighting Really Looks Like
Forget the stereotypes of dark warehouses and dramatic raids. Those exist but they are only one part of a much broader system.
Dog fighting today often operates through:
Private properties and rural locations where activity attracts little attention
Temporary setups that can be dismantled quickly
Online coordination, including encrypted messaging and coded language
Movement of dogs across regions to avoid pattern detection
Dogs are not simply put into fights. They are prepared.
Preparation can include:
Isolation and chaining
Forced exercise to build endurance
Use of equipment such as treadmills or weighted harnesses
Intentional aggression conditioning
Severe neglect or controlled feeding
Many dogs never make it to a fight. They are discarded during training.
The Dogs Behind the System
The public often sees only the aftermath, if they see anything at all. Dogs used in fighting operations frequently present with:
Deep puncture wounds and untreated injuries
Scarring around the face, chest, and front legs
Missing ears or tails (often crudely removed)
Severe psychological trauma
But not all signs are visible. Some of the most affected dogs show:
Extreme fear responses
Learned aggression as a survival mechanism
Inability to interact safely with other dogs. Ours get very stressed in the presence of other dogs.
Shutdown behaviour, completely withdrawn from their environment
These are not bad dogs. They are abused animals shaped entirely by what has been done to them.
Why It Continues
Dog fighting persists for one simple reason: it is still profitable and still hidden enough to continue. Key drivers include:
Gambling: Significant sums of money can be exchanged in a single fight
Status and control: Participation is often tied to identity and reputation within certain groups
Low detection rates: Operations are difficult to infiltrate and prove
Lenient consequences in some jurisdictions relative to the severity of the crime
There is also a broader issue, dog fighting rarely exists in isolation. Investigations have repeatedly linked it to:
Illegal breeding
Drug-related activity
Weapons offences
Organised crime networks
This is not a fringe issue. It sits alongside other serious criminal activity.
The Challenge of Enforcement
In Turkey, dog fighting is illegal under law 5199 Article 11. Authorities face challenges including:
Lack of direct evidence (fights are rarely witnessed by outsiders)
Intimidation within communities
Rapid relocation of operations
Difficulty proving intent or involvement
By the time cases reach court, much of the network has already shifted.
The Role of Public Awareness
One of the most effective tools against dog fighting is not enforcement alone, it is visibility. People often dismiss warning signs because they seem minor or ambiguous.
These can include:
Dogs consistently kept isolated or chained
Repeated injuries explained as “accidents”
Unusual foot traffic to private properties at irregular hours
Individuals transporting multiple dogs without clear purpose
No single sign proves dog fighting. But patterns matter.
Where We Stand
At Dog Desk Animal Action, we do not approach this issue as a distant or abstract problem. We see the consequences in the dogs who come through rescue networks:
Dogs who cannot safely live in homes without long-term support
Dogs who will never fully recover from what they have experienced
Dogs who were never given a chance to be anything other than tools
Our position is clear:
Dog fighting is not culture, sport, or tradition
It is sustained, intentional cruelty
And it continues because it is allowed to remain hidden
What Needs to Change
Ending dog fighting is not about a single solution. It requires:
Stronger, consistent enforcement
Greater scrutiny of breeding and ownership practices
Public willingness to report concerns
Long-term support for rehabilitation of survivors
Most importantly, it requires honesty. This is happening. Not elsewhere. Not historically.
Now.
Final Reflection
Dog fighting depends on silence, on people looking away, assuming it is rare, or believing it has already been dealt with.
It hasn’t.
And until that changes, the cycle continues exactly as it always has:
out of sight, structured, and sustained.



I would kill every single person involved in this cruelty. If they want to bet on fighting let them fight themselves and those ignorant and cruel humans can bet on the humans fighting to the death