A male lost pooch would sniff its approach to Rathinaswamy, and the traffic police officer would take care of a couple of rolls to the canine, and keep the rest in one of the panniers hanging in his Segways cruiser.
At the point when he rides the battery-driven bike and watches the stretch between Gandhi Statue and Napier Bridge, the canine would be a dedicated friend running close by the moving machine.A lost pooch wins the hearts of traffic police faculty at the D-5 Marina Beach police headquarters Before starting his watching obligation on Kamaraj Salai, T. John Rathinaswamy, a traffic police constable connected to the D-5 Marina Beach police headquarters, holds up in expectation, a pack of scones in hand.
After the two-hour watching, Rathinaswamy takes care of the canine the remainder of the bread rolls and furthermore furnishes it with more tidbits and they enjoy a reprieve. It is said this is Rathinaswamy’s daily schedule for as long as five months when he was moved from the wrongdoing wing of Tirumangalam police headquarters to the traffic wing at the Marina Beach police headquarters.
From that point forward he has been watching Kamaraj Salai particularly its administration paths, protecting it from illicit stopping and infringements, and he has discovered partners in the pooch and the battery-run bike. “One of the exceptional things I have seen is that he (the pooch) likes to be just with white-clad traffic police constables at the station and on Kamaraj Salai. By and by, the pooch is well disposed to all,” says constable Rathinaswamy, a local of Tenkasi.
Alongside Rathinaswamy, who is in Chennai just for the one year however he has 10-long stretches of administration behind him, a little group of traffic police work force, who control traffic at the traffic signal close to the Napier Bridge inverse the station, additionally feed the lost pooch routinely. The canine has become a day by day guest to the station particularly during the lockdown time frame as it can’t discover food somewhere else. Subsequently, the traffic police work force at the station give the pooch pieces of food. Rathinaswamy does the customary taking care of, morning and night, for the most part during his watch work.
Traffic police work force at the station additionally state that the homeless pooch, which doesn’t have a name in spite of being around the station since he was a little dog, has been useful particularly when traffic violators contend with the constables as the canine barks at them.
“I have not had a dog either in my native town (Tenkasi) or here (Chennai). But, my experience with this dog at the station has encouraged me to have a dog like him in the future,” says Rathinaswamy. Similar story on video: