Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
International

Canadians Woman Sent Home For Trying To Sneak Cat Into New Zealand

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Dec, 2016 11:29 AM
    WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A Canadian woman who authorities say managed to hide her 4-year-old pet cat Bella in her handbag during a trans-Pacific flight had her vacation cut short when border agents discovered the ruse at a New Zealand airport.
     
    The woman was refused entry into the country and she, her husband and the cat were forced to catch the next flight home, Ministry for Primary Industries spokesman Craig Hughes said Thursday. He called the woman's actions "reckless and dangerous."
     
    New Zealand has strict regulations for importing pets. Cats and dogs from most approved countries must have an implanted microchip and be quarantined for a minimum of 10 days after arrival.
     
    Hughes said the couple, both in their mid- to late-20s, managed to conceal the cat from the flight crew and other passengers during the 7,000-mile (11,300-kilometre) flight from Vancouver to Auckland.
     
    "Apparently it was a very quiet cat. Very docile," Hughes said, adding that it may have been drugged to make it drowsy.
     
    He said the travelling couple said they had nothing to declare upon arrival but border agents then determined their muddy boots needed inspecting. Agents then moved the couple's bags to an X-ray machine.
     
    Hughes said the woman was "very reluctant" to have her small handbag X-rayed and insisted it had already been checked. She finally admitted there was a cat inside, Hughes said, but then said she'd told a ticketing agent about Bella when she purchased her ticket.
     
    Hughes said even if the woman's story were true, which he doubted, it was still unacceptable to bring a cat across the border without declaring it. He said foreign cats could bring with them ticks and diseases that aren't present in New Zealand.
     
    He said the woman got upset about being sent back home.
     
    "She had plans to have a nice holiday with her husband in New Zealand," Hughes said. "And her cat."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    5 Richest Indian-Americans Who Made It Onto The Forbes Rich List And How They Did It

    5 Richest Indian-Americans Who Made It Onto The Forbes Rich List And How They Did It
    Five Indian-Americans figure among America's 400 richest people, in a list again headed by Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, 

    5 Richest Indian-Americans Who Made It Onto The Forbes Rich List And How They Did It

    Sonita Nijhawan Murder: NRI Banker Who Stabbed His Wife 124 Times Found Guilty

    Sonita Nijhawan Murder: NRI Banker Who Stabbed His Wife 124 Times Found Guilty
    A 46-year-old Indian-origin former banker on trial in the UK over allegations that he fatally stabbed his wife with 124 blows with an axe has been found guilty of her murder.

    Sonita Nijhawan Murder: NRI Banker Who Stabbed His Wife 124 Times Found Guilty

    Surgical Strike Fallout? Pak's Spy Agency ISI Chief Likely To Be Replaced

    Chief of Pakistan's powerful spy agency Inter-Services Intelligence Lieutenant General Rizwan Akhtar is likely to be replaced within the next few weeks

    Surgical Strike Fallout? Pak's Spy Agency ISI Chief Likely To Be Replaced

    2005 Lewd Video Leaves US In Shock, Donald Trump Apologises, Republicans Too Say 'Withdraw'

    2005 Lewd Video Leaves US In Shock, Donald Trump Apologises, Republicans Too Say 'Withdraw'
    Following the release of the recording, Trump initially said he was sorry "if anyone was offended" by the "locker room banter".

    2005 Lewd Video Leaves US In Shock, Donald Trump Apologises, Republicans Too Say 'Withdraw'

    No Hopes Of Breakthrough In Ties During Modi's Tenure: Sartaj Aziz

    No Hopes Of Breakthrough In Ties During Modi's Tenure: Sartaj Aziz
    Aziz on Friday said Pakistan had been resisting India's "hegemonistic attitude" in the region and calling for the promotion of bilateral ties on an equal basis, Pakistan Today reported.

    No Hopes Of Breakthrough In Ties During Modi's Tenure: Sartaj Aziz

    Indian American Solving Rural India's Challenges Wins Philanthropy Award

    Indian American Solving Rural India's Challenges Wins Philanthropy Award
    Dr. Suri Sehgal, an octogenarian Indian American philanthropist trying to solve the problem of rural India's disempowerment, has received the 2016 American Bazaar Philanthropy Award.

    Indian American Solving Rural India's Challenges Wins Philanthropy Award