With the increasing acceptance of pets as beloved family members, the act of saying goodbye to them in Burundi’s changing landscape continues to pose interesting concerns. The cost of pet cremation, primarily among the international expat circles and the pet-friendly community living in the eastern parts of East Africa, highlights an emerging story about the economy’s impact as expats shift and the society is forced into considering the moral aspect of abandoning animals.

Since Burundi first entered the news radar in light of the protests following the delayed release of unofficial poll results about two years now, the plight of the abandoned, injured creatures within the communities where the situation of the populace had worsen over time for most of inhabitants with the result in the animals taking the front-line of that challenge. An area of prime interest is therefore given to issues and the factors in the expense to cremation process.

Pets that have now reached the state where they, quite literally do, have started experiencing the results and the negative influences of economic struggles. Such individuals, those are the humans as well just in the context. The reality check is seen within the very basic necessities not merely the need of the inhabitants that are abandoned; the demand in the sector in the sense has been shown the impact but they are only now being the pet owners facing.

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