New Delhi, Aug. 15 -- The Supreme Court on Thursday criticised the Delhi government and its civic bodies for failing to implement their own regulations on stray dog management, even as it reserved its verdict on pleas to suspend an August 11 order of a two-judge bench that had directed the mass capture and sheltering of such animals across Delhi-NCR. The court did not clarify when its order would be delivered. "You frame laws and rules but do not implement them. On one hand, humans are suffering and on the other, animal lovers complain of non-adherence to rules. Animal boards and authorities do nothing. They should have implemented their own rules but they do nothing," the three-judge bench led by Justice Vikram Nath told additional solicitor general Archana Pathak Dave, who appeared for the Delhi government. The bench was hearing challenges to directions issued last week by justices JB Pardiwala and R Mahadevan, mandating civic bodies in Delhi, Noida, Ghaziabad and Gurugram - later expanded in a written order to include Faridabad - to round up all stray dogs within eight weeks and keep them in dedicated shelters, with no re-release onto the streets. Solicitor general Tushar Mehta, also for the Delhi government, said urgent action was needed given "shocking" incidents of child mutilation and deaths from dog bites....