[FEL-L] India State Accused of Putting Pride Before Lions

BigCatSimba at aol.com BigCatSimba at aol.com
Mon May 14 15:29:19 CDT 2007


India State Accused of Putting Pride Before Lions 
May 11, 2007 — By Rupam Jain Nair, Reuters

AHMEDABAD, India -- An Indian state housing the world's only natural habitat 
for the rare Asiatic lion is refusing to relocate the big cats despite calls 
from conservationists who say it is the only way to save the species.  
More than a dozen lions have died -- mainly due to increased poaching -- in 
the last two months in Gir National Park. Yet authorities in Gujarat in western 
India are resisting calls to shift some of the population to a neighbouring 
state.  
"The lions are a symbol of Gujarat's uniqueness in the world," Chief Minister 
Narendra Modi said in a recent speech. "Why should we share it when we are 
capable enough?"  
Environmentalists say pride is coming before the interests of the lions. A 
second home is needed, they say, because it is too risky to keep all the world's 
Asiatic lions in one place.  
Since March, 14 lions have died -- seven were killed by poachers, four 
drowned in wells dug by villagers living inside the park, two died due to infighting 
and one died of natural causes.  
The carcasses of those killed by poachers had claws, skulls and bones 
missing.  
The bones are used for traditional Chinese medicine and the claws are worn by 
some men as pendants in the hope of increasing their virility.  
Conservationists say keeping all the big cats in Gir is also a serious risk 
as a single epidemic or natural disaster could wipe out the entire population, 
which was 359 in 2005.  
A SECOND HOME?  
"Lions belong to the whole planet and Gujarat has to learn to share them as 
it will serve as a life insurance for the last surviving Asiatic lions," said 
Belinda Wright, director of the Wildlife Protection Society of India.  
As far back as 1994, the Wildlife Institute of India recommended Kuno-Palpur 
sanctuary in the neighbouring state of Madhya Pradesh as the most suitable 
site for an alternate home for the lions.  
Following federal government approval for the relocation, authorities have 
been preparing the ground for their arrival.  
Villages inside the sanctuary have been relocated, the habitat restored and 
the prey-base enhanced, say forest officials, adding the site is now ready to 
receive the lions.  
But Gujarat officials refuse to pursue the experiment, saying Madhya Pradesh 
is ill-equipped to handle the lions.  
The federal government says it wants the lions moved fast, for the sake of 
the animals and the entire country.  
"It is a matter of the pride of India," central Environment Minister A. Raja 
said in a recent interview to NDTV news.  
"If the lions are going to be put at stake, then ultimately not only Gujarat 
will go down in the eyes of the world, but so will the entire credibility of 
India."  
_http://www.enn.com/today.html?id=12746_ 
(http://www.enn.com/today.html?id=12746)  



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