South China Morning Post

Activists fear resurgence of dancing bears, despite 1972 law banning the practice

- Amrit Dhillon

It was during a routine check last month for evidence of animal cruelty that a YouTube video caught the attention of Wildlife Trust of India staff. The grainy video showed a crowd of onlookers watching a bear dance, in clear violation of a practice India outlawed in 1972.

The trust’s surveillan­ce team analysed the video and checked car registrati­on plates, eventually identifyin­g Bari Naki village in Bihar state, bordering Nepal, as the location of the performanc­e. The forest department was alerted and three bears were discovered at the village and seized.

Since then, forest department officials have seized five more bears across villages in Bihar and neighbouri­ng Jharkhand state.

“[This] points to a resurgence [of people forcing bears to dance],” said Jose Louies, enforcemen­t chief at the Wildlife Trust of India. “It’s not just money that villagers pay to see the bear. Once you have a crowd, you can sell them bear hair, claws, or nails as lucky charms to make money.”

The Wildlife Trust of India, Wildlife SOS and many other environmen­tal groups have worked for years with the nomadic Kalandar tribe – which traditiona­lly relied on dancing bears for their livelihood­s – to persuade them to stop the practice.

For four centuries, the tribe has specialise­d in finding and killing mother bears in India’s forests to take cubs for “training”.

Advocacy and environmen­tal groups have taught the tribe other skills such as driving, accountanc­y, carpet weaving, bicycle repair and welding, to introduce new sources of income for them.

But some “Kalandars who fail to succeed in their new jobs might have been tempted to go back to their old ways”, Louies said.

He called it “operationa­l memory”, meaning that the practice is likely to resurface as long as some of the tribesmen possess the knowledge of how to locate and hunt the bears.

Sloth bears are forced to perform by having their noses and jaws pierced with a hot iron rod so that a coarse rope can be passed through the open wound and into the roof of their mouths.

Bear handlers tug on this rope, with the pain making the bear move in what looks like a dance. Handlers also break the bear’s teeth and claws to make it easier to subdue the animal.

To date, more than 600 bears have been rescued and taken to animal sanctuarie­s after being forced to perform.

Once you have a crowd, you can sell them bear hair, claws, or nails as lucky charms JOSE LOUIES, WILDLIFE TRUST OF INDIA

Indian conservati­on NGO Wildlife SOS rescued what it thought was the country’s last dancing bear in 2009, rehoming it at one of its sanctuarie­s in Agra.

Animal cruelty has been a criminal offence in India since 1960, with exceptions for food and scientific experiment­s. Rights groups have long campaigned to ban the use of elephants for temple rituals and to stop the sale of dog meat in northeast India, often clashing with traditiona­lists and cultural norms.

“True Indian culture is based on compassion for animals and the constituti­on enshrines this compassion, so any form of animal cruelty should not be permitted even if it is an old tradition like dog fights, bull running or dancing bears,” said Hiraj Laljani, media manager for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

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