China Daily

Birds cut down by razor-sharp strings

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NEW DELHI — Razorsharp strings on kites flown as part of the traditiona­l Indian Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns are taking a painful toll on birds.

Workers at the Charity Birds Hospital see it happen every year — mostly to pigeons, but also to crows, eagles and parrots.

The wounded populate cages lining the halls of the clinic’s emergency ward.

The hospital, set up in the courtyard of the Digamber Jain Temple in the old quarters of New Delhi, relies on donations. It treats birds year-round for injuries they might have sustained in animal attacks or from flying into ceiling fans. But every August, its halls fill with hundreds of fluttering, squawking birds that have been sliced up by kite strings.

“This year there have been about 700 birds in just three days,” manager Sunil Kumar Jain said on Thursday.

About 15 percent of those have died, he added.

Across the Indian subcontine­nt, kite flying is popular and competitiv­e.

Enthusiast­s often line the strings of their kites with shards of glass or metal, with the aim of crossing opponents’ kite strings and cutting them down. The last one aloft wins.

The competitio­ns can be dangerous. Last year, three people were killed when kite strings cut their throats, prompting New Delhi to ban the coating of kite strings with glass.

The new rules have not helped the birds at the clinic, some of which arrived with razor-sharp strings still embedded in their flesh.

“It’s very painful to see your hard work in trying to save a life end in vain,” said veterinari­an Rameshwar Yadav.

He said he takes solace in helping the survivors.

“There’s no better feeling than giving them back their freedom.”

 ?? TSERING TOPGYAL / AP ?? A pigeon wounded by kite strings in New Delhi on Wednesday.
TSERING TOPGYAL / AP A pigeon wounded by kite strings in New Delhi on Wednesday.

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