Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

10 TB-infected elephants ferrying tourists to Amber Fort taken off duty

- Press Trust of India letters@htlive.com

Ten elephants, deployed at the Amber Fort here to entertain tourists and give them royal rides, have been relieved of their onerous duty after they were found suffering with tuberculos­is.

The ten pachyderms, forming a group of 100 others, were found suffering from the energy sapping, infectious disease during their medical examinatio­n by the Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) between December 2017 and March 2018 at Hathi Gaon, following which they were withdrawn from the active duty.

“A team by AWBI conducted examinatio­n of 103 elephants and 10 of them were found with the symptoms of TB,” Jaipur Zoo’s Deputy Forest Conservato­r Sudarshan Sharma disclosed it in a letter to the Amber fort superinten­dent two days back.

In his letter dated June 19 today at the Fort, Sharma also asked the fort authoritie­s to stop using the elephants. Amber fort Superinten­dent Pankaj Dharendra said the use of the sick elephants has been stopped forthwith. “After receiving the letter from the forest department on June 19, we have stopped the use of those ten elephants,” he said.

There are now nearly 90 elephants which are being used for giving ride to the tourist at the sprawling historic fort, he added.

Animal lovers and activists welcomed the move, but sought provision of better living conditions for the quarantine­d tuskers. “We welcome the news of the infected elephants being quarantine­d and not being used to give rides. Their segregatio­n alone, however, is not enough,” said Managing Director N G Jayasimha of Humane Society Internatio­nal, India (HSI, India) in a statement.

He added that the affected elephants need to be given better living conditions so that they are cured and the contagious disease does not spread to other elephants.

The animal rights activists had earlier asked the Union Health Ministry on June 18 to quarantine the elephants infected with tuberculos­is in Jaipur’s Amer Fort and screen all the untested animals, which are “forced” to give rides to tourists, as the disease can spread from animals to human beings as well. The animal lovers had raised the demand after the AWBI report was released.

HSI India had also urged the director general of police and Jaipur district magistrate to initiate prosecutio­n against custodians of the infected elephants for posing a threat to the lives of other elephants, besides the human beings who come in their contact.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), India, said its representa­tives recently held meetings with high-ranking officers of the Rajasthan government and had apprised them of the AWBI’s findings of health conditions of the captive elephants.

JAIPUR:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India