The Asian Age

No missed opportunit­y

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The tragic event of a pregnant wild elephant in Palakkad district in Kerala falling prey to continuing man-animal conflicts in the country, especially in villages abutting forest areas, is now being used by vested interests as a pivot to launch a hate campaign against the state. Nobody has a case that the perpetrato­rs of this heinous crime be allowed to go scot free; the police booked three people and arrested one barely 48 hours after the event being brought to its notice. But while the police was on it, hatemonger­s wasted no time pouncing on Malappuram district after a news channel wrongly located the gruesome incident in it. Rightwing apparatchi­ks, led by former Union minister Maneka Gandhi, unleashed a barrage of wrong statistics, nasty innuendoes and plain nonsense. As per the BJP leader, 600 elephants are being killed in Kerala every year but Rajya Sabha records say 510 elephants died of unnatural reasons in India between 2014 and 2019 and only 42 belonged to Kerala. Ms Gandhi said someone fed a pineapple with a bomb inside it to the animal while a post-mortem report found no traces of the fruit. She named senior officials of the forest department and the minister and called them “useless”. And the Twitteratt­i launched a relentless campaign. There was no dearth of suggestive statements about the demography of Malappuram, the state’s only Muslim-majority district. Many celebritie­s, who had failed to hear the cries of the guest workers who died walking home in the hot sun, boarded the bandwagon.

It is a fact that “god’s own country” has not been jumbo-friendly. The state has the largest number of domesticat­ed elephants, the term being an oxymoron because taming this wild animal is impossible except through cruel and painful methods. Elephants by nature cannot stand heat and noise but are paraded during religious festivals in hot summer. Last year, Thrissur erupted in anger when the district magistrate denied permission to bring in a one-eyed elephant, which has a history of killing six people, for a festival. That he was forced to relent betrays the true nature of the so-called “elephant lovers”.

Man-animal conflict is a phenomenon seen the world over as humans expand their area of work to meet their quest for necessitie­s, comforts and luxuries. But there has to be a balance between that and the urgent need for environmen­tal protection. It is for humanity to find out ways to eliminate such incidents.

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