The Hindu (Kochi)

Vote bank concerns prompt govt. to ease curbs on Thrissur Pooram

- Dhinesh Kallungal

When the State government tried to curb the conduct of a full-›edged Thrissur Pooram following the COVID-19 outbreak in 2021, the Devaswoms had decided to limit the festival to a mere ritual in protest. Interestin­gly, BJP leader Padmaja Venugopal, who was then contesting the Assembly elections on the Congress ticket, went on a hunger strike, demanding the conduct of a full›edged Pooram.

Later, the State government gave in to the demand of the Devaswoms with riders.

Celebrity elephant

In 2019, when the State was heading to general elections, the government’s decision to ban celebrity elephant Thechikott­ukavu Ramachandr­an, which has a history of killing people, from participat­ing in the Thrissur Pooram, kicked up a controvers­y.

The Thrissur Collector banned Ramachandr­an from the Pooram following a recommenda­tion by the then Chief Wildlife Warden and the Thrissur City Police.

Later, the decision was reversed by the State government after the Elephant Owners’ Associatio­n issued a boycott call.

After Puttingal

In 2016, despite the High Court banning the use of high-decibel crackers and the display of …reworks from sunset to sunrise in the wake of the …rework tragedy at Puttingal, which claimed around 109 lives and injured around 280 people, the State Cabinet gave permission to the Pooram.

Later, the court allowed low-decibel …reworks at night during the Thrissur Pooram, exempting it from the ban.

Further, the candidates in the 2016 Assembly polls exerted pressure on the State government when the Forest department placed restrictio­ns on parading captive elephants during daytime.

In 2013, a joint protest by Devaswoms forced the State to give exemption to the organisers of Thrissur Pooram after the amended Kerala State Captive Elephant (Management & Maintenanc­e) Rules barred the tuskers from being paraded between 11 a.m. and 3.30 p.m.

‘A bad precedent’

In 2023 as well, the organisers threatened to limit the celebratio­n to rituals unless the decision to hike the rent for the Pooram exhibition ground by the Cochin Devaswom Board (CDB) is withdrawn.

The government later yielded to their demand. M.N. Jayachandr­an, a former member of the Kerala State Animal Welfare Board and an animal rights activist, said it was the unhealthy practice followed by successive government­s that set a bad precedent in Kerala.

Vote banks associated with the festival are the main reason for the State giving in too much, he said.

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