The Borneo Post

Sri Lanka overturns ban on adopting elephants

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka said yesterday it would allow rich individual­s and temples to adopt baby elephants, overturnin­g a ban put in place to protect the animals.

Elephants are revered as holy in mainly Buddhist Sri Lanka, where the high-maintenanc­e beasts have become a status symbol for the wealthy elite.

But they are also kept by temples for use in religious ceremonies, and the ban had led to worries there would not be enough tame elephants for Buddhist pageants.

“Wildlife conservati­on is good, but we also need to conserve our cultural pageants,” said government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne after the cabinet overturned a ban on adoptions.

Senaratne said the government decision had been motivated partly by overcrowdi­ng at Pinnawala, which was set up as an elephant orphanage and now runs a successful breeding programme.

He said strict conditions would be put in place to ensure the animal’s welfare. Individual­s would have to pay 10 million rupees ( US$ 66,000) for an elephant, while temples would get them for free.

But there has been controvers­y over the separation of elephant calves whose parents are still alive.

Earlier this month, a group of wildlife enthusiast­s went to court to stop an elephant calf given to New Zealand during a visit by the then prime minister John Key from being taken away from its mother.

Buddhist monk Omalpe Sobitha said Nandi, six, should not be separated from her parents, who were both still living at Pinnawala. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows an infant Sri Lankan elephant walking through a field with adults in Minneriya National Park. — AFP photo
File photo shows an infant Sri Lankan elephant walking through a field with adults in Minneriya National Park. — AFP photo

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