Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Living next door to elephants

Kumudini Hettiarach­chi visits the heartland of the human-elephant conflict in the North Western Province where a fence project initiated by the Centre for Conservati­on and Research has shown the path to harmonious co-habitation

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It is an extraordin­ary audience, from a short distance away, with a ‘King’. As we spot the majestic tusker, monarch of all he surveys, we are spellbound. The scene is picture-postcard perfect. A fairly strong breeze blowing across the vast wewa makes ripples on the waters, set a-shimmer with silvery hues by the gently setting sun.

There are two pairs of mongoose slinking close to the jungle’s edge and birds are winging their way home. As we watch from across the waters, in twos and threes come the elephants, the big tusker with a 50-odd herd with lots of babies.

Vigilant and protective, he moves with dignity around his kind, which includes about seven tuskers of different ages, while babies gambol close to their mothers and young bullelepha­nts engage in playful ‘who-is-stronger’ tussles. Another tusker, obviously in musth, seems the King’s second-incommand, keeping a wary eye out for intruders.

The beauty of it all is that on the other side of the tank, the same ablutions and more are being performed by people…….. washing of clothes, bathing, fishing, chatting while seated on motorcycle­s parked on the wew-pitiya and even smoking what seems to be different to beedis or cigarettes.

The irony, however, is that we are in the very heartland of the human-elephant conflict (HEC) in Wayamba (North Western Province).

Will this magnificen­t tusker fall victim to the same fate as his Galgamuwa brother who faced an untimely death when the vehicle transporti­ng him elsewhere collapsed? He was being ‘translocat­ed’, which strong scientific research has found is not the answer, for the alleged crimes of marauding village homes and crops.

Of course, Galgamuwa had been the home of the tusker long before humans ventured on unplanned developmen­t, opening up huge tracts of land, with nary a thought that these were the ‘traditiona­l

An entreprene­ur, meanwhile, has taken the initiative to make a little money through a business opportunit­y that has arisen.

Chaminda Herath has just had his lunch, after a tot of arrack, even though the afternoon has advanced into evening. Not owning much land, he and his band of men have learnt to construct electric fences by working with the CCR on village and paddyfield fences. Now every season they set up electric fences and offer the ‘service’ of protecting paddyfield­s for a fee.

He re-lives the time when they did not know what an electric fence looked like. “Madadomba was more like an ‘ alipura’ ( elephant city), with elephants roaming the area.”

Now this entreprene­ur has fenced 67 acres of paddy and is looking after them for the farmers, while employing several others too. The CCR is helping him develop his initiative further. homelands’ of the elephants.

There, however, is strong hope now that a fencing problem-solver, studied, tried and tested, is proving that both human and elephant can and should co-exist.

Ehetuwewa and Galgamuwa are arguably the worst HEC areas in Sri Lanka, points out the Chairman of the Centre for Conservati­on and Research (CCR), Dr. Prithivira­j Fernando -whose passion along with his wife and fellow researcher, Dr. Jennifer Pastorini are elephants -- when we meet him in Galgamuwa. “There are no Protected Areas (PAs) coming under the purview of the Department of Wildlife Conservati­on (DWC) here.

There are lots of people who have settled on government lands and lots of elephants in and around these people – it’s a fine-scale heterogene­ous mix, with people and elephants living in the same landscape,” he says.

Dr. Fernando’s ‘main tool’ in curbing the HEC has been creating awareness and enabling people to protect their crops and their homes in a nonconfron­tational manner and allowing them to cohabit with the elephants, by the proper use of electric fencing.

And the Sunday Times sees the village and paddy-field electric fences and also the faces of farmer men and women wreathed with big smiles. The electric fences protecting the villages are permanent, while those around the extensive paddy fields, large and small holdings, are ‘seasonal’, removed once the harvests are gathered, leaving some tasty morsels for the wild elephants to feast on.

The people themselves put up the fences, bear part of the cost and do all the maintenanc­e, says Dr. Fernando, adding that the CCR designs and suggests the best location for these fences. While the CCR gives the technical know-how, the farmers contribute a percentage of the cost in addition to all the labour required. Villagers create a fund and Fence Committees allied to Death Donation Societies which are very active in the area, collect a monthly fee for maintenanc­e.

The CCR with a villager, monitors the fences and checks the voltage (high enough to give a shock but low in amperes so that it will not injure or kill an animal or even a human who touches it accidental­ly) weekly for a year and monthly thereafter. The villager informs the Fence Committee of any fence issues, which are rectified immediatel­y.

“If the electric fences are provided free, the villagers do not have a sense of ownership,” says Dr. Fernando, adding that in some villages those who were unable to meet the cost were granted loans by the village Death Donation Society.

With regard to paddy-field fences, he says: “We first got an insight into the paddy cultivatio­n patterns and elephant ecology of the area – if the pad- bunds, spectacula­r is the scenery. Tiny stupas set amidst rocks, trees with watch-huts over large tracts of golden-eared paddy on one side of the tank and on the other their day’s labours over, as dusk is about to descend, men and women washing clothes and having a dip, after bathing their little children and keeping them dry a little way off.

Along the bund, a mammoty slung over her shoulder, comes 65-yeard-old B.R. Kau Amma. She engages in cultivatio­n, toiling all alone

“Gama aaraksa karala gama wate weta gahala thiyenne (the fence has been put around the village protecting it),” she says, giving us a smile, adding that now they hear the trumpeting of the elephants but are not fearful.

Their crops are also safe as they have fenced their paddyfield­s too, she says, inviting us to her humble home for a cup of tea.

But we have to move on, for other curious villagers have come out of their homes, though no prior indication of our visit has been given. All are eager to tell us their stories and W.M. Anulawathi Kumari talks of how many people close to her home had been injured by elephants before. She had lost her Bappa (uncle) when an elephant killed him and a youth had escaped with his life but broken his leg in a similar attack. Now no more……..the village and paddy-field electric fences have saved the day.

The other day around 5 a.m. they left their home on a trip when suddenly they came upon an elephant. “Aliyath bayawuna, apith bayawuna,” she laughs, adding that the elephant as well as all of them got very scared. So they still have to take care when they move around in the area but this they find acceptable. With her daughter and pet dog near her, Kumari sounds very convincing when she says without hesitation that “alith inna one, apith inna one. Me palatha api degollagem­a. (Both the elephants and people have to live. This area belongs to us both.)”

The village and paddy-field electric fence projects led by CCR’s Sampath Ekanayake were initiated in the Grama Niladhari (GN) divisions of Madadombe in Galgamuwa and Ethinimale in Ehetuwewa in 2011 and have shown the path to conflict-free co-habitation.

The CCR has helped people protect 15 villages and 10 paddy fields in these two GN divisions, covering almost their entirety in the highest HEC area in Sri Lanka, providing proof of the workabilit­y of the concept. “This is as much as we can and want to do. Now it is up to the appropriat­e stakeholde­rs – who are the people themselves and the agencies responsibl­e for developmen­t and people’s welfare, to take it forward,” says Dr. Fernando.

The DWC appears to have accepted that the electric fence can act as a ‘peace barrier’ between human and elephant, instead of a tool for imprisonin­g elephants in Protected Areas where they cannot survive. The DWC is now putting up 30 village fences under a project inaugurate­d by Wildlife and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Minister Gamini Jayawickre­ma Perera in February, this year.

 ??  ?? Dr. Prithivira­j Fernando
Dr. Prithivira­j Fernando
 ??  ?? All smiles:B.R. Kau Amma
All smiles:B.R. Kau Amma
 ??  ?? Kumari: This land belongs to us and elephants
Kumari: This land belongs to us and elephants
 ??  ?? Chaminda Herath
Chaminda Herath

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