Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Rescued elephant gives officials tough time

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THOUGH THE JUMBO WAS RESCUED IN THE AFTERNOON, THE TEAM FAILED TO GET IT TO BOARD A TRUCK TILL LATE IN THE NIGHT ON SUNDAY

NEW DELHI: A 40-year-old elephant that was being sent to a rescue centre gave a tough time to a team of 10-12 wildlife officials when it refused to board a truck for nearly 24 hours. The animal was seized from its owner in Wazirabad area and was finally sent to a rescue centre in Haryana.

Even though the full-grown female elephant, named Moti, was confiscate­d from its owner on Sunday afternoon, the team failed to get it to board the truck till 11.30pm at night on Sunday. On Monday, the team tried again, and after around four or five failed attempts, the animal finally boarded truck around noon.

“We had brought in JCB machines, cranes, and lifting machines, so that the elephant could be boarded on to the truck. But it refused despite all efforts. At one point, we even thought of tranquilis­ing it. But then finally we managed to load it around noon on Monday ,” a senior forest official said.

Of the six domesticat­ed elephants that were in Delhi, four have already been sent to Gujarat by their owners. While Moti was sent to Haryana on Monday, the last elephant, who is unwell, is likely to be temporaril­y sent to Asola Bhatti Sanctuary, where the national capital’s first wildlife rescue-cum-rehabilita­tion centre is expected to come up.

“The elephant was refusing to board the truck. The forest officials beat her continuous­ly. They were all hitting it with sticks. In the morning a JCB machine was brought in so that the animal could be pushed to board the truck. But the animal refused and sat down. Is this not cruelty?” Farukh Khan, the owner of the elephant, said.

“Even though the elephant initially refused to board the truck, it finally did with the help of the mahout and his two helpers. Everything went fine,” the forest official said.

The elephant was fed well with banana leaves and sugarcane before boarding, officials claimed, and said it was given a bath to keep it cool during the journey. Food and buckets of water were also kept on the truck so that they could be sprinkled on the animal to keep it hydrated. Two wildlife inspectors and a veterinari­an travelled with the elephant.

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