Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Yala jeep driver caught with jumbo placenta

- By Malaka Rodrigo

Asafari Jeep driver with a jumbo placenta in his possession was arrested in Tissamahar­ama a few days ago. According to the Police, the driver, who was part of a three-vehicle convoy visiting the Yala National Park, had found the placenta by the wayside. Acting on a tip-off, wildlife officers stopped the vehicle at the park exit, seized the placenta, and took the driver into custody. He was produced before the Tissamahar­ama court and fined Rs. 35,000.

Jumbo placenta, known in Sinhala as “wede maha”, is believed by locals to ease labour pains in pregnant humans. The driver told the Police that he picked up the placenta for his pregnant wife.

Under National Park regulation­s, removing anything from the premises of a state-administer­ed park is an offence, and visitors may get off vehicles only at designated spots. Wildlife officers told the Sunday Times that the fresh animal placenta suggested the mother elephant had given birth in the previous 24 hours, and as such the mother, the baby elephant, and the rest of the herd would have been in the vicinity when the safari convoy went by. In such a situation, the mother elephant is extra protective of her offspring, and liable to attack intruders in her habitat.

Yala National Park Warden W. A. B. Indrajith said misbehavio­ur by safari drivers is on the rise. On a normal weekend, about 400 vehicles drive into Yala. Besides heavy traffic, speeding vehicles is another problem that worries wildlife officials. The park warden also admitted that a few trackers needed to be discipline­d.

Lakdasun, an internet-based conservati­on group, has set up a forum (www.lakdasun.org) to help promote good practices in wildlife parks, and encourages communicat­ion and interactio­n between conservati­onists and safari operators.

Last week, the director of a leading travel agency warned that if the situation in parks deteriorat­ed, it would affect their business and the tourism industry.

Addressing more than 60 drivers and Jeep owners in Debarawewa, Nishaad Wijethunga said visitors from overseas were well aware, through the internet, of conditions at Sri Lankan wildlife parks. When they visit wildlife parks, they are extra vig-

LEOPARD KILLING: NO

INVESTIGAT­ION YET

Six months ago, the carcass of a young leopard was found inside Yala. A post-mortem confirmed the cause of the death was a road accident, while wildlife officials said the animal was apparently killed by a speeding vehicle. The Department of Wildlife Conservati­on had promised an investigat­ion, but there has been no follow-up action.

“It is possible the culprit is an influentia­l person and that the Department of Wildlife Conservati­on is reluctant to investigat­e,” said conservati­onist Rukshan Jayawardan­e. The activist said that Department of Wildlife Conservati­on was not functionin­g as before, and lacked direction as there was no permanent Director General. Former Wildlife Director-general Chandrawan­sa Pathiraja was dismissed a year ago and he has not been replaced.

Web watch for animal welfare

Wildlife enthusiast­s concerned about abuse of animal rights and bad practices inside wildlife parks have created a website for reporting irresponsi­ble acts by park visitors. The website carries a list of willful and accidental acts against animals by park visitors. Readers who have anything to report or photograph­s to share may contact the animal activists. See www.irresponsi­ble-tourism.tumblr.com ilant about driver/tracker behaviour. He said there has been a 20 per cent drop in the number of tourists visiting Yala; these visitors have deliberate­ly dropped Yala from their itinerarie­s. Mr. Wijethunga said Jeep drivers had an important role to play in projecting a favourable image of Sri Lanka and its most famous national park. Mr. Wijethunga reminded the drivers and Jeep owners that tour companies did not insist on leopard sightings, and that visitors know that a leopard sighting is a rare occurrence. Drivers were therefore not under pressure to somehow provide visitors with a leopard sighting. Answering drivers who complained that safari guides insisted on finding leopards, Mr. Wijethunga said it was the travel agent who gave the drivers businesss, not the guides. Drivers were not expected to chase leopards, and they should drive within speed limits, he said.

Tharindu Jayasinghe, secretary of the Independen­t Jeep Drivers’ Associatio­n, thanked Mr. Wijethunga for explaining the true situation, and added that the message should also be communicat­ed all visitors to Yala, including locals who drive their own vehicles and Jeeps. The animals should be the priority at all times, and all who visit the national parks should understand that the parks belong to the animals, not to the visitors, and that the animals and their habitat should be respected by all visitors. This was the message of Rukshan Jayawarden­a of the Wildlife Conservati­on Forum and Vimukthi Weeratunga, head of the Biodiversi­ty Unit of the Internatio­nal Union of Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) Sri Lanka.

Leopard behaviour in Yala is changing as a result of aggressive and intrusive human behaviour, the conservati­onists warned.

 ??  ?? A group of drivers who were present at last week’s forum
A group of drivers who were present at last week’s forum

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