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Sorry, no more wild gifts

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  • Sorry, no more wild gifts

    Calcutta Telegraph, India
    March 18 2005


    Sorry, no more wild gifts
    OUR CORRESPONDENT


    New Delhi, March 17: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has decided to ban
    the practice of gifting animals to heads of state or government or
    foreign zoos.

    The decision, announced by Singh while chairing a National Board for
    Wildlife meeting today, is a big victory for members of the Born Free
    Foundation who had recently written to the Prime Minister urging him
    to ban what they called an inhuman practice.

    Hollywood actors Virginia McKenna and Bill Travers, who starred in
    Born Free, had in the letter objected to the Indian government's move
    to send a baby elephant from Banerghata sanctuary in Karnataka to
    Armenia.

    Pointing out that it was virtually impossible for the elephant to
    survive in freezing temperatures, the foundation quoted statistics
    showing how the practice invariably led to animals perishing in
    foreign and inimical climates.

    The ban was among several important decisions taken by Singh at the
    meeting convened to discuss the recent tiger crisis caused by
    largescale poaching and mismanagement of reserves.

    Sources said the Prime Minister was critical of the functioning of
    the Union environment ministry and its role in checking the
    disappearance of big cats from sanctuaries.

    The meeting began with an impassioned presentation from tiger
    conservationist Valmik Thapar, who made a strong case for the
    constitution of a task force on the status of tigers in wildlife
    parks across the country and a separation of forests and wildlife
    from the environment ministry.

    The Prime Minister will head the proposed task force, which would
    include forest officials, representatives of civil society and
    wildlife experts. It would be asked give a report on the current
    position of Project Tiger and on the status of tigers in wildlife
    parks, said a PMO official.

    Singh has also ordered a CBI probe into reports of tiger poaching in
    Sariska in Rajasthan.

    The wildlife board has decided to establish a National Wildlife Crime
    Prevention and Control Bureau to crack down on rampant poaching in
    parks such as Sariska and Ranthambore.
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