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Zoo suspects disgruntled staff of killing elephants in southern Indi

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  • Zoo suspects disgruntled staff of killing elephants in southern Indi

    Zoo suspects disgruntled staff of killing elephants in southern India

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 26, 2004 Tuesday 8:58 AM GMT

    BANGALORE, India Oct 26 -- Disgruntled workers at a zoo in southern
    India are suspected of poisoning elephants to death after a prize
    calf became the third victim.

    Police have been called in to investigate the death last week of
    seven-year-old Komala at Mysore, in southern Karnataka state, zoo
    director Manoj Kumar told AFP on Tuesday.

    Two elephants and a lion-tailed macaque, an endangered species,
    were poisoned in August.

    "There is a suspicion that some disgruntled employees may be behind
    the deaths," he said, adding it was still too soon to suspend anyone
    at the zoo.

    A government-run veterinary institute found that zinc phosphide,
    a cheap pest control agent normally used again rodents, had killed
    the first two tuskers.

    "There is a pattern in all the three deaths. It is due to poisoning,"
    Kumar said.

    Komala had been picked out to be sent to Armenia as a gift from Indian
    President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam.

    "Komala was due to be flown out to Armenia on October 14 and there
    was a delay from the Armenian side. Later the date was revised and
    fixed for October 30. It is unfortunate," the director said.

    The century-old Mysore zoo houses 1,100 animals.
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