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  • Shakuntala misses out on a foreign groom

    Calcutta Telegraph, India
    Sept 20 2004

    Shakuntala misses out on a foreign groom
    - Govt sits on rash of requests for trained elephants as animal count
    goes up
    SWATI SENGUPTA

    Captive trained elephants taking tourists around a reserve forest.
    File picture

    Calcutta, Sept. 19: Shakuntala could have lived happily ever after
    with Grandik in Armenia. But Komala will.

    The six-year-old from Jaldapara Wildlife Sanctuary lost out to Komala
    from Mysore Zoo because matchmaker Bengal took longer than the
    elephants to rise from slumber.

    Shakuntala is among 76 elephants bred and being reared in captivity
    in the reserves of Bengal.

    They are breeding fast and the government is finding it increasingly
    difficult to afford so many. A forest department official said: `We
    have to spend a lot of money on the elephants, and cannot use them
    effectively unless they are about eight to 10 years old and around
    six-foot tall. A lot of manpower is also essential to grow and train
    them.'

    The elephants live in Jaldapara, Buxa Tiger Reserve and Gorumara
    National Park. Jhargram has two specially trained kunki elephants.
    These are used for patrolling forests, taking tourists around and
    capturing wild animals.

    The forest department official said at least 14 out of the 76 in its
    custody `can be sent elsewhere'.

    But the Bengal government, which is flooded with requests from other
    states and abroad to hand over some of them, is yet to take a
    decision.

    The official said: `Individuals are not allowed to exchange animals
    against money, but governments can. The idea is to sell some of the
    baby elephants and use the money for the others.' But proposals from
    several states and abroad are `pending' with Writers' Buildings.

    The Central Zoo Authority wrote to the chief wildlife wardens of
    Bengal, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Assam and Jharkhand saying
    Delhi had decided to gift an elephant to Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian and sought to know the possibility of `gifting a captive
    born female' between six and eight years old.

    During his visit to India when Atal Bihari Vajpayee was Prime
    Minister, Kocharian had apparently discussed the possibility of
    taking a female companion for Grandik, a resident male of Yerevan Zoo
    in Armenia.

    A senior official of the forest department said the Bengal government
    had been told about the availability of such elephants in the state.
    Shakuntala was named among the most eligible. `However, we did not
    receive any response,' the official said.

    Komala, who is seven-and-a-half years old, would be in Armenia next
    month. Bipul Chakrabarty, the scientific officer of the Central Zoo
    Authority, told The Telegraph: `The Karnataka government responded
    faster than Bengal, and so we are happy to send Komala to Armenia.
    She will be airlifted from Bangalore by October 15.'

    Four officials from the Mysore zoo - a vet, a range officer, a
    supervisor and an animal keeper - will accompany Komala to her new
    home and stay there for a month, by when she is expected to get
    acclimatised.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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