Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Jumbo gift gets stuck amid protests

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Jumbo gift gets stuck amid protests

    The Hindu, India
    April 8, 2005

    JUMBO GIFT GETS STUCK AMID PROTESTS

    Our Staff Reporter


    Little Veda', India's courtesy gift' to Armenia's Yerevan Zoo, has
    managed to create more than a rumble in the corridors of power in the
    Capital in the wake of appeals from across the globe asking the
    Indian government to prevent the nine-year-old pachyderm from
    crossing the seven seas'.

    School children have been rallying for the elephant, e-mailing from
    the United Kingdom, France, Belgium, Argentina, America, Spain and
    Germany. The female baby elephant from the Bannerghatta National
    Park, Bangalore, was promised as a mate to the lonely male elephant
    in Armenia way back in 1999 by the then Prime Minister, Atal Bihari
    Vajpayee. The request was put forward by the then visiting Armenian
    president.

    However, in December 2004 when the Armenian government asked the
    pachyderm to be transported in the middle of sub-zero temperatures
    there, an Indian non-government organisation saw red and the process
    was delayed by four months, resulting in Veda still being in India.

    "Recent surveys show that Yerevan Zoo lacks proper housing space
    needed to support an elephant. Worst of all, the sub-zero freezing
    conditions prevalent for 4-6 months there will not suit the animal.
    During these cold bitter months, the elephants will have no
    opportunity to walk or exercise. Also, Armenia's natural vegetation
    does not have natural grass, leaves, sugarcane, jaggery and other
    nutritional requirements of elephants which are available in tropical
    countries," said the vice-president of Compassion Unlimited Plus
    Action, Bangalore, Suparna Bakshi Ganguly, the NGO that first opposed
    the transfer of the animal.

    Meanwhile, a final decision is now pending with the Prime Minister's
    Office. Also, the former Union Minister, Maneka Gandhi, has joined
    the children efforts to keep the pachyderm at home. In a letter to
    the Prime Minister early this month, she said: "Yerevan Zoo's track
    record has been poor with elephants. They have no elephants because
    each time they get them, they die. One elephant was shot dead when it
    escaped from its enclosure in early 1970s. One elephant slipped on
    the ice and died in early 1990s. This elephant was suffering from
    malnutrition and hypothermia. The third elephant, currently housed
    there has been acquired from Russia in 1999 and has been housed in
    solitary confinement for so many years, Yerevan Zoo has no
    affiliations with any European zoo associations or federations and is
    therefore not required to follow any rules and regulations."
Working...
X