| Indian Railways News => | Topic started by puneetmafia on Apr 19, 2013 - 20:00:04 PM |
Title - Elephants being killed on Indian Railway tracksPosted by : puneetmafia on Apr 19, 2013 - 20:00:04 PM |
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Wild elephants continue to be killed on the railway tracks across India, suggesting an open confrontation between the wild life habitats and the Indian railways.In March this year, an adult male elephant was killed by a speeding train in the Buxa Tiger Reserve located in West Bengal.The reserve’s northern boundary runs along the international border with Bhutan. It serves as a corridor for the elephants migrating between the two countries, making it dangerous for these animals.Such incidences have become more frequent in the last few years. In December last year, five elephants were reportedly killed after they were hit by a passenger train in Orissa state, as the animals were crossing railway tracks with their herd. “In recent years elephants have been killed on railway tracks in the states of West Bengal (Buxa Tiger Reserve), Assam, Uttrakhand, Orissa, and Tamil Nadu (Krishnagiri),” said K. Tito Joseph, program manager at Wildlife Protection Society of India. According to Joseph, elephants usually travel in herds through forest and elephant corridors. “Elephants nature is such that it annually moves through corridors in search of food and railway tracks come in between.” According to Eleaid, an organization involved in conservation of Asiatic Elephants, India has 50 to 60 —percent of Asia’s total wild elephants and 20 percent domesticated. The total elephant range is spread across 110,000 square kilometers in south, central, north-east, and north-west of the country.In a report titled “Elephants on railway hit list,” published in the Civil Society magazine, author Vivek S. Ghatani writes that there are 529 elephants in Buxa. Recently the state government stated 49 elephant deaths in the last two years in the region, out of these 22 were killed by the speeding trains. |