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Killer elephant ‘Osama’ shot dead in India
GUWAHATI (India)—An elephant
named “ Osama bin Laden” that has killed 27 people in Assam, has been
shot dead, triggering protests by conservationists who say forestry
officials had probably shot the wrong animal.
The 10-feet tall male elephant had been terrorising villagers in Assam
for the past two years, destroying hundreds of homes and trampling
scores of people — prompting locals to name him after the elusive al
Qaeda leader. The animal was accused of killing 14 people in the past
month.
A forestry official said on Sunday “Osama” had been shot dead on
Saturday in a tea plantation on the outskirts of Behali town, about 140
km north of Guwahati. “The elephant was killed after villagers
identified him,” a senior forestry official said, adding the animal
could be identified because it had no tusks. Despite efforts by local
authorities to hunt him down, “Osama” had evaded them moving from place
to place, hiding in forests and tea estates in the northern parts of
Assam. The hunt for “Osama”, believed to have been between 45 and 50
years old, came to a climax last week when Assam’s local assembly
ordered a shoot-to-kill directive to forestry officials and a deadline
to hunt the beast down by Dec. 31.
“The elephant has been killing people, destroying houses in villages in
my constituency,” Ranjit Dutta, a MP from Behali. “He was not afraid of
fire and even firecrackers.” Conservationists have criticised the
shooting, saying the elephant killed was not “Osama”, but a look-a-like.
“Probably this is not the same elephant they wanted to kill,” said
Kushal Sharma, an elephant expert. “The elephant was found in a
different habitat more than 80 km away from his usual place where he
moves around.”
Activists said forest officials hurriedly buried the elephant without
verifying the foot prints, dimensions and other identifying marks that
were the same as “Osama’s”. “They have killed an innocent elephant. It
is an eye wash and shame on the part of the forest officials in Assam,”
Soumyadeep Dutta, a wildlife conservationist said.
Elephants are a protected and endangered species in India. Animal rights
activists fear there will now be serious repercussions, with the herd of
elephants to which “Osama” belonged likely taking revenge and destroying
more villages and people in the area. On Saturday night, several
thatched houses were destroyed by a group of elephants in the same area
where “Osama” was killed. India has nearly half of the world’s 60,000
Asian elephants, with around 5,000 in Assam, according to a census
conducted in 2002. But conservationists say the pachyderm population has
fallen rapidly in recent years because of loss of habitat as a result of
human encroachment into forest areas, leading to human-elephant
conflicts.—Agencies |