Hindustan Times (Bhopal), Ssarkar@hindustantimes.com, 10 Aug 2013
There has been no successful lion translocation in the past in the country
Jalpesh Meha
Founder chairperson, Empower Foundation
Sravani Sarkar
On eve of the World
Lions Day (August 10), a Mumbai-based NGO has sought intervention of
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) - the oldest global
environment network - on the issue of the translocation of Asiatic Lions from
Gir in Gujarat to Kuno Palpur in Madhya Pradesh.
The NGO - Empower
Foundation - has been opposing the translocation of lions - saying that the
conditions are adverse in the proposed site of Kuno Palpur and that serious
animal rights’ issues are involved with the entire process. The organization is
rather insisting on increasing habitat availability for lions through
restoration, connectivity, corridor establishment, habitat protection and
natural movement of lions.
Now, the NGO has also
said that the translocation would amount to serious violations of IUCN
guidelines on 29 counts and has urged the IUCN authorities to appoint an
international expert/team of experts to intervene in the matter and guide the authorities
in two states.
The founder chairperson
of the Empower Foundation, Jalpesh Mehta has written to the IUCN authorities
including the chairman of the Species Survival Commission (SSC) Reintroduction
Specialist Group Dr Frederic Launay seeking this intervention. In the letter to
the authorities, the NGO has given details of all the 29 guidelines violation
and the 12 adverse conditions in Kuno Palpur (based on NGO’s own study) to draw
attention of the international body.
The translocation issue
is hanging fire between two states - Gujarat
and Madhya Pradesh since more than a decade. Recently, the Supreme Court
mandated translocation of Lions to MP, but Gujarat government filed a review
petition pointing out that the decision was one-sided and highlighting the
poaching culture of MP (50% of world’s tigers over the last decade were poached
in MP).
“We have been working on
this issue since a while and in a situation where there has been no successful
lion translocation in the past in the country and concerned persons having no
expertise on Lions, we thought it apt to seek the intervention of IUCN,” Mehta
said while talking to HT.
He added that the
Empower foundation was not against translocation, but concerned with the end
result. “We simply want to save lions from being pushed to extinction,” he said.
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