Afghan Taliban kill 11 Pakistani travellers – official

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Suspected Afghan Taliban insurgents killed 11 Pakistanis who crossed into Afghanistan in order to detour around a dangerous part of the border area, officials said on Saturday.

Paktia governor spokesman Rohullah Samon said gunmen opened fire on a bus carrying the travellers in Samkani district, as they made their way from Kurram to Peshawar via Afghanistan.

Tribesmen frequently take the circuitous Afghan route as the direct road linking the two regions is often the scene of Pakistan Taliban attacks on travellers.

While the Pakistan and Afghan Taliban are different organisations, they have close links and draw the overwhelming bulk of their fighters from the Pashtun ethnic group which was divided by a colonial-era border known as the Durand Line.

While Pakistan has taken some steps against its own Taliban insurgency, Kabul and its allies accuse Islamabad of secretly supporting the Afghan Taliban and giving sanctuary to their leadership.

Islamabad denies the charges, but Pakistan has long seen Afghanistan as “strategic depth” in case of war with its eastern neighbour, India. (Writing by David Fox; Editing by Jeremy Laurence) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Two poachers arrested near Corbett sanctuary with leopard skin

Udham Singh Nagar (Uttarakhand), May 16 (ANI): The police arrested two persons near Corbett sanctuary in Uttarakhand”s Udham Singh Nagar District for possessing leopard skin.

Police said the duo was coming from Champawat district and going to Uttar Pradesh”s Moradabad district to sell it off.

“When we were checking some suspected vehicles at the intersection, our informers told us that two people were standing with leopard skin and are waiting for a bus to Moradabad,” said Arvind Choudhary, a police officer.

“We arrested both of them at the Ambedkar Park. We have seized skin of two leopards from them,” he added.

“One skin is around three months old and it has been peeled off very nicely and has been well preserved. So, it seems that this has been done by a skilled worker,” added Prakash Arya, Sub-Divisional Officer, Ramnagar forest.

Besides Corbett National Park, leopards are found in Rajasthan”s Ranthambore National Park and Sariska Tiger Reserve. (ANI)

US piles on pressure on Pak to pound terror training camps

Washington, May 7 (ANI): Amidst the wide scale outburst against Pakistan that it has to act against terror breeding groups flourishing on its soil especially after the failed New York bombing, the United States has stressed that Islamabad must not hesitate to take on the extremists threatening it and the world.

Addressing a regular press briefing here, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell romped up pressure on Pakistan to take stiff measures against terror training camps operating in the country.

Referring to the Times Square bombing plot, Morrell said the incident underlines the need for “all to continue aggressive operations in going after terrorists wherever they reside”.

He parried questions over the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operated drone strikes in Pakistan, but added that the incident would ‘reinvigorate’ both Washington and Islamabad to confront these threats more effectively.

Separately, Michele Flournoy, Under-secretary of Defence for Policy, also denied to comment on reports that US is contemplating expanding drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal regions, but admitted that the Obama Administration is concerned over the presence of militant training camps in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

“Afghanistan-Pakistan, that border region, has been the sort of locus of the sort of heartland, if you will, of Al Qaeda for many years,” Flourney said while testifying before the House Armed Services Committee.

“And so I think denying them sanctuary and safe haven there, disrupting them there has a powerful impact on the global network,” The Dawn quoted her, as adding.

Meanwhile, media reports quoting some ‘unidentified’ US officials said that the Obama administration had quietly allowed the CIA to expand drone strikes in Pakistan’s semi-autonomous tribal regions along the country’s border with Afghanistan. (ANI)

Pak Army finally realising need to quash its ‘created Frankenstein’ in North Waziristan

New York, Apr.30 (ANI): The Pakistan Army, which has been reluctant to take on the Taliban and other extremist groups operating from the terror hot bed of North Waziristan, is now coming to terms that it must focus on the restive tribal region for the country’s own interests, Pakistani and US officials have said.

North Waziristan has long been considered as the most important safe haven for the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, where Islamabad has nurtured militant groups for years to run proxy wars across it borders.

According to US officials, the Pakistan Army is now beginning to understand that it was important to take on both the Taliban, which is targeting the state, and also those groups that are fighting against the foreign forces in Afghanistan.

“This is a scary phenomenon. All these groups are beginning to morph together,” The New York Times quoted a US official, as saying.

However, both Pakistani and Western officials said that any operation in North Waziristan by the Pakistan Army is likely to be months away.

“And even if it is undertaken, the offensive may not completely sever Pakistan’s relationship with the militants, like Sirajuddin Haqqani, who serve its interests in Afghanistan,” the newspaper observed.

North Waziristan has long been a sanctuary for the Haqqani group, which is believed to be a longtime ‘asset’ of the Pakistan military and the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI).

A top Pakistani official, who spoke on conditions of anonymity, admitted that North Waziristan is at the core of the terror issue in the country, which needs to be addressed immediately.

“The source of the problem is in North Waziristan, and it will have to be addressed,” he said.

Analysts also pointed out that an offensive in North Waziristan is imminent.

“An operation could come sooner, not least because officers on the ground are calling for it. More frequent attacks emanating from North Waziristan are likely to lead to a reaction sooner rather than later as field commanders feel the pressure to protect their troops,” said Shuja Nawaz, director of the South Asia program at the Atlantic Council in Washington.

The Pakistan military not only has to tackle the Taliban and Al-Qaeda extremists in North Waziristan, but it also has to tackle those splintered militant groups comprising of Pashtun tribesmen, Arabs, Uzbeks and ethnic Punjabis which are fighting separately, the newspaper said.

Though consensus is fast building up that the North Waziristan based terror groups must be targeted, it still remains to be seen how the Pakistan Army, which is already fighting on several fronts and often complains of lack of resources to push into the terror hot bed for at least several months, takes up the challenge. (ANI)

Pak safe havens will ensure Afghan Taliban win: Report

Washington/New Delhi, Apr.24 (ANI): Having a sanctuary in Pakistan and knowing that the Hamid Karzai Government in Kabul is relatively weak, the Afghan Taliban feels that it enjoys several advantages that historically correlate with insurgent success.

According to Ben Connable, the lead author of “How Insurgencies End,” which has been published by Rand Corporation in Washington, while current US counterinsurgency doctrine in Afghanistan broadly conforms to historical best practices, the Taliban enjoy advantages that historically correlate with insurgent success, according to results of 89 past and ongoing insurgencies worldwide.

The historical trends suggest that the Achilles heel for the Taliban would be the loss of their Pakistani sanctuary, while the principal American vulnerability lies in Hamid Karzai””s anocracy, or weak, pseudo-democracy.

Connable says his study cannot be predictive, but can help the US address or exploit these vulnerabilities.

“A lot of the things being done in the current [US military] plan is along the lines of successful things we””ve seen in the study. The key is if the US recognizes it is working with an anocracy and recognizes the limits of that kind of government, you can work on solutions to that problem,” the Christian Science Monitor quotes Connable, as saying.

He says that the problem of a weak central government can be resolved through a greater focus on local governance and setting up local civil defense forces that are carefully tied down to one location.

Connable says that anocracies have won only about 15 percent of their conflicts with insurgents.

His report also reveals that indiscriminate terror attacks on civilians tend to backfire on insurgents.

The Rand study looked at 89 insurgencies dating to the 1934 start of Mao””s uprising in China. The final scoreboard: 28 wins for governments, 26 wins for insurgencies, 19 mixed results, and 16 ongoing. (ANI)

In UK Facebook beats sex

A new survey has found that overworked Britons would rather check their email and update their Facebook page than have sex.

In the poll of British adults’ favourite bedroom activities, it was shown that making love came in sixth, with activities on the laptop being preferred to sex.

Among the 4,000 people questioned, most preferred to sleep, read, watch TV, listen to music and surf the Internet rather than have sex, and one in seven treated their bed as another place to get work done.

A quarter said they now only turn up the heat in the bedroom once a fortnight. They blamed overwork, exhaustion and stress.

Women were more likely to read in bed and men more likely to watch TV.

Men were keener than women for romance outside the bedroom with the living room bathroom, kitchen and garden favoured places.

“Given the long hours we work and the stresses and strains we are under, it’s no wonder we see their bedrooms as a sanctuary in which to relax,” the Daily Express quoted Amanda Jones, of the bed manufacturer Silentnight, which commissioned the survey, as saying.

Overworked Brits prefer Facebooking to sex

London, April 22 (ANI): A new survey has found that overworked Britons would rather check their email and update their Facebook than have sex.

In the poll of British adults’ favourite bedroom activities, it was shown that making love came in sixth, with activities on the laptop being preferred to sex.

Among the 4,000 people questioned, most preferred to sleep, read, watch TV, listen to music and surf the Internet rather than have sex, and one in seven treated their bed as another place to get work done.

A quarter said they now only turn up the heat in the bedroom once a fortnight. They blamed overwork, exhaustion and stress.

Women were more likely to read in bed and men more likely to watch TV.

Men were keener than women for romance outside the bedroom with the living room bathroom, kitchen and garden favoured places.

“Given the long hours we work and the stresses and strains we are under, it’s no wonder we see their bedrooms as a sanctuary in which to relax,” the Daily Express quoted Amanda Jones, of the bed manufacturer Silentnight, which commissioned the survey, as saying. (ANI)

Fisher fined for illegal angling

The Cape Byron Marine Park Authority says some anglers still think they can break the rules and get away with it.

A Queensland man was recently fined more than $1000 after being caught in The Moat-Bream Hole sanctuary zone at Lennox Head.

Park manager Andrew Page says the man had more than 60 Turban Snails and sea urchins, and 15 fish, four of which were under-sized.

Mr Page says it’s the second time in as many months someone has been caught there.

“Oh there’s certainly a number of people out there who know what they’re doing, they go there at night under cover of darkness,” Mr Page said.

“The public down there have been great, they want to preserve the place with its high levels of bio-diversity and natural beauty, they don’t want to see it trashed so the people have been well and truly on side and letting us know,” he said.

“We have had quite a few reports lately, people will certainly go down there chasing Jew and other fish when there are large numbers of fish in there,” Mr Page said.

“It supports a really high level of bio-diversity and it’s quite a unique structure in there, the boulder foreshore, it’s just a coastal lagoon there, you even get seagrass in there from time to time,” he said.

Meet Alby, the barn owl who skateboards!

London, March 19 (ANI): A barn owl that rides a skateboard has caught the attention of shoppers in Folkestone, Kent.

Alby, a 13-year-old owl, apparently knows how to do a few tricks with the skateboard.

Folkestone Owl Sanctuary in-charge, Brian Maxted, 73, observed Alby”s talent during a trip to the local shopping centre.

“I often take some owls into town to try and get some donations from shoppers,” the Telegraph quoted Maxted, as saying.

He added: “I had the owls out one day last week and a young lad stopped to look at them.

“He put down his skateboard and Alby, who”d been fast asleep, saw it and jumped on.

“Someone pulled it along the ground and he loved it so much, we had to get him one of his own.”

Alby can swoop onto the board, using the momentum from his flight to push him along.

As the board comes to a stop, it takes off and flies in a small circle before re-landing on the board, pushing it along again.

Student Paul Lendon, 17, from Folkestone said: “I was stunned when I saw him riding along on his miniature board.

“I”m aware of the famous skateboarder Tony Hawk, but I”ve never before heard of Tony Owl.” (ANI)

U.S. missile strike kills 10 militants in Pakistan

(Reuters) – A U.S. drone aircraft fired missiles into Pakistan’s North Waziristan region on Tuesday, killing 10 militants, the latest such strike on a major al Qaeda and Taliban sanctuary, officials and residents said.

World

The attack targeted a militant compound in the Datta Kheil area, about 40 km (25 miles) west of North Waziristan’s main town of Miranshah.

“Smoke is rising from the burning compound,” Javed Iqbal, a resident of Datta Kheil, told Reuters by telephone.

U.S. officials say the pilotless drones are one of the most effective weapons against militants. The strikes have killed senior Taliban and al Qaeda figures.

But they have caused resentment in U.S. ally Pakistan, where anti-American feelings run high. The Pakistani government wants the Americans to provide them with drone technology so the country’s military can carry out its own strikes.

(Reporting by Haji Mujtaba; Writing by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Michael Georgy)

Two tigers found dead in Ranthambore Sanctuary

Ranthambore (Rajasthan), Mar 8 (ANI): Two tiger cubs were found dead under mysterious circumstances at the Ranthambore Sanctuary in Rajasthan on Sunday.

The cause of the deaths is yet to be ascertained, but prima facie, it seemed like a case of poisoning.

“This situation looks like that the tigers have hunted the two goats. One goat was found hanging on the tree, looking at the other goat it looks like someone might have poisoned the goat or it could be pesticides consumed by the goat, which became the reason for the death of tiger, as they consumed them. Evidence of vomiting was found and clears certain queries. But we are examining the tigers, and the clear picture would emerge after it,” said R.S. Shekhawat, District Forest Officer, Sawaimadhopur.

The carcasses of the cubs have been sent for a postmortem. (ANI)

US says Pak unwilling to target Taliban commanders fuelling Afghan insurgency

Islamabad, Sep.20 (ANI): US Ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson, has said that Islamabad is reluctant to target Taliban leaders present on its soil despite repeated appeals by America in this regard.

In an interview with a US daily, Patterson said even after eight years of Pakistan agreeing to support the US in its war against the Al-Qaeda and Taliban, Islamabad, it appears, has ‘different priorities’ from the US.

“It is ‘certainly reluctant to take action’ against the leaders of the Afghan insurgency,” Patterson said.

She said Pakistan’s laid back attitude had affected US goals and was undermining the efforts of the allied forces to deny Al-Qaeda and other extremist outfits to establish a sanctuary in Afghanistan.

“Where we differ, of course, is the treatment of the groups who are attacking our troops in Afghanistan. And that comes down to Haqqani and Gul Bahadur and Nazir, to a lesser extent Hekmatyar, and yes, of course, there are differences there,” Patterson told The McClatchy.

She highlighted that the threat emanating from different Talibani groups posed the biggest problem in Afghanistan.

“My own view is that the Haqqani group is the biggest threat in Afghanistan. The Quetta Shura, yes, is sort of a command and control. They move in and out of Afghanistan,” The Daily Times quoted Patterson, as saying. (ANI)

Jumbos enjoy a day off at a wildlife sanctuary in West Bengal

Jalpaiguri, Sep 18 (ANI): Captive elephants, used by the forest officials to supervise the area, enjoyed a royal treat at the Jaldapara Sanctuary in Jalpaiguri district of West Bengal.

The forest officials use elephants to supervise the area since most of the sanctuary is inaccessible by vehicle or on foot.

Every year on the occasion of Vishwakarma puja, the jumbos get the much-awaited annual holiday.

On this day, the elephants are given special treatment. The day starts with the bathing of the animals in the river. The mahouts then decorate the elephants and give them special food.

“The elephants are the ride of Lord Vishwakarma and Vishwakarma takes care of machine, elephants. That’s why we the staff members of Jaldapara Wildlife perform this puja (ritual),” said Kharke Bahadur, a mahout.

Wildlife officials said elephants played a big role in maintaining the sanctuary.

“Because at Jaldapara, it’s mainly wildlife area. Here, there is very important role for such captive elephants because some areas where vehicle movement and foot patrolling is not possible because there is risk to life and these areas are accessible (because of elephants). So we totally depend on these captive elephants,” said Buddhadev Mondal, range officer at the sanctuary. (ANI)

US Navy ship sunk in World War II battle located

Washington, September 11 (ANI): A research mission has located and identified the final resting place of the YP-389, a US Navy patrol boat sunk approximately 20 miles off the coast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, by a German submarine during World War II.

Six sailors died in the attack on June 19, 1942. There were 18 survivors.

The wreck is located in about 300 feet of water in a region off North Carolina known as the “Graveyard of the Atlantic,” home to US and British naval vessels, merchant ships, and German U-boats sunk during the Battle of the Atlantic.

NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) and its expedition partners mapped and shot video of the wreck using high-resolution camera equipment, multibeam sonar and an advanced remotely operated vehicle deployed from the NOAA ship Nancy Foster.

Researchers were able to locate and positively identify the YP-389 by reexamining data from the Duke Marine Laboratory expedition that discovered the USS Monitor in 1973.

Today, the relatively intact remains of the YP-389 rest upright on the ship’s keel.

The wreck site is home to a variety of marine life. Much of the outer-hull plating has fallen away, leaving only the intact frames exposed.

“She rests now like a literal skeleton, a reminder of a time long ago when the nation was at war,” said Joseph Hoyt, Monitor National Marine Sanctuary archaeologist and principal investigator for the project.

Built originally as a fishing trawler, the YP-389 was converted into a coastal patrol craft and pressed into service after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

The ship was equipped with one 3-inch deck gun to protect the ship from enemy aircraft and surfaced submarines and two .30-caliber machine guns.

However, on the day of the attack by the German submarine U-701, the ship’s deck gun was inoperative, and the YP-389 could return fire only with its machine guns.

Weeks after the attack on the YP-389, the U-701 was sunk by Army aircraft in the same vicinity as the YP-389.

According to Rear Admiral Jay A. DeLoach, USN (Ret), director, Naval History and Heritage Command, “The US Navy considers the YP-389 discovery a grave site and, by law, it is to be left undisturbed.” (ANI)

Ancient Egyptian temples followed astronomy to set their calendars

London, September 9 (ANI): A new study has indicated that ancient Egyptian temples were aligned so precisely with astronomical events that people could set their political, economic and religious calendars by them.

According to a report in New Scientist, the study was of 650 temples, some dating back to 3000 BC.

For example, New Year coincided with the moment that the winter-solstice sun hit the central sanctuary of the Karnak temple in present-day Luxor, according to archaeological astronomer Juan Belmonte of the Canaries Astrophysical Institute in Tenerife, Spain.

Hieroglyphs on temple walls have hinted at the use of astronomy in temple architecture, including depictions of the “stretching of the cord” ceremony in which the pharaoh marked out the alignment for the temple with string.

But there had been little evidence to support the drawings.

Belmonte and Mosalam Shaltout of the Helwan Observatory in Cairo found that the temples are all aligned according to an astronomically significant event, such as a solstice or equinox, or the rising of Sirius, the brightest star in the sky.

“Somebody would have had to go to the prospective site during a solar, stellar or lunar event – as we did – to mark out the position that the temple axis should take,” Belmonte said.

“For the most important temples, this may well have been the pharaoh, as the temple drawings show,” he added. (ANI)

1st century A.D. colossal statue of Greek God Apollo unearthed in Turkey

Washington, September 9 (ANI): Italian archaeologists have unearthed a 1st century A.D. colossal statue of Apollo, the Greek god of the sun, light, music and poetry, from white calcified cliffs in southwestern Turkey.

Colossal statues were very popular in antiquity, as evidenced by the lost giant statues of the Colossus of Rhodes and the Colossus of Nero.

Most of them vanished long ago, with their material re-used in other building projects.

“This colossal statue of Apollo is really a unique finding. Such statues are extremely rare in Asia Minor. Only a dozen still survive,” team leader Francesco D’Andria, director of the Institute of Archaeological Heritage, Monuments and Sites at Italy’s National Research Council in Lecce, told Discovery News.

Split in two huge marble fragments, divided along the bust and the lower part of the sculpture, the 1st century A.D. statue was unearthed at the World Heritage Site of Hierapolis, now called Pamukkale.

Founded around 190 B.C. by Eumenes II, King of Pergamum (197 B.C.-159 B.C.), Hierapolis was given over to Rome in 133 B.C.

The Hellenistic city grew into a flourishing Roman city, with temples, a theatre and popular sacred hot springs, believed to have healing properties.

Standing at more than four meters (13 feet) in height, the newly discovered statue, which is missing the head and the arms, might have been one of the most impressive sights in the city.

“It depicts the Greek god Apollo sitting on a throne and holding the cithara with his left arms. The god wears a wonderfully draped tunic. The cloth has a transparency effect to reveal mighty muscles,” said D’Andria.

Inspired by the great classical masterpieces, the artist did not pay the same peculiar attention to the back of the statue.

“This shows that the sculpture was placed against a wall and was supposed to be seen only frontally,” D’Andria noted.

Standing in all its massive regality, the statue was particularly important for the city, since Apollo was venerated as Hierapolis’ divine founder.

The colossal statue was probably the main sculpture at the sanctuary of Apollo, which was intentionally built over an active fault.

“Hierapolis is a unique site, and archaeologists are bringing to light incredible findings each year. As with all the other ancient buildings, the statue will be virtually reconstructed in full detail,” Francesco Gabellone, an architect at the National Research Council in Lecce, told Discovery News. (ANI)

Pak intelligence’s severe ‘torture’ saved Rauf from being extradited to UK

London, Sep.9 (ANI): The Pakistani intelligence had tortured Rashid Rauf, the alleged mastermind of the airliner bombing plot, so badly that Britain had to abandon its plan to prosecute him.

According to the Guardian, Rauf was treated so badly that he could not be extradited.

Rauf, who was born in Pakistan in January 1981 and raised in Birmingham, is described as a key figure in Al-Qaida’s most ambitious conspiracy against the western world since the 9/11 carnage.

Rauf has also been named as a possible ‘facilitator’ of the July 7, 2005 London terror attacks by MI5 and MI6.

Rauf, wanted in London for murder, was arrested in Pakistan in August 2006, but he later escaped from police custody in Rawalpindi in broad daylight just two weeks before the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.

His escape also aborted an alleged plan said to be mutually agreed between Islamabad and London to exchange Rauf for two high-profile Baloch leaders wanted for allegedly waging war against the Pakistan army.

The Baloch leaders seeking sanctuary in the UK were arrested for the exchange purpose but after Rauf’s escape the court apparently released them for want of evidence. (ANI)

Pak facing existential threat from western border, not India Gates

Washington, Sep.9 (ANI): US Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said Pakistan has realized that the Taliban and other extremists based in the western tribal area of the country pose the real existential threat to it rather than India.

In an interview with a private television channel, Gates said Pakistan has acknowledged that the real threat to its existence come from the extremists based in the lawless tribal areas along the Afghan border and not from India.

“Pakistan faces a lot of problems right now. I think they have always thought of India as the existential threat to Pakistan, but I think they are beginning to understand that the extremists in the ungoverned spaces in their west have become an existential threat,” Gates said.

He said Washington wants Islamabad to take hard action against the Taliban and other extremist outfits having their base inside its territory.

Gates said the Obama Administration is ready to provide all help and encourage Pakistan to act sincerely against the banned outfits.

“Pakistan will be encouraged to take action in some of its ungoverned spaces in the western part of the country, where the Taliban and al-Qaida have taken sanctuary,” The News quoted Gates, as saying.

He highlighted that the situation in western Pakistan went out of hand due to withdrawal of the security forces from the region.

“Now, the Pakistanis are back in the fight. They have been an important source of support for us. Almost all of our supplies, about 80 percent of our dry cargo, moves through Pakistan to Afghanistan, and they have helped provide protection for the convoys,” Gates added. (ANI)

Elephants worship Lord Ganesha in Mudumalai

Mudumalai (Tamil Nadu), Aug.24 (ANI): A group of elephants on Monday worshipped Lord Ganesha at a temple in Mudumalai on the occasion of the ongoing 10-day Ganesha festival.

The unique annual ceremony is being conducted by elephants in Mudumalai Tiger sanctuary for last 25 years.

On this special day, more than 22 camp elephants are brought to the tribal Ganesha temple in a lively musical procession. The elephants are all decked up and adorned with particular ornaments.

Once the elephants reach the temple only two elephants enter the temple premises and perform the puja. They kneel down and worship lord Ganesha, followed by other elephants.

Special food is also served to all the elephants on this day.

According to a forest officer, the ceremony is performed only in Mudumalai sanctuary.

“Worship of Lord Ganesha by elephants at Mudumalai is one of the oldest. This ceremony is only performed here and nowhere else in India, as it is one of the oldest sanctuaries for elephants,” said Halan, Range Officer, Mudumalai Tiger Sanctuary.

Hundreds of tourists from different parts of the country and abroad visit the place to witness unique elephant Puja (ceremony) dedicated to lord Ganesha.

“We just came here yesterday. My sister, brother-in law, my mom ..my whole family is here and it is Vinayak Chaturthi (Hindu festival)…first thing we saw here was beautiful herd of elephants with very nice tusks. We are having great time. It is wonderful for us,” said Sandeep, a tourist. By Jehova G(ANI)

Two baby elephants found dead in Kerala stream

Thattekad (Kerala), Aug 22 (ANI): Residents and forest officials found the bodies of two baby elephants that probably slipped and drowned from a steep upstream due to heavy rainfall near Thattekad Bird Sanctuary in Kerala.

Officials presume that bodies slipped due to very heavy rainfall the night before, which had led to temporary flood-like-situation in the region.

“The incident took place mainly due to rainfall and heavy currents in the water. This is a steep region and a high waterfall area. Both the babies must have slipped and flown over, that is the reason we assume deaths have happened,” said Thomas Varghese, forest ranger of the Thattekad Bird Sanctuary.

There were no heavy cut marks on the bodies except a small scar on the forehead on one, caused due to hard hitting on the rock and some blood stains were found coming out of the trunk.

Many jungle logs were also found near the bodies of elephant babies in the stream.

Hundreds of captive elephants are booked in advance by organisers of fairs and festivals in southern India to attract people that often cause accidents.

Home to 60 per cent of Asia’s elephants, India has the highest death rate from human-elephant conflict in the world, with 200-250 people and 100 elephants killed annually.

Habitat fragmentation, poaching of tusked males, and patchy forest law enforcement are behind their decline, but their numbers have slowly been rebounding.

Experts claim that massive deforestation, poaching and people encroaching upon forest corridors have forced elephants to move out of their natural habitats in search of food and water. (ANI)