A
Jumbo Tragedy
The failure to
enforce rules and stressful use at temple events are forcing elephants
in Kerala to run amok
KA SHAJI
Thrissur and Kochi
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| Photo:
SK Mohan |
EVERY SUMMER, a tragedy
unfolds in Kerala. Somewhere or the other, elephants trained to participate
in temple festivals turn on their trainers and the religious congregation
around them and stampede. Sometimes, they kill people. On April 24, an
elephant ran amok at a temple near the coastal Thrissur city trampling
an elderly woman to death and killing two men, including a mahout (while
its own sat atop terrified) who it impaled on its tusk. It took two hours
to control the animal. By the time the elephant was brought to heel 90
minutes later, it had also destroyed portions of the temple. This is the
season of the Thrissur pooram festival when elephants are taken and form
part of processions to mark one of the most significant Hindu religious
festivals in Kerala. This incident occurred around noon when the elephant
was being taken out of the temple for a ceremonial procession.
Animal rights activists
say the temple tragedy underlines the serious flaws in the management
of captive, or tamed, elephants in Kerala. Since January, rampaging elephants
have killed 18 people, including eight mahouts, across Kerala. According
to the Kerala Elephant Lovers’ Association, a group of passionate advocates
for the beast, the elephants’ fury continues because of the failure of
the government to enforce the rules set out for the management of the
captive elephants. “How can civil society continue to ignore the failure
to adhere to the norms?” asks VK Venkitachalam, head of the association,
who alleges that the authorities at the temple where the elephant rampaged
had not complied with an order of the Kerala High Court specifying the
do’s and don’ts for the use of elephants at such events. The court’s order
included a restraint on the display of the captive elephants between 11
am and 3 pm as stipulated by the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.
ACCORDING TO the government
rules, organisers must begin providing the forest department daily fitness
certificates for the elephants from three days before an event begins.
But such certificates are submitted in bulk only to get the requirement
out of the way. Says Radha Krishnan, an elephant lover: “Earlier, only
kings and lords owned elephants. Now, they are a necessity at temples,
churches and mosques. With a steady increase in number of festivals, the
casualty also increases.”
Many elephants are
made to quickly cover many kilometres between temples during the January-May
festival season. “Elephant owners and trainers are warned every year to
care for their animals,’’ says noted environmentalist PK Uthaman. “But
many elephants still have to endure unhealthy living conditions and are
underfed.” Adds another expert, KC Panicker: “The number of elephants
participating in festivals is very large, about 50 to 60. That has to
be reduced. All elephants have to be given a fitness certificate by a
veterinary surgeon.”
Last year, the Kerala
government announced that committees will be set up in each of the state’s
14 districts to ensure that Captive Elephant Management Rules were
 |
| Photo:
SK Mohan |
followed. Such committees
were to include forest officials and activists. But no committee has been
set up in any district even as elephants run crazy and kill people, and
temples continue to use elephants in their events.
“It not just their
beauty but also the faith that the elephant represents Lord Ganesha that
makes the elephant crucial for our festival events,” says P. Chandrasekharan,
who runs one of the city’s temple administrative bodies, the Thiruvambadi
Devaswom. In most cases, long working hours in sweltering heat and dehydration
puts elephants under extreme stress. “We cannot directly interfere with
individual temple administrative bodies,” G. Sudakaran, who heads the
ministry that exclusively caters to the management of such temple bodies,
told TEHELKA. Admitting that it was cruelty that forced the beasts to
the violence, the minister adds: “We will try to bring in new legislation
to stop the use of elephants.”
But a ban on the use
of elephants in temples would be easily flouted in festival-crazy Kerala.
Elephant lovers as well as festival organisers say that the need of the
hour is a consensus that will bring down the abuse of the animal. Pointing
out that the elephant is Kerala’s state animal and that the state government’s
emblem also has two elephants in it, government official KP Sreekumar
says almost all festival events have at least one richly caparisoned elephant.
Currently, some 700
elephants are in captivity across the state. About 260 are with the devaswoms,
the temple bodies, while 440 are individually owned. The largest private
collection is 14 elephants. Earlier, only the high-caste Namboodiris owned
elephants. But elephant ownership is now seen as symbolic of wealth and
prestige. Kerala Forest Minister Binoy Viswam had last year said that
all elephants will be ‘retired’ at the age of 65 years. But no followup
action has been taken. His other elephantfriendly initiatives such as
fixed work hours and safe transportation for the elephants also remain
on paper.
“The Kerala Elephant
Owners’ Association would welcome scientific initiatives on the part of
the government to avoid tragedies. We have to compile a proper set of
rules to decide what needs to be done when elephants run amok,” says the
association’s representative P. Sasi Kumar.
In Kerala, elephants
rarely breed in captivity. Capturing them from the forests is banned.
They are now being bought from Bihar, West Bengal and the Northeast.
The cost of each calf
varies from Rs 1.5 lakh to Rs 3 lakh. The journey to Kerala lasts up to
15 days. Once trained, elephants are rented at the rate of Rs 15,000 for
a three-hour programme. Such events invariably begin around noon and the
elephants are made to stand in the sun and denied water for long periods.
“There is a misconception that elephants fan their ears and dance because
they appreciate the music,” says EK Easwaran, an elephant expert. “Actually,
elephants fan their ears to cool their bodies and dance on their feet
to get away from the hot tar.”
After a long strenuous
walk in the hot sun, when the animals are hungry and thirsty, their mahouts
feed them and take them to water. But instead of bringing them much relief,
this actually clogs their intestines, says Easwaran.
Elephants, he says,
can never be completely domesticated and always desire to return to the
wild. A mahout puts the elephant under stress by hitting it when it disobeys
commands. “Captive elephants are always made to work even when there is
no work,’’ says Easwaran. Clearly, man or beast, there is only so much
repression that a living being can take, as the rampaging elephant showed
at Thrissur.
WRITER’S
E-MAIL
shaji@tehelka.com
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