Vadodara,
June 4, 2014
Updated: June 4, 2014 13:26 IST
The railway authorities have also agreed to consider the demand of not running goods trains in morning and evening hours when there is more movement of lions on rail track in Amreli district
Western Railway has agreed to reduce speed of trains passing through
tracks near Gir forest in Gujarat’s Amreli district to prevent accident
of Asiatic lions moving in the area, a senior forest official said on
Wednesday.
“The Western Railway has agreed to reduce the speed limit of goods
trains on the route passing through areas of movement of Asiatic lions
so that a driver can prevent an accident if lions or cubs cross the rail
tracks,” Gujarat’s Chief Conservator of Forests R L Meena told PTI,
after a meeting with Western Railway officials in Mumbai on Tuesday. The
meeting was held in the wake of the death of six Asiatic lions of Gir
forest this year in separate accidents after being run over by trains.
The railway authorities have also agreed to consider the demand of not
running goods trains in morning and evening hours when there is more
movement of lions on rail track in Amreli district, Mr. Meena said. They
agreed to reschedule timings of running of goods trains near these rail
tracks, he added.
The railway authorities have also agreed to impart training to more
train drivers to sensitise them about lions, on why big cats need to be
protected and what can the drivers do to ensure the safety of animals if
found on tracks. The training will be imparted by forest officials, he
said.
The forest department will bear the expenditure of barbed wire fencing
in 30 km area on railway track in Amreli frequented by lions, while the
railway will construct an under passage (running under the rail track)
for enabling movement of lions and other wild animals, the official
said. The lion population has steadily increased
in Gir forest, more than doubling from a low of 180 in 1974 to 411 big
cats, comprising 97 adult males, 162 adult females, 75 sub-adults and 77
cubs, as of April 2010, sources said.
The Gir national park and wildlife sanctuary in Western Gujarat is the only habitat for Asiatic lions.
About 100-150 lions have permanently settled in the coastal areas around Rajula and Jafrabad towns of Amreli.
http://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/energy-and-environment/western-railway-to-limit-train-speed-near-asiatic-lions-abode/article6081772.ece
http://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/energy-and-environment/western-railway-to-limit-train-speed-near-asiatic-lions-abode/article6081772.ece
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