English language news articles from year 2007 plus find out everything about Asiatic Lion and Gir Forest. Latest News, Useful Articles, Links, Photos, Video Clips and Gujarati News of Gir Wildlife Sanctuary (Geer / Gir Forest - Home of Critically Endangered Species Asiatic Lion; Gir Lion; Panthera Leo Persica ; Indian Lion (Local Name 'SAVAJ' / 'SINH' / 'VANRAJ') located in South-Western Gujarat, State of INDIA), Big Cats, Wildlife, Conservation and Environment.
The
majestic Asiatic Lion (Panthera Leo Persica) calls Gujarat its home,
and according to a 2015 census, around 523 big cats live in the
protected areas of the Gir forest. However, the state government
recently admitted in the Gujarat Assembly that around 184 lions died in
two years (2016 and 2017).
Of the 184 deaths, 32 lions died due to
unnatural causes. Many reasons can be attributed to the spike in
unnatural deaths, but at the root of the problem is the alarming fact
that 45-55 percent of Gir’s lion population lives outside the protected
areas.
Now the Gujarat High Court has intervened taking suo motu
cognisance and issued notices to the state government and the Centre;
the next hearing on the matter will be held on 18 April.
Gir’s Problem: Too Many Lions!
On
5 March, the state’s Forest Minister Ganpat Vasava told the Gujarat
Assembly that the unnatural deaths occur due to road accidents, open
wells with no concrete parapets, railway tracks passing through the
protected areas and forests, and electric fences securing agricultural
land.
Unnatural
deaths happened because around 40-45 percent lions live outside the
protected areas of Gir forest and are likely to meet with road and rail
accidents or get electrocuted while entering farm lands.
HS Singh, Wildlife conservationist and member of the National Board of Wildlife
Clearly
the Gir National Park has more far more Asiatic lions than it can
handle. In fact, HS Singh adds that the Asiatic Lion now shares the
territory with a growing leopard population as well. He estimates there
are over 500 leopards living there. They also compete with the lion for
territory and food, pushing even more lions out of the protected area.
In
2016, 104 lions including 33 cubs died in Gujarat, whereas 80 lions
including 38 cubs died in the year 2017. In all 12 lions died of
unnatural causes in 2016 while 20 lions in 2017 died of unnatural
causes.
Advocate
Hemang Shah filed a PIL on the unnatural lion deaths and is assisting
the court in the case. According to him the World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
had published a report claiming that wells have been barricaded with the
help of the state governments.
“If that report is true then
either new wells have been constructed or barricades on the existing
wells have been broken, or its just on paper. I have also demanded for a
complete ban on vehicles passing through forests after sunset. In 2010
the state government had proposed to close these roads but due to public
pressure they have not done it.”
Around 30 percent of dead lions are cubs hardly a week to two years old.(Photo: iStock)
Without
disagreeing with Shah, it may well be argued that Gujarat’s
conservators are fighting a losing battle. They have clearly done well
over the years in raising the population of the lions and other big
cats. This has inevitably led to greater human vs big cat conflict, as
the causes of the unnatural deaths reveal. One solution has been staring
Gujarat in the face for years but has steadfastly been ignored.
An Asiatic lion rests in Gir forest. (Photo: Reuters)
In
the 2018 CAG report, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has
lauded Gujarat’s efforts in conservation of lions but at the same time
stated that over 54.6 percent lions live outside protected areas and
that the government has not approved new protected areas in the last
decade.
According
to Conservation Scientist Ravi Chellam, “In 1994, about 30 percent of
the lions, which means more than 1,000 of them, died in Serengeti
National Park in Africa due to canine distemper. I’m not saying it is
guaranteed to happen in India, but if it happens it will be too late to
act as our ENTIRE population of wild Asiatic lions are in and around Gir
Forest, and could be decimated by a single epidemic. Translocation is
like buying the Asiatic Lion an insurance policy, a safety net.”
Wildlife
activist Faiyaz A Khudsar had filed a PIL in the SC in 2006 seeking
translocation of lions from Gir to Madhya Pradesh. He said,
“Distributing lions is the best idea and we have lost a big opportunity
in not sending them to MP already. They are all concentrated in one
area, now if there is an epidemic, protecting lions will be difficult.”
Translocation of Lions Going Slow
The
Supreme Court had issued a directive to move lions from Gujarat to
Madhya Pradesh on 15 April 2013. However, things are moving at a very
slow pace as stated by the Principal Chief Conservator of Forest, GK
Sinha.
The
SC has issued directive that lions do need to be translocated but under
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) guidelines.
Translocation is not an easy process as per IUCN, 33 studies are to be
conducted before translocation is done. So, this process will take some
time.
GK Sinha, Principal Chief Conservator of Forest (PCCF), Gujarat
Gir Lion resting in the shade.(Photo Courtesy: Wikimedia)
Ravi
Chellam, who was a member of an expert committee formed by the SC to
implement translocation, said, “It will be 5 years and counting since
the SC ordered translocation of lions. Around 2-3 weeks ago the matter
was again heard in response to a contempt petition filed in 2017
demanding action against the government of Gujarat and India for not
implementing the SC April 2013 order. Does the SC order carry any
validity?”
When asked by when the translocation programme will be
completed, GK Sinha said, “I cannot comment on when the translocation
procedure will be completed, that is something the Government of India
can answer.”
Tigers Get ‘Lion’s Share’ of Funding
The
Asiatic lion and the Bengal tiger are classified as ‘endangered’ on the
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. However, when it comes to fund
allocation for conservation, Project Tiger received Rs 1,007 crore
between 2012 and 2017 from the Centre, whereas the mighty Asiatic Lions
only got Rs 25 crore.
Reply to West Bengal MP, Md Nadimul Haque’s query on fund allocation for lions(Photo: Rahul Nair/The Quint)
The
Union Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Dr Harsh
Vardhan stated that Gujarat government had sought central funding to the
tune of Rs 135 crore and had proposed bearing a share of Rs 15 crore
for lion conservation.Reply to West Bengal MP, Md Nadimul Haque’s query on fund allocation for lions.(Photo: Rahul Nair)
Vardhan
stated during last year’s monsoon Session of the Parliament, “The
requisite funds were not available under the centrally sponsored scheme –
‘Integrated Development of Wildlife Habitats (IDWH)’. The Gujarat
government was advised to review the proposal and prioritise activities
up to Rs 1 crore,” the minister replied to the query.
Gujarat Starts Project Lion
With
habitat loss and increase in the number of lions, the Gujarat
government has planned to start Project Lion, which aims at protecting
the big cat, especially those that stray out of protected areas.
PCCF of Gujarat, GK Sinha told The Quint,
“The government has done a lot to protect the lions of Gujarat. In the
current budget itself Rs 4 Crore has been allocated to ‘Project Lion’.
The Project aims at preserving corridors, eco-sensitive zones and lions
moving out of the protected areas. The project has been introduced to
ensure a comprehensive, systematic and scientific management of lions
that stray out of the protected areas.”
The
Chief Justice himself said that this not an adversarial litigation,
this is something that we have to work for the benefit of the lions.
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