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Elephants drive women in labour up the tree
Wild elephants invaded Duli Maharani’s home when she was having labour pain,
forcing her to climb on a tree and deliver her baby in machan on 2 March.
A resident of Goddaran village in Jharkhand’s Dumka district, Duli and her
baby somehow survived. But Rangi Rani of neighbouring Renudih village was
not so lucky. Chased by the elephants in labour pain, Rangi too climbed on a
tree to deliver her baby on 18 February. But her little one died for want of
proper medical attention.
Over 300 hundred men and women have taken shelter on trees, living in
perpetual terror with the elephants on rampage in the villages of three
tribal-dominated block of Dumka district, a fact-finding team of the Peoples
Union for Civil Liberties has said. The villagers have built machans with
hay and bamboo on tree-top to protect themselves from the marauding
elephants which had been targeting over 50 villages spread over in
Gopikandar, Ghasipur, Patharkata and Nishchitpur blocks in Dumka regularly
for the last six months.
Besides Duli Maharani and Rangi Rani, according to the PUCL’s findings, four
women including Sunita Maharani, Lakhi Soren, Ratani Maharani and Silvanti
Tuddu have been forced to deliver their babies on trees. And having chased
out by elephants, about a dozen women have aborted their babies so far.
The wild elephants have destroyed thousands of huts of Santhal and Paharia
tribals living in the villages of Gopikandar, Ghasipur, Patharkata and
Nishchitpur blocks. Seething in anger at the administration’s failure to
provide them relief from the ‘killer’ elephants, the villagers indulged in
arson and violence at a forest department’s office at Kathikunda. But
instead of helping them out, forest officials have lodged FIRs against the
villagers, according to the PUCL’s findings.
A PUCL’s senior office bearer, Mr Sashibhushan, told that the
affected villagers at their meeting recently adopted a resolution demanding
compensation for the loss of their lives and property caused by the wild
elephants which of late have proliferated in the jungle of Dumka. The
regional sabha (committee) of the tribals have sent a copy of their
resolution to the President, Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, the Prime Minister, Mr AB
Vajpayee and the Jharkhand chief minister and Chief Justice of the Jharkhand
High Court.
But the affected people haven’t received any words of comfort from any
quarters so far.
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Nalin
Verma |
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