Fri Aug 12, 2011 07:39 AM ET | AFP
Hundreds of conservationists decided not to take part because of
fears prompted by comments from a minister that the survey will be used
to seize elephants and send them to temples for use in religious
ceremonies.
Some 4,000 people are taking part in the two-day survey which is
the first time formerly war-ravaged Sri Lanka has attempted to count
elephants in all of its national parks
The enumerators headed out before dawn on Friday and started the
count at watering holes, ancient irrigation tanks and lakes commonly
used by elephants.
The animals will be categorized according to gender and the number of
young, Pradeep Hettiarachchi, park warden at the Minneriya National
Park told AFP.
"We have the largest concentration of wild elephants in a single
park and the survey will give us valuable information for park planning
and conservation work," Hettiarachchi said.
The boycott was triggered by reported comments by Wildlife
Minister S. M. Chandrasena earlier this week who said that the results
of the survey would be used to identify elephants to be domesticated.
"Calves suitable for pageants will be chosen during the elephant
census, tamed and handed over to the temples," he said according to the
Colombo-based Daily Mirror newspaper.
"Sometime back there were more than 300 tamed elephants in the country and the number has now dwindled to around 150 of which only a few are tuskers suitable for pageants."
Elephants are treated as sacred animals in Buddhist-majority Sri Lanka and are often paraded during temple festivals.
Wildlife officials have denied there was any plan to use census data to capture wild elephants.
The shortfall of volunteers caused by the boycott was filled by
security forces and villagers who will work alongside wildlife
officials, said S.R.B. Dissanayake, deputy director of the Department of
Wildlife Conservation.
The survey results are due within a month and will give a fair
picture of herd patterns and numbers in a country that boasted 12,000
elephants in 1900, according to officials.
The department estimates the current population at just 4,000.
NOTE: This story disturbed me and made me gnash my teeth. You?
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