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World Environment Day: Let’s Not Stop At One Elephant

The outrage we feel towards the death of one elephant ought to be channeled towards tackling the danger many wild animals face.

An elephant calf along with two wild elephants walk along a road in Kerala’s Palakkad district, on Aug. 29, 2019. (Photograph: PTI)
An elephant calf along with two wild elephants walk along a road in Kerala’s Palakkad district, on Aug. 29, 2019. (Photograph: PTI)

It isn’t every day that the country outrages over the death of an elephant.

A recent incident from Kerala—where a pregnant elephant died after eating a pineapple laced with firecrackers—has shaken the internet and people’s consciousnesses. An elephant is a tremendous animal: expressive, tightly bonded, towering in its size, and its sentience. Elephants are feared and revered, the two feelings often becoming one.

Elephant and calf. (Photograph courtesy: Aditya Panda)
Elephant and calf. (Photograph courtesy: Aditya Panda)

The dead elephant in question was foraging in a crop field—near a forest stretch in Palakkad—when it consumed the pineapple. The pineapple was a bait bomb, a simple, cruel device that blasts the mouth or breaks the jaw of the animal that eats it, so it can’t perform the act of eating anymore. On Thursday, Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar tweeted that the culprits would be nabbed and that the attack was against ‘Indian culture’.

Elephants are endangered. For any species facing the threat of extinction, lactating or reproducing females are especially valued. The elephant that died had a foetus inside; the post-mortem pictures show a beautifully formed, horribly dead, calf. The cruelty and unfairness are staggering.

Yet, the outrage we feel towards the death of this elephant—and the death of her calf—ought to be channeled towards tackling a looming danger many wild animals face today.
A sand sculpture representing the recently killed wild pregnant elephant,  in Puri, on June 4, 2020. (Photograph: PTI)
A sand sculpture representing the recently killed wild pregnant elephant, in Puri, on June 4, 2020. (Photograph: PTI)

This is the complete loss of any dignity or agency of wild animals, because of a policy decision bracketing them as pests. Responding to a strong agricultural lobby, the government invited states to give lists of animals that could be declared ‘vermin’. Vermin means pests, and certain species were to be declared pests because they were destroying human property, like crops. This was said to be a move to stem human-wildlife conflict. Animals like Nilgai, rhesus macaque monkeys, and wild pigs were declared vermin in many states and then killed in a variety of ways. Some were shot in cold blood, some put in wire snares. Others—like a Nilgai in Bihar’s Vaishali district—were buried alive, crying pitifully, after a mechanical crane dug a grave and pushed the animal in as people watched.

The pineapple that the elephant ate may have been meant for a wild pig. But in the wild, no one is really counting who dies of a snare or poison or with a broken jaw, or which unintended target becomes a victim. In Athagarh in Odisha in December 2018, another female elephant died of a bait bomb, her lower jaw broken, her tongue in pieces. So, one must ask: has the random killing of wild animals solved the human-wildlife conflict problem? The answer is, a predictable, no.

Instead of revenge, we need systems that focus on solutions.
A herd of wild elephants from the nearby Rani Forest reserve in the wetlands at Deepor Beel on the outskirts of Guwahati, on Sept. 10, 2019. (Photograph: PTI)
A herd of wild elephants from the nearby Rani Forest reserve in the wetlands at Deepor Beel on the outskirts of Guwahati, on Sept. 10, 2019. (Photograph: PTI)

The answer can lie in better distribution, market reach, and a startup ecosystem. Apart from certification systems like Fairtrade, networks for ‘wildlife-friendly’ products exist. Businesses, farms, or individuals who don’t actively harm wildlife can be certified as wildlife-friendly. A small movement for biodiversity-friendly coffee and tea—from estates which don’t poach or injure wildlife—has already taken off in India. The potential for scale-up for organic, elephant, tiger, or leopard friendly produce is huge. In Assam, a new experiment is underway - parts of fields are being left fallow for elephants to feed in, creating ‘elephant meal zones’. Thus, a land-sharing system can also work, if incentivised and planned.

June 5 is World Environment Day. The internet is up in arms, asking for justice for the elephant. They have given her a name: Vinayaki, named after an elephant-headed goddess. The agitation gives an occasion to remember that World Environment Day isn’t another day for webinars and graphics, but to come up with solutions that impact real lives.

Elephant habitat in Kerala. (Photograph: Neha Sinha)
Elephant habitat in Kerala. (Photograph: Neha Sinha)

The government has notified elephant reserves and landscapes in India. Unlike sanctuaries or National Parks, these are not legal categories. At the moment, many of them read like a map of mining in India.

The elephant reserves of Mayurbhanj, Singhbhum, and Kaziranga are in, or next to, mines.

Now, decks are being moved to mine nearly 100 hectares of elephant reserve in Dihing Patkai in Assam for coal.

A herd of wild elephant in Assam’s Majuli district. (Photograph: PTI)
A herd of wild elephant in Assam’s Majuli district. (Photograph: PTI)

For the elephants, this is another in a long list of obstacles. If one is to map a day in an elephant’s life in East or North-East India, it could be thus. Walk to find food. Dodge fireballs thrown at you. Run. Break-through walls or barriers. Duck, so that sagging wires don’t electrocute you, as they did to seven elephants in Dhenkenal, Odisha. Dash across railway lines, so you don’t die as 60 other elephants did in the last four years. Circumvent mining pits. Die.

Things are so bad that the Supreme Court has told the state of West Bengal that firebombs should not be thrown at elephants.

If we want less conflict, we need to take the decision of leaving forest and elephant habitat intact, and creating cushions for farmers and elephants in elephant areas that are under cultivation.

Villagers stand near the carcass of a wild elephant that was electrocuted by low-tension electric wires, in Assam’s Nagaon district, on June 2, 2020. (Photograph: PTI)
Villagers stand near the carcass of a wild elephant that was electrocuted by low-tension electric wires, in Assam’s Nagaon district, on June 2, 2020. (Photograph: PTI)

It is heartening that within a pandemic of human suffering, people can find the mind space to think of an elephant: to learn of her, to mourn her, and to name her after she has passed. But though the opportunity to help elephants may start with one individual animal, it shouldn’t stop there. All elephants need our help. Let’s step up to it.

Neha Sinha works with the Bombay Natural History Society. Views expressed are personal.

The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of BloombergQuint or its editorial team.