The Assam Government on Tuesday had no answers to the alarming increase of rhino poaching in the Kaziranga National Park but announced the constitution of a high-powered committee to assess the situation and come up with a report by the end of this month.
While four highly-endangered one-horned rhinos, including a three-year-old calf, have been killed by poachers in and around the 1,000-sq km National Park in central Assam in the New Year, as many as 21 rhinos had fallen victim to the guns of poachers who managed to sneak in and escape after removing their horns.
Assam Forest and Environment Minister Rockybul Hussain called an urgent meeting of top-ranking forest and wildlife officials on Tuesday morning in the wake of Sunday’s killing of a female rhino and her calf. State Forest Commissioner BB Hagjer has been named the head of a 12-member high-powered committee that has been asked to proceed to Kaziranga and assess the ground situation.
Eminent environmentalist PC Bhattacharyya of WWT, HK Choudhury of Wildlife Trust of India and Amit Sharma of WWF have also been included in the panel.
“We are highly concerned about the spurt in killing (of rhinos) in Kaziranga in the recent months. That is why we have constituted the committee to find out the loopholes and suggest measures to stop further recurrence of such incidents,” Hussain said.
An Assam Government spokesman said the committee has been asked to also suggest remedial measures so that incidents of poaching could be completely stopped. “Poaching of rhinos in Kaziranga is not just a conservation issue. It has become a law and order problem with poachers sneaking in from Nagaland as well as from Karbi Anglong district,” the Government spokesman said.
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