NEW DELHI, Sept 16: On the eve of the first anniversary of much touted “Project Cheetah,” The BJP member of the Lok Sabha Varun Gandhi in yet another attack on his own party government has criticised the move to import cheetahs and letting them die at the Kuno national park in Madhya Pradesh.
He termed bringing cheetahs from Africa and allowing them to die “cruelty and negligence”, and called for a focus on conserving India’s endangered species. His mother Maneka Gandhi, also BJP MP, is known to be an animal lover.
Mr Gandhi’s remarks come in the backdrop of nine cheetah deaths in Madhya Pradesh’s Kuno National Park in a span of five months, and amid reports of the next batch of the big cats being brought from South Africa and introduced into the state’s Gandhi Sagar Wildlife Sanctuary.
As part of Project Cheetah, the first batch of the big cats, brought from Namibia, had been released in Kuno National Park by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on his birthday – September 17 – last year. Sunday will be the first anniversary of Project Cheetah.
In a post on X, Mr Gandhi tagged a report on another batch of cheetahs and said, “Importing cheetahs from Africa and allowing nine of them to die in a foreign land is not just cruelty, it’s an appalling display of negligence. We should focus on conserving our own endangered species and habitats rather than contributing to the suffering of these magnificent creatures.” “This reckless pursuit of exotic animals must end immediately, and we should prioritise the welfare of our native wildlife instead,” his post said.
This is far from the first time that the MP from Uttar Pradesh’s Pilibhit has attacked his own party or a government headed by the BJP. At an event in Uttar Pradesh last month, he had asked people not to disturb a sadhu (ascetic) and said nobody knows “when ‘maharaaj ji’ will become the chief minister,” a dig at the government in Uttar Pradesh.
Kuno National Park has seen the reintroduction of 20 adult cheetahs since September last year, and four cubs have been born there since then. Nine of the cheetahs, including three cubs, had died in a span of five months till early August this year. Some experts had attributed the cheetah deaths to the use of sub-standard radio collars, but the government had dismissed the charge as “speculation and hearsay without scientific evidence”.
Hearing a petition on the deaths, the Supreme Court had said last month that there was no reason to question the government on the moves being made to reintroduce cheetahs in India. The Project Cheetah head SP Yadav had said the next batch of cheetahs would be imported from South Africa and introduced in the Gandhi Sagar Wildlife Sanctuary, which would be ready to receive them by the end of the year.
(Manas Dasgupta)