Idukki (Kerala):In Kerala's famous Kodanad Elephant Training Camp, a temporary cage measuring 15 feet x 15 feet inside and 20 feet high, made using Eucalyptus wood, is being readied for a special guest rogue wild tusker popularly known as 'Arikomban' for his love for rice. The experienced mahouts of the camp in Ernakulam district eagerly await the arrival of the young tusker.
About a hundred kilometres away from Kodanad, in Chinnakanal in Idukki, a big team consisting of Forest, police, revenue, and health department officials is fine-tuning the last-minute preparations for one of their most complicated elephant relocation missions: To send this tusker, which frequently strays into human settlements and raids ration shops in search of rice, to the Kodanad camp.
Casting a shadow over the operation to cage 'Ari Komban', the Kerala High Court on Thursday night stayed the department's move till March 29. A Division Bench of the High Court took the decision on pleas filed by animal rights organisations, challenging the mission planned for March 26. If the high court lifts the stay and give its go ahead to the task force, 'Arikomban', who earned the nickname from Malayalam words 'Ari' (Rice) and 'Komban' (tusker), will have to say goodbye to the wild where he was born, played, and grew up.
A large patch of forest, trapped between human inhabitants on one side and the Anayirangal dam on the other, is the home of wild elephants, including Arikomban, who is now estimated to be between the age of 25 and 30. The district administration has taken unprecedented precautions for the capture of this elephant, as the area of operation is located inside human settlements and in some of Kerala's favourite tourism destinations.
The plans include the invocation of Section 144 of CrPC in the wards of two panchayats on the day of operation. The district administration is worried about people gathering in the areas during the operation as the news about the capture is widely publicised. Forest Department sources said already huge crowds are gathering to watch the Kumki elephants, which are brought to Chinnakanal for the operation.
"We are trying everything to restrict the crowd's movement. We do not know what the elephant will do if it gets agitated. The capture area is not inside the forest, and we have many tribal colonies there," Shantri Tom, Assistant Conservator of Forests, Devikulam Range, told PTI. In order to keep the curious people at bay, the task force has arranged a mike announcement in both the panchayats in three languages, Malayalam, Tamil, and the tribal language Kudi.
The task force had earlier postponed the date of the capture from March 25 to March 26 considering the annual examinations in schools and colleges scheduled on Saturday and also due to the delay in the arrival of two more Kumkisdomesticated elephants trained to tame wild pachyderms. The Forest department has already brought in two Kumki elephants from WayanadVikram and Suryanand two more are expected to reach Chinnakanal for the mission.