Tuskers ill-treated at Dalada Maligawa
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Tusker blinded
in one eye by
its mahout at the maligawa
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By Risidra Mendis
Controversy regarding the two baby tuskers forcibly
taken from the Pinnawela Elephant Orphanage by
Diyawadana Nilame Nilanga Dela has taken a new turn,
with environmentalists accusing him of ill-treating not
only Raju and Sindu but also the tuskers at the Dalada
Maligawa.
Environmentalists now argue that apart from the serious
cruelty imposed on Raju and Sindu by Dela they will have
to undergo further suffering and cruelty like the
present tuskers and elephants at the Maligawa.
Speaking to The Sunday Leader, Coordinator, Elephant
Conservation Forum, Shantha Jayaweera said the Pinnawela
Elephant Orphanage is the only place in the country
where a large number of elephants can be seen in a herd,
the second largest place being the Dalada Maligawa.
“The
Maligawa has more than seven tuskers. However no
measures have been taken by Dela who is also the
president of the Tamed Elephants Association to breed
these animals,” Jayaweera said.
He
charged that the only reason why Dela is so interested
in taking elephants and tuskers from the orphanage is to
make money. “After he has tortured these animals and
trained them to go in peraheras he uses them for hard
labour. He also charges high rates when he hires these
animals to other temples to participate in peraheras.”
Jayaweera said.
According to Jayaweera the Maligawa elephants and
tuskers are never in one place at a given time except
when they are needed for the Kandy perahera .“The
Maligawa has more than seven tuskers and many elephants.
However all these animals are hired out for hard labour
such as lifting logs and for elephant safaris. If an
elephant is pregnant she cannot be used for hard labour
as the gestation period is 22 months. After the baby is
born the mother has to feed the baby for five years.
Elephant owners can bring their female elephants to
Pinnawela and breed them with the males and help in
breeding more elephants if they are interested,”
Jayaweera said.
He
added that reports of elephants and tuskers suffering at
the Maligawa have also emerged. “A baby tusker belonging
to the Maligawa was tied by its mahout close to the
Mahaweli
River.
The mahout left the animal unattended and the animal
drowned when the water level rose in the river. Another
tusker belonging to the Maligawa is blind in one eye,
the result of an attack by its mahout. Yet another
tusker has a big wound on its leg and a large growth on
the side of its face.
“According to eyewitnesses this tusker takes a long time
just to walk 10 meters. Dela’s greed to collect more
elephants from the orphanage will only result in more
deaths and suffering of these majestic animals,”
Jayaweera explained.
According to Jayaweera when elephants are taken on
safaris they are not given proper food. “Most tame
elephants are in the wet zone. When they are brought to
the dry zone for safaris they have to rely on food from
the wet zone. These elephants are given only a coconut
branch and a piece of kithul as their food. Elephants
should ideally be given a mixture of branches from a
variety of trees and grass,” Jayaweera said.
Veterinary surgeon Dr. Suhada Jayawardene said releasing
two baby tuskers from Pinnawela could have serious
repercussions on the tusker population in the country.
“It is important that these two baby tuskers be kept at
the Pinnawela Elephant Orphanage for future breeding
purposes. It is very difficult to breed a tusker. They
have to pick their own mates. At the orphanage the males
and females are given the freedom to pick their mates.
It is our duty to breed more elephants and tuskers to
protect the future generation of elephants in the
country. We cannot do that if the only remaining tuskers
at the orphanage are taken away to be gifted to
temples,” Jayawardene explained.
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Clarification
Secretary to the Cabinet D. Wijesinghe has sent a
clarification with regard to the article “Cruelty in
the name of the gods” published in The Sunday Leader
of August 2.
My
attention has been drawn to a paragraph in the
article by Risidra Mendis under the above heading in
your issue of August 2, 2009 which having referred
to me by name in connection with a Cabinet decision
states ‘The Sunday Leader learns that Wijesinghe has
told zoo officials that this is an order from the
top and not to interfere in this matter.’ I
completely deny this and call it a blatant lie.
Neither Risidra Mendis nor anyone else from your
journal questioned me on this matter. Further I have
never spoken to a zoological officer since I left
office in 1992 as secretary to the then Ministry of
Tourism and Rural Industrial Development under which
both the Zoological Department and the Pinnawela
Orphanage functioned.
Thanking you,
Yours sincerely,
D.
Wijesinghe
Secretary to the Cabinet
Case will be taken up on August 24
The case filed by animal rights activist and
President, Sathva Mithra against the cruelty imposed
allegedly by Diyawadana Nilame, Nilanga Dela on two
baby elephants was taken up by the Supreme Court on
August 6.
The petitioner was given time by the courts to study
the agreement signed between the donor and the
recipients of the two baby tuskers Raju and Sindu.
The case will be taken up again on August 24.
Former Diyawadana Nilame speaks
Former Diyawadana Nilame, Niranjan Wijeratne told
The Sunday Leader that during his tenure as the
custodian of the tooth relic he never took baby
elephants below five years from the Pinnawela
Elephant Orphanage.
“The orphanage has a policy that says they will not
release suckling babies to be gifted to temples or
any other places. I respected that decision and
didn’t request for baby elephants below five years
of age,” Wijeratne said. Wijeratne went on to say
that many tuskers were gifted by former heads of
state during his tenure as Diyawadana Nilame but
that all these elephants were between the ages of
six to eight years.
“We never inflicted cruelty on any of the tuskers or
elephants gifted to the Dalada Maligawa to train
them in time for peraheras. The Maligawa has its old
elephant keepers whose experiences are made use of
to gradually train these tuskers and elephants to
take part in peraheras,” Wijeratne said.
Wijeratne added that when Raja the Maligawa tusker
now known as the National Treasure fell ill he
treated the animal. “When Raja fell ill none of the
veterinary surgeons could get close to him to treat
him. Raja didn’t even allow the mahouts to attend to
his wounds. Since I knew Raja as a baby I was the
only one who could get very close to him. Dr.
Shelton Atapattu taught me how to give Raja the
injections and clean his wounds. I treated Raja from
the time he fell ill in 1983 and until 1988 when he
died,” Wijeratne said.
Wijeratne served as Private Secretary to his father
Nissanka Wijeratne when he was Diyawadana Nilame.
Wijeratne was Basnayake Nilame to the Lankathilake
Devale from 1980 to 1985 and was then appointed
Diyawadana Nilame to the Dalada Maligawa in 1985. He
served as Diyawadana Nilame for a period of 20 years
(1985 to 2005).
Elephants gifted during Wijeratne’s tenure
Tuskers and elephants gifted to the Dalada Maligawa
when Wijeratne was Diyawadana Nilame.
Late president J.R. Jayewardene gifted tusker Eka
Dantha in 1977.
Mrs Wimala Kannangara gifted the elephant Kadira in
1977. Late President J.R. Jayewardene gifted tusker
Ariththa later named Jana Raja in 1987.
This tusker was taken from the
Colombo
zoo.
Late President Ranasinghe Premadasa gifted tusker
Nalaka in 1989.
Late President D.B.Wijetunghe gifted tusker Saman
Raja in 1993. This tusker was not well when he was
donated and took part in only one perahera. He died
in 1994 due to ulcers in his stomach.
The army’s Sinha Regiment gifted Sinharaja in 1993.
Former President Chandrika Kumaratunghe gifted
tusker Megara in 2001
The King of Thailand gifted Vijaya Raja in 1986.
Late Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi gifted Indi
Raja (eight years) to the Dalada Maligawa in 1988.
Former Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee
gifted Kaaveri Raja from the Mysoor zoo in 2001.
Number of tamed tuskers in the country.
Number of tamed tuskers in the country is 20 out of
which 10 are local. Within the last 19 years 13
tamed tuskers have died (two from the Maligawa). Out
of the tuskers that died, two were very old. Out of
a 100 elephants seven tuskers are born. However
according to latest reports out of 100 elephants
five tuskers are born. |

Sri Lanka: Coming full circle
By R. Hariharan
The
government of
Sri Lanka
under President Mahinda Rajapakse said it was going to
war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
with the battle cry of freedom. It spoke of a vision of
a Sri Lanka where people’s lives would not be determined
by the language they spoke. However, after the war is
over, with a great deal of sacrifice of men and material
resources, the emerging socio-political environment does
not indicate the vision coming true; it may well remain
what it was – just a vision.
By now
it is clear that the word ‘devolution’ has joined the
rank of words to be wished away — like ‘federalism’ —
into political obsolescence. And the word ‘minority’
also might join the list soon. That seems to be the new
emerging order that is seen across the board not only
with the ruling coalition but also among the major
political parties.
This
was best illustrated by the United National Party (UNP)
presided over by Ranil Wickremesinghe. As Prime Minister
he agreed to federalism as fundamental to the peace
process in 2002, but now he and his party had no
hesitation in jettisoning it at the altar of political
expediency. And the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) is no
better.
Political somersault
This
comes as no surprise to Sri Lanka watchers as political
parties, like many of their leaders, have done similar
acts of political somersault more than once. (I should
confess our own Indian political parties and leaders are
no better. The latest in this genre was the Tamil Nadu
political leader Ms. Jayalalithaa’s sudden volte face on
the question of Tamil Eelam on the eve of recent
parliamentary poll. )
Apparently, it has become part of the political culture
although it is extremely doubtful whether the common man
is taken by such double whammy on the eve of elections.
But in
Sri Lanka
in the past, the political double speak was the main
reason why Tamil people lost faith in the political
process. Ultimately Tamil youth took up arms to fight
for their beliefs, right or wrong, because they saw only
failed political process’.
President Mahinda Rajapakse appears to be in no hurry to
implement the 13th Amendment of the Constitution in
full, despite repeated promises to do so after the
Eastern Province election. There might be sound internal
political reasons for this; the President appears to be
getting ready to advance the date of presidential
election to early next year as indicated in his recent
interview to cash in on his popularity to get elected as
president for a second term. And probably he would like
to retain his southern votes.
But
does the President require a popular mandate to
implement what is authorised in the constitution? In
case a people’s mandate was necessary for the
President’s course of action, a parliamentary poll would
be the true barometer. That would help his party gain a
majority in parliament without the President sacrificing
part of his present term. Of course, a strong
presidential mandate first would ensure the SLFP
sweeping the parliamentary polls.
Thus
it would enable the President to do away with the
dependence upon other smaller parties. It might also
reduce the influence detractors of his policy who have
migrated from various political parties to the SLFP
bandwagon as well as the opposition — the leftist
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and the right wing
Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU).
With
nearly 20 percent of the Tamil population living as
displaced persons behind barbed wire in welfare camps,
elections would be democratic if they are free. Would
they be free before the presidential poll? That is a
question the government has to answer because there are
contradictory signals coming from different limbs of
government. And there is also the traditional gap
between intent and action of the government.
The
President has with equal alacrity turned the all party
committee for devolution, which he constituted on
assuming office in 2006 with a lot of fanfare, into one
more committee of irrelevance if not non-action, as
recently confessed by its chairman Tissa Vitharana.
His
report submitted is said to cover a wide range of
subjects that ail Sri Lanka from the executive
presidency to revision of constitution to the rights and
powers of people living away from Colombo. This well
meaning effort is in danger of being consigned to the
archives of history as was the case with President
Chandrika Kumaratunga’s attempts at constitutional
amendment that had almost everyone’s consensus.
India
strangely muted
Curiously,
India which had initially been speaking of devolution
later downgraded its desire to implementation of the
13th Amendment. And when even that is in doubt
India
has become strangely muted, except that it came up as a
point on the sidelines of the conference of non-aligned
nations attended by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and
President Rajapakse.
But
all these are exercises in politics and not of the
promised pathway to ethnic reconciliation. It is not
good intentions that is lacking in Sri Lanka but their
implementation. President Rajapakse has sought to wish
away the term minority as applied to non Sinhalese
citizens of the country. This is an admirable sentiment
but it does not appear realistic in the absence of
political, structural, constitutional and social actions
needed to make it a reality.
Unless
the vision of a minority free Sri Lanka is fleshed out
with appropriate missions to turn into a reality, it
would remain a distant vision only. And sadly, this is
what it is turning out to be, it appears.
The
ethnic divide has established deep roots of distrust
between the two communities that are yet to be uprooted.
So when the state once again sidelines the basic issue
of Tamil quest for equitable treatment there cannot be
but a feeling of déjã vu among the people on this issue.
These are partly reinforced by the continued presence of
nearly 300,000 Tamil IDPs still in welfare camps with no
hope of returning back to their war ravaged villages
within six months as promised earlier.
Their
doubts on the new dispensation increase further when
Dayan Jayatilake, who turned in a stellar performance at
the UN to save the face of Sri Lanka , was sacked
overnight. Of course, he was guilty of trying to sell
the state’s own merchandise – the implementation of 13th
Amendment (plus?). Such actions only turn the feeling of
discomfort of those who question government policy
decisions into insecurity.
A
nation needs conscience keepers to question and
introspect. And a free media is the vehicle of
conscience keepers; and they are ill served if the
Damocles Sword of the Press Council keeps the media in
tenterhooks. After decades of agonising conflict Sri
Lanka needs an ambience free of fear and suspicion,
where all people will have a fair share of power in
decision making. And that unfortunately is not
happening.
The
process of polarisation of Sinhala and Tamil communities
had been going on for over half a century. It had been
clouding the emergence of a united Sri Lankan identity
after it became bread and butter of Sinhala and Tamil
politics in Sri Lanka . It has resulted in Sri Lanka
going through a full circle from politics to extremism
to militancy to insurgency to terrorism to war to
politics now. Should Sri Lanka go through this agonising
cycle all over once again? This is a question the people
and rulers of Sri Lanka cannot afford to ignore.
R. Hariharan is a retired military intelligence officer
of the Indian Army with nearly three decades of service.
His areas of special interest are insurgency and
terrorism, South Asia with special reference to
Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka. He writes regularly
in the website of South Asia Analysis Group.