BHOPAL :
EIGHT cheetahs have
been captured in
Botswana in southern
Africa ahead of their
translocation to India
under the cheetah reintroduction programme, launched in
2022 after the fastest
land animal went
extinct here decades
ago, a senior forest official said.
The cheetahs, including two males,
will be quarantined for a month and
undergo a medical examination before
being sent to India, the
official told PTI,
requesting anonymity.
“Inter-continental
translocation involves
several formalities.
Considering these and
the upcoming
Christmas holidays, I
can’t say when the cheetahs will be flown to
Kuno National Park in Sheopur district ofMadhyaPradesh;mostprobably in January,” he added.
When contacted, Cheetah
Project field director Uttam
Sharma stated that the matter
was being handled by the two
governments and he could not
comment on it.
“We alreadyhave enclosures
and facilitiesready for the third
batch of cheetahs, which were
prepared when the animals
were earlier brought from
Namibia and South Africa,” he
added.
Meanwhile,afive-member
South African delegation visited the Gandhi Sagar Wildlife
Sanctuary (GSWS), located on
theboundaryofMandsaur and
Neemuch districts in Madhya
Pradesh, after its field visit to
Kuno National Park on
Thursday.
The teamremained atGSWS
on Friday before returning to
New Delhi to fly back to South
Africa, said Mandsaur
DivisionalForestOfficerSanjay
Raykhere.
The team appreciated the
efforts of the Central and
MadhyaPradeshGovernments
and Kuno management in
cheetah conservation under
Project Cheetah, said field
director Sharma.
The delegation comprised
Anthony Mitchell, head of
office and cabinet liaison for
DeputyMinisterNarendSingh;
Kam Chetty, retired bureaucrat; Sam Ferreira, SANParks
leadbiologist;BrentCoverdale,
animal scientist at Ezemvelo
KZN Wildlife; and Jeanetta
Selier, senior scientist at the
South African National
Biodiversity Institute (SANBI).
They were accompanied by
Indian counterparts S PYadav,
managing director of the
International Big Cat Alliance
(IBCA) and advisor to Project
Cheetah; Subharanjan Sen,
principal chief conservator of
forests (wildlife) of Madhya
Pradesh; andSanjayanKumar,
inspector general, NTCA,
Sharma added.
On September 17, 2022,
PrimeMinisterNarendraModi
released eight cheetahs
brought from Namibia into a
special enclosure at Kuno
National Park, marking the
world’s first intercontinental
relocation of a large wild carnivore species. India later
imported 12 more cheetahs
from South Africa in February
2023.
Three years into the ambitious revival programme, the
country now has 27 cheetahs,
including 16 born on Indian
soil. Of them, 24 are at Kuno
and three are at GSWS.
Nineteen cheetahs- nine
imported adults and 10 cubs
born in India-have died from
various causes since the project began, while 26 cubs have
been born in Kuno so far. After
importing 20 animals from
Africa,Indiacurrentlyhasanet
gainof sevencheetahsover the
initial number.