Activist demands higher rate of conviction in increasing crimes against animals

By ANI | Published: January 23, 2021 09:52 PM2021-01-23T21:52:24+5:302021-01-23T22:00:07+5:30

Strong voices against animal cruelty have once again risen in the country after a viral video showed a blazing tire being hurled at a 50-year-old elephant which later caused its death.

Activist demands higher rate of conviction in increasing crimes against animals | Activist demands higher rate of conviction in increasing crimes against animals

Activist demands higher rate of conviction in increasing crimes against animals

Strong voices against mal cruelty have once again risen in the country after a viral video showed a blazing tire being hurled at a 50-year-old elephant which later caused its death.

Social platforms went on with messages of condemnation and demanded the arrest of those behind this intended act of crime.

"Clear linkages of mal and human abuse have been established through innumerable researchers. With the help of law and order, we need to protect our weakest section, which is the mals. However, our law is currently failing to do that," mal rights activist Gauri Maulekhi stated. Maulekhi further stated, "Our law enforcement agencies are not fully investigating wildlife crimes even when wildlife penalties are somehow higher, the conviction rate is almost zero because investigations don't happen properly."

Elephants are a notified heritage mal of India which has the highest protection under the Wildlife Protection Act.

Although an arrest has been made in this particular case following the viral video, Maulekhi threw questions on thousands of such crimes that go completely unreported and proposed for systemic change by the government.

In 1960, parliament came up with the Prevention of Cruelty to mals Act with a prescribed heavy penalty of Rs 50. However, the penalty has not been revised ever since.

On June 27, the country was seen outraged after the news of the death of a pregnant elephant while standing in river Velliyar after it ate a pineapple stuffed with crackers surfaced in Kerela's Palakkad district.

Again in September, another disturbing video went viral in which a man was seen throwing a stray dog from a bridge several feet tall into a Bhopal lake and then smiling for the camera.

Other than viral videos, several reports of crime against domestic and farm mals are seen, however, unreported crimes against mals remain high.

"Somewhere I feel that the government has given this level of confidence to people by not amending the laws through raising penalties and investigating these cases properly. The rise in crime against mals is indicative of a degrading society," expressed Maulekhi.

According to lawyer Mathews J Nedumpara, who has filed a petition in the Supreme Court seeking to direct the government to seriously examine the room for strengthening and improving the existing administrative mechsm on laws related to mals, said that governments have failed to address these issues effectively.

"There has been mfest failure to enforce the law as it exists today, for the enforcement of which a writ in the nature of mandamus will certainly lie. There is a great imperative to bring in further legal and administrative measures to alleviate the cruelty," informed Nedumpara, who is president of the National Lawyers' Campaign For Judicial Transparency And Reforms.

The advocate has filed a petition under Article 32 of the constitution of India seeking enquiry into the tragic event of a wild tusker being burned to death by a tire coated with petrol being thrown at it to scare the mal away as it entered a resort in the middle of a forest.

Police have arrested the house owner Prasad and Raymond on Friday evening following video evidence. They were arrested under Wildlife Protection Section 9. One more accused named Ricky is absconding.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in app