Two detained for death of leopards in Satkosia forest division in Odisha

On Sunday, when a forest team led by divisional forest officer (DFO) Saroj Panda went to the village to pick the suspects up, the villagers there resisted the detention and held the officials captive.

Published: 01st November 2022 09:18 AM  |   Last Updated: 01st November 2022 09:18 AM   |  A+A-

Leopard

Image used for representational purpose. (Photo | Express)

By Express News Service

BHUBANESWAR/ANGUL: The Satkosia forest division on Monday detained two persons from Kulangi village in Jagannathpur B beat for interrogation in connection with the death of the two leopards in Pampasar range few days back.

On Sunday, when a forest team led by divisional forest officer (DFO) Saroj Panda went to the village to pick the suspects up, the villagers there resisted the detention and held the officials captive. The forest officials were released only when they assured the locals that the arrests would be made only after having concrete evidence. 

Panda informed that there was no evidence against the two persons regarding their involvement in the leopards’ deaths and they were detained only as suspects. “Apart from poisoning, we have also started investigating if the death of the two big cats were due to electrocution,” he said adding, the investigating team suspects electrocution as the reason as over 500 metre electric cable near the village is lying uninsulated. 

Besides, it is being suspected that the carcasses were dumped in the nullah after the leopards were electrocuted somewhere else near the village. Honorary wildlife warden for Angul and JTF member Aditya Chandra Panda said it is important that the vacancies of field-level staff in Satkosia be filled immediately to improve patrolling in the area.

“Satkosia is struggling with shortage of field-level staff. Only two forest guards are managing seven beats in the Pampasar range. The patrolling responsibility has been put on the locally-recruited watchers who are residents of the villages inside the Tiger Reserve so it is likely that they are more supportive towards their community members than the department. Under these circumstances, protection of the animals suffer so it becomes essential to fill the vacancies up on a priority basis,” said Panda.


India Matters

Comments

Disclaimer : We respect your thoughts and views! But we need to be judicious while moderating your comments. All the comments will be moderated by the newindianexpress.com editorial. Abstain from posting comments that are obscene, defamatory or inflammatory, and do not indulge in personal attacks. Try to avoid outside hyperlinks inside the comment. Help us delete comments that do not follow these guidelines.

The views expressed in comments published on newindianexpress.com are those of the comment writers alone. They do not represent the views or opinions of newindianexpress.com or its staff, nor do they represent the views or opinions of The New Indian Express Group, or any entity of, or affiliated with, The New Indian Express Group. newindianexpress.com reserves the right to take any or all comments down at any time.