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Monkeys blamed for fatal fall by New Delhi deputy mayor

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From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2007:

 

 

Monkeys blamed for fatal fall by New Delhi deputy mayor

 

NEW DELHI--New Delhi deputy mayor Sawinder Jeet Singh Bajwa

died on October 20, 2007 from head injuries reportedly suffered when

he fell from a balcony at his home while trying to avoid aggressive

rhesus macaques.

Whether that is really what happened, however, is unclear.

" Baiwa fell while reading a newspaper on the terrace at about

7:00 a.m., according to his family, " reported Times of London Delhi

correspondent Jeremy Page. " They said they thought he had been

attacked by monkeys and lost his balance while trying to chase them

away. "

Said Bajwa's personal assistant Pawan Bhaskar, " Other-wise,

there was no reason for a man sitting in his chair to fall. "

Bajwa, 52, was also vice president of the Delhi chapter of

the Bharatija Janata Party. The most prominent Delhi BJP member may

be member of Parliament and People for Animals founder Maneka Gandhi.

" I don't believe the monkey story at all, " Mrs. Gandhi told ANIMAL

PEOPLE. " No one saw anything. There were no witnesses. This looks

like an afterthought by people who want to get rid of the monkeys in

a temple nearby. "

Wrote Page, " Bajwa's house is near a temple dedicated to

Hanuman, the Hindu monkey god, where hundreds of monkeys gather

every day to be fed offerings by devotees. Their alleged role in his

death has reignited a debate about how to handle the Delhi population

of rhesus macaques, which experts now estimate at more than 5,500. "

" Since May this year we have managed to capture 1,250

monkeys, of whom over 450 were caught in the last 20 days, " Delhi

mayor Arti Mehra told The Hindu after Bajwa's death. " We are also

planning to advertise in newspapers in Tamil Nadu and Assam as we've

had good experience with monkey-catchers from these states. There

are plans to increase the monkey-catching teams to 12 from the

existing two. The rate for capturing the animals has also been

increased. "

A June 2007 ANIMAL PEOPLE article, " Monkeys may swing

elections, but Delhi doesn't want them, " described the controversy

over the monkeys and what to do with them, which has been

smouldering for at least five years.

Currently monkeys captured in Delhi are relocated to the

Asola Bhatti Mines near Mehrauli, in itself a controversial site.

Sand mining at Asola Bhatti was halted in June 1990 by the

then-lieutenant governor of Delhi as an occupational safety hazard,

after hundreds of workers died in accidents. The Asola Bhatti area

was incorporated into a wildlife sanctuary in 1991.

The formerly nomadic Od people, who had worked in the mines,

continued to live there until they were forcibly resettled in

mid-2006 to land from which subsistence farmers had been evicted.

 

 

 

--

Merritt Clifton

Editor, ANIMAL PEOPLE

P.O. Box 960

Clinton, WA 98236

 

Telephone: 360-579-2505

Fax: 360-579-2575

E-mail: anmlpepl

Web: www.animalpeoplenews.org

 

[ANIMAL PEOPLE is the leading independent newspaper providing

original investigative coverage of animal protection worldwide,

founded in 1992. Our readership of 30,000-plus includes the

decision-makers at more than 10,000 animal protection organizations.

We have no alignment or affiliation with any other entity. $24/year;

for free sample, send address.]

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