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Pregnant Elephant dies after eating pineapple stuffed with firecrackers in Kerala

Why are people getting so flustered by the religion of the culprits?

I hope there is no communal politics played now since we know their religion now and these idiots are let go. I want these people to suffer.
 
Wonder if Kohli had time to tweet on migrants walking. Seems to have come up with some tweet on this that has been copy pasted all over the net. Does he have an electric fence in his farmhouse. WOuldn't be surprised.
Kohli will never tweet on sensitive issues for the ruling dispensation. Lol, he even hailed demonetization as greatest move in India's political history. He knows who butters his bread. He is one of the biggest hypocrites in India currently.
 
We all are hypocrites because no one cared about that wild boar who always got killed by these explosive snares for several years but suddenly when an Elephant got killed all the he’ll broke. It’s just that for some people, some lives matter more than the others.
 
We all are hypocrites because no one cared about that wild boar who always got killed by these explosive snares for several years but suddenly when an Elephant got killed all the he’ll broke. It’s just that for some people, some lives matter more than the others.

You are right. It’s a inhumane way to kill any animal.
There is nothing hypocritical about it. I never even knew such a method existed to keep unwanted animals away and pretty sure most folk here had no clue either.

Also most times Animals smarten up to danger if it happens often like for example conventional mouse traps etc so some times they are just used to keep them away and the intent is not to kill them.

Whatever the case, Let’s not over complicate this by saying why this was not addressed before etc, sometimes it takes a major incident to bring attention to the larger problem. Nothing can be done now on what happened in the past. Hopefully new laws are introduced and this brutal method is banned.
 
A guy bringing in Modi and demonetization on a totally unrelated thread. I wonder what IT cell these bots work for?
 
Bhakts being bhakts, failing basic comprehension test, not surprising though.
 
We all are hypocrites because no one cared about that wild boar who always got killed by these explosive snares for several years but suddenly when an Elephant got killed all the he’ll broke. It’s just that for some people, some lives matter more than the others.

I think it is because wild boar is vermin while elephant is protected species. No one cares if some street dog is killed but if the victim is tiger or lion all hell breaks loose. You are right, ultimately all humans are hypocrites, because so many animals are brutally killed but we choose to focus on some, who even mentions the poor animals tested in labs? But we need to be practical also, protected species gets higher level of safeguard, support and care because ecosystem hinges on them.
 
Cow’s jaw blown off after eating cracker stuffed food in Himachal

In an alleged repeat of the highly condemned killing of a pregnant elephant in Kerala by feeding it cracker, a pregnant cow’s jaw was blown off by firecracker-laced food in Himachal Pradesh’s Bilaspur district. A senior police officer said the cow was fed firecrackers stuffed in wheat dough.

The alleged incident took place on May 26 in Jhandutta area of Bilaspur district but came to light on Saturday when cow’s owner Gurdayal Singh uploaded a video of the injured bovine on social media.

The video soon went viral following which strict action was demanded against the miscreants.

The cow’s owner has accused one of his neighbours of the cruel act. He alleged that a person named Nand Lal fed his cow the firecracker stuffed in wheat balls while the animal grazed in the fields.

The incident is a grim reminder of another in Kerala, which has led to a huge outcry. On May 27, a 15-year-old pregnant elephant died after having chewed on a coconut filled with crackers.

Bilsapur Superintendent of Police (SP) Devakar Sharma said the cow was fed a highly explosive firecracker called “aalu bomb”. Sharma said a case under Section 286 of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act has been registered and the role of the main accused and some other people is being investigated.

This cruel method is said to be used by poachers to kill wild boars and other wild animals. Some locals claimed that farmers in Himachal Pradesh also practice such methods to save their crops from the wild animals.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/cow-s-jaw-blown-off-after-eating-firecracker-stuffed-wheat-balls-in-hp-s-jhandutta/story-OjLTeD48Eu8zTQKHXjCoBJ.html
 
My faith in humanity diminishes by the day.

Are people getting more and more crazy or is it just my imagination.
 
We all are hypocrites because no one cared about that wild boar who always got killed by these explosive snares for several years but suddenly when an Elephant got killed all the he’ll broke. It’s just that for some people, some lives matter more than the others.

This is what I was referring to earlier in the thread. Death of an elephant has sparked massive outrage but countless pigs being blown using this method goes unnoticed.
 
Residents rush to help victims of airliner accident
Maligned Malappuram responds with mercy
To sections of Sangh parivar, the residents of Kerala’s lone Muslim-majority district have always been 'cruel', 'extremist' and everything in between


AP
K.M. Rakesh
Bangalore Published 09.08.20, 02:45 AM


The denizens of Malappuram have responded with action that spoke louder than the slander of detractors.

To sections of the Sangh parivar, the residents of Kerala’s lone Muslim-majority district have always been “cruel”, “extremist” and everything in between.

Earlier this year, BJP leader Maneka Gandhi accused them wholesale of a tendency towards “criminal activity” after a trap set with explosives killed a pregnant elephant — except that it had happened in another district (Palakkad).

Yet what Indians countrywide and abroad saw on Friday night was hundreds of Malappuram residents, such as Junaid Mukkood and Fazal Puthiyakath, rushing on their own to help victims of an airliner accident in their backyard.

They risked harm to themselves from a possible fire or the coronavirus and spent their own money to arrange transport to hospital.

The swiftness with which the first volunteers arrived at the site of the 7.41pm tragedy and the efficient way they mobilised reinforcements and vehicles seemed to corroborate the reputation for hospitality that the district enjoys among some who know it well.

Less than five minutes after an Air India Express plane from Dubai had overshot the tabletop runway at the Calicut International Airport, fallen and broken into two, a group of 15 young men from the neighbourhood had arrived, leaving the comfort of their homes and braving the rain.

Responding to their messages, or learning about the tragedy from social media or television, nearly 100 people from Kondotti — the town abutting the crash site — arrived, many with vehicles.

People from across Malappuram and neighbouring Kozhikode continued to turn up till 2am, many hours after the last injured traveller had been taken to hospital in a rescue operation speeded up by all the public help.

By early Saturday morning, people had begun lining up at the 16 hospitals across Malappuram and Kozhikode districts where the victims had been taken, responding to messages to donate blood.

Chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan and health minister K.K. Shailaja have thanked the public for their help, which they said had possibly averted a bigger tragedy.

On Saturday evening, the death toll stood at 18 among the 190 on board. About 120 people were in hospital, 23 of them seriously injured, while 23 had been discharged.

The volunteers
Junaid was sipping tea and luxuriating in the heavy rain from his home, just 20 metres from the western end of the airport, when he heard the deafening noise.

“I ran out on the road and could sense something was amiss. I slipped on a shirt over my lungi and called friends who live nearby. We ran in the direction of the aircraft tail that we could see,” Junaid told The Telegraph on Saturday.

“The gate on the airport’s boundary was locked and a lone armed guard was manning it. We were pleading with him to let us in when five men from the airport rescue team arrived. When we asked whether they needed extra hands, they allowed us in.”

He added: “We could hear the passengers crying for help from the broken fuselage, and saw the two pilots slumped on their seats. The nose of the aircraft was smashed. Since we didn’t know how to extricate the pilots, we focused on rescuing the passengers.”

The 15 did not stop to find out whether there was a fuel leak, and the possible danger of a fire. “Our priority was to save people. During the time we spent helping the rescue efforts, we forgot we were in a (Covid-19) containment zone,” he said.

But fearless did not mean careless. Another member of the group of 15, Fazal, recalled how they got the entire neighbourhood to turn off gas cylinders and electricity.

“We are no rescue experts, but we realised the need to avoid even the smallest of sparks anywhere in the area since we didn’t know whether the aircraft was leaking fuel,” Fazal said.

Junaid received his first shock when he saw a small head protruding out of a pile of debris and luggage. It belonged to an injured one-year-old child.

“Several passengers had been flung out of the plane when the fuselage broke. In the darkness we could glimpse a few people lying in the bushes. We later found that some of them had bones jutting out of gashed limbs,” he said.

Since there weren’t enough ambulances around, the group sent out WhatsApp messages asking people from the neighbourhood to come with vehicles. “Within minutes, we saw vehicles from trucks to motorbikes rushing towards the spot. I took the child to a private hospital in Kondotti,” Junaid said.

The aircraft’s nose had rammed against the boundary wall of the airport.

“When the ambulances started moving through the service road next to the tarmac, we took it upon ourselves to get an excavator to demolish the portion of the wall on which the badly mangled nose was resting. This opened up a new rescue route,” Fazal said.

He thanked the hundreds of Malappuram residents who had ferried the injured to hospital. “Passengers who had no major injuries were transported to hospital on motorbikes. This was before a large number of ambulances arrived,” he said.

By 9.30pm, the disaster relief teams had rescued all but two of the survivors who had been caught in the tail portion. Extricating the duo took another 45 minutes.

The rescuers prised open what remained of the cockpit to bring out pilot Deepak Vasant Sathe, who was already dead, and the severely injured co-pilot Akhilesh Kumar, who died later.

“Our society played a massive role in the rescue operations. Those related to this sector say the rescue mission was exceptional. The local people and the rescue agencies did a great job,” chief minister Vijayan told reporters on Saturday.

Minister Shailaja wrote on Facebook that the “depth of the disaster could be reduced only because of the good people from the neighbourhood”.

“They engaged in the rescue mission ignoring even the Covid protocol,” she wrote.
 
Lightning kills herd of 18 elephants in Assam

The incident happened in Kandali Proposed Reserve Forest
A bolt of lightning is believed to have killed a herd of at least 18 elephants in central Assam’s Nagaon district on Wednesday night.

The incident happened in the hilly Kandali Proposed Reserve Forest in the Forest Department’s Kathiatoli Range, officials said.

“The local staff said 18 elephants have died and lightning is most likely the cause,” Assam’s Chief Wildlife Warden, M.K. Yadava told The Hindu.

“There have been cases of lightning striking animals down. Lightning claimed five elephants in West Bengal some time ago, but this is huge,” he said.

Officials said a team of veterinary doctors and other wildlife experts have left for Kandali and are expected to reach the spot by Friday morning.

The team is expected to examine if there are other reasons behind the death of the elephants.

The district had cases of man-animal conflicts.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/lightning-kills-herd-of-18-elephants-in-assam/article34551208.ece/amp/
 
There were no burns or anything like that. Also surprisingly only the elephants got affected by the lightning not the human living there. Looks like fishy to me.
 
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