Four tusks go missing from Sankarankulangara temple devaswom

Two elephants had died 2 decades ago.

Update: 2017-04-08 20:50 GMT
DNA analysis has shown that the two tusks of an elephant often show up in separate shipments, suggesting the same dealer is behind both. (Representational Image)

Thrissur: A total of four tusks   of two elephants which had died over  two decades ago have been  missing from Sankarankulangara temple devaswom  at Kanattukara  here.  This was revealed by   two  devaswom managing committee members,  Janardhanan Nambiar and Anil Kumar Nair, at a press meet here on Saturday. Though the trading of  tusks is  banned  since 1989 as per an international treaty, a kg of elephant tusks  costs Rs 75,000 in the black market. The matter was taken up with the forest department officials and Forest Minister K. Raju. The flying squad of the department conducted a  preliminary inspection at the devaswom and found the tusks missing.

Secretary of Heritage Animal Task Force V.K. Venkitachalam told DC that the two members were newly elected to the committee after annual public meeting of the devaswom recently and they took up the matter with the other members. “Elephant Krishnankutty of the devaswom died after being hit by a bus on April 9, 1996 and another elephant Ganapahty had died on July 19, 1993. The tusks of both these elephants are  missing and the total weight of all the missing tusks will be 700 kg. The cost will be  Rs 5.25 crore in the black market,” he noted.

He also said that the tusks had been missing from the printed and published audit report of the devaswom since 2003 and the managing committee members had been keeping mum. Venkitachalam has also filed a complaint with National Board for Wildlife over the matter. Since 2006, after the death of elephants, the forest department has been taking the tusks in custody and they are being stored in the lockers of Chief Wildlife Warden in Thiruvanathapuram, he added. Like in the case of  Sankarankulangara devaswom, several other temples had been possessing such tusks and a much larger picture on such missing tusks would emerge if the forest department orders an inquiry into the pre-2006 scenario, he said.

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