Wild elephants turn
up in Dak Lak, rejoicing conservators
Dak Lak people feel both worried and glad
when seeing wild elephants in the areas near residential quarters. This means
that the wild elephant populations there have been growing well.
Two herds of wild elephants with some
25 individuals have regularly turned up in the areas near the residential
quarters in Dak Lak and Dak Nong in recent days to look for food.
On October 10, about 20 elephants
were seen entering the hamlet No. 6 in Ea Sup town to seek food. Local people
then tried to drive the elephants away. However, the elephants were stubborn
and came back in the next days.
The tools that create sounds and fire
could not frighten wild elephants any more. Therefore, it took local people
five nights to drive the elephants back to the forest.
However, Huynh Trung Luan, Director
of the Dak Lak provincial elephant conservation center, thinks the elephants
would come back.
“The hamlet No. 6 is close to the
forest, where there are many kinds of trees favored by elephants,” he
explained.
In September 2013, the elephants once
came to hamlet No. 5 in Ea Sup town and destroyed crops. A report by the Ea
Sup district people’s showed that during their “visits” to the hamlets, they
damaged 20 hectares of crops.
Nguyen Minh Khoi, a local resident
living in the area for 20 years, said he has never seen such furious
elephants. “They destroyed 720 square meters of rice fields in September and
they damaged the remaining some days ago,” he complained.
“We tried every method to drive them
away, but they were very dogged,” he said.
While the people in Ea Sup town live
in a constant anxiety that the wild elephants would come back to destroy
crops, the people in Cu Jut district of Dak Nong province spend sleepless
nights to try to drive two wild elephants, which first appeared in March 2013
and have come back over the last month to look for food.
According to Tran Van Thanh, Chair of
Dak Drong commune people’s committee, two houses, 7 watch towers in the
fields and tens of hectares of crops have been damaged by the elephants.
Local people have been told to use
manual and simple measures to drive the elephants away. If necessary, bred
elephants would be mobilized to help drive away wild elephants.
According to Luan, there was a baby
elephant in the herd of elephants which appeared some days ago in Ea Sup. He
said the herd has well balanced structure, which included male and female
elephants, adults, 2-3-year old elephants and new born.
The new born elephant, less than 100
kilos in weight, has turned up for the first time. This is really the good
news for the elephant conservation center in Dak Lak, because this shows the
development of the wild elephants.
However, Luan has expressed his worry
that the elephants may be harmed because they try to damage the crops. It
would be really dangerous for people if they meet elephants, because the
elephants are very furious.
The project on elephant conservation
in Dak Lak, which was approved by competent agencies many years ago,
reportedly lacks money to run. The budget for 2014 has not been allocated
yet.
Mai Chi,
|
Thứ Tư, 25 tháng 12, 2013
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