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Home / World

City at wits' end over 'Simian menace'

By Andrew Buncombe
24 Oct, 2007 04:00 PM6 mins to read

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Langur monkeys are used to scare off the prolific rhesus monkeys. Photo / Reuters

Langur monkeys are used to scare off the prolific rhesus monkeys. Photo / Reuters

KEY POINTS:

At the home of Sawinder Singh Bajwa, friends and relatives were honouring the dead man, lighting sticks of fragrant incense and draping a framed photograph of him with garlands of bright orange flowers. Of the perpetrator of the crime that killed him, there was no sign.

Bajwa, the
Deputy Mayor of Delhi, died last weekend after falling from his first-floor balcony while trying to ward off an anonymous intruder who was apparently attempting to enter his house. The only description the authorities have of the would-be criminal is that he had pointed ears, a long, looped tail and shiny red buttocks. He was a common rhesus monkey, a Macaca mulatto.

Bajwa, a 52-year-old politician, became the most recent and highest-profile victim to fall foul of a growing threat that is plaguing not just Delhi but cities across India.

With urban expansion pushing further and further into green areas that were once the sole habitat of the nation's flora and fauna, encounters between mankind and wildlife are becoming increasingly common. And in some cases, perilous.

In certain parts of India the problem has become such that the authorities have been forced to undertake special steps to confront what the local papers call "the Simian menace".

In Delhi, officials have even constructed a "monkey prison" in the south of the city where animals that are captured on the streets of the capital are put in cages and then delivered to the walled sanctuary and released.

Some local communities have got together and hired men with larger, more aggressive langur monkeys to scare away the rhesus monkeys. Several years ago the federal Government even put some of the langurs on its payroll, paying them around $19 a month in bananas to patrol the areas around some of the government departments. The authority that runs the city's recently opened subway also resorted to hiring langurs to clear away the smaller monkeys who were following commuters on to the trains.

Tourist attractions and temples are often overrun with monkeys. Bajwa's family said they believe the monkeys that caused his death came from a Hindu temple next to his house. "The monkeys sit at the nearby temple because people feed them," said his son, Arjun. "Dad had the habit of coming and getting the newspaper from the balcony."

Bajwa's son said that his mother, Nimmy, had also been on the balcony when up to four monkeys climbed up. He said his father told his mother to go inside and he picked up a stick and tried to scare the monkeys away. As he did so, he slipped and fell about 3.5m on to the concrete courtyard.

Bajwa, a senior member of the local Bharatiya Janata Party died after doctors were unable to stop his internal bleeding.

"The thing about monkeys is that if you leave them alone they will just look at you," said Yuruf Bajwa, a cousin who was also at the family home. "But if you show them a stick then they get angry."

No one knows precisely how many monkeys there are in Delhi. Officials put the total as anywhere between 5000 and 20,000, though this could easily be too low. Parts of the city, especially on the southern edge, are besieged with the animals, who sit on the roadside as traffic passes.

Dealing with the monkey problem has been a slow process, not least because devout Hindus believe that the animals are manifestations of the monkey god Hanuman and feed them bananas and peanuts. Monkeys were apparently regularly fed at the temple located close to Bajwa's house. Culling them is out of the question.

Attempts to persuade a number of other states to accept the city's monkeys have also fallen flat. The authorities in places such as Madhya Pradesh said they had enough monkeys of their own to be dealing with, never mind taking in extra troublemakers.

But earlier this year the federal Government demanded that the city authorities act. The monkeys had previously broken into a government office, torn up and destroyed secret documents and even broken into the complex in which Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's office is located.

In May, the Delhi High Court ordered the authorities to begin rounding up the stray monkeys and relocating them to a specially constructed sanctuary. That, they believed, would be the end of the problem. They were wrong. The grandly titled Asola-Bhatti Wildlife Sanctuary lies at the far southern edge of the city. This area contains one of the last surviving remnants of the so-called Delhi Ridge. Once this forested ridge area extended throughout the city, but development has all but destroyed it.

Authorities have established a sanctuary by erecting a 13m wall of hardened plastic that contains an area of many hectares. Since April, officials say they have captured and released 1650 monkeys into the reserve. The city pays monkey catchers $15 per animal and has vowed to increase the number it employs. "We trap them in cages and transfer them to the reserve," said an official in the city's wildlife department. Asked about claims that the monkeys were climbing over the wall and attacking people, the official said: "One or two may have climbed over but it is not a problem."

But just five minutes spent at the entrance to the sanctuary revealed that there was more of a problem than the official was ready to admit.

Those monkeys that stayed on the inside of the reserve did so out of choice. When they fancied a quick visit to the neighbouring village for a little foraging, nothing would stop them. "There are lots of monkeys, many problems," said one elderly man, who said the monkeys would come into the village and pinch people.

Campaigners say that the only real solution to avoiding incidents such as the one that lead to the death of Bajwa was to avoid encroaching on the animals' habitat. Given the growth of India's urban areas over the past 10 years, such encroachment is unlikely to end, but other steps can be taken.

N. G. Jaya Simha, campaigns manager with the Indian office of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta), said city planners needed to ensure that new parks being built had fruit-bearing trees that could provide food for monkeys and thus discourage them from foraging.

He said: "A lot of cities are being beautified but while these parks look very nice there is nothing there for monkeys to eat."

The other solution is education. No matter what reverence the monkeys deserve, people should be taught not to feed them, he said. "Their fear of humans is disappearing. They associate people with food."

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