Daijiworld Media Network - Palakkad (SHP)
Palakkad, Jun 3: In one of the most horrific forms of animal abuse, a pregnant elephant in Kerala died after consuming firecracker-laden pineapple offered to it by unidentified miscreants.
The incident came to light after a forest officer narrated the details of the horrific death on social media.
The wild elephant had left the forests of the Silent Valley in Palakkad district, meandering into a nearby village in search of food. As she walked on the streets, she was offered the cracker-laden pineapple by locals.
"She trusted everyone. When the pineapple she ate exploded, she must have been shocked not thinking about herself, but about the child she was going to give birth to in 18 to 20 months," forest officer Mohan Krishnan, who was part of the Rapid Response Team to rescue the elephant, wrote on Facebook.
So powerful was the cracker explosion in her mouth that her tongue and mouth were badly injured. The elephant walked around in the village, in searing pain and in hunger. She was unable to eat anything because of her injuries, Krishnan added.
"She didn't harm a single human being even when she ran in searing pain in the streets of the village. She didn't crush a single home. This is why I said, she is full of goodness," Krishnan wrote in an emotional note in Malayalam, along with photos of the elephant.
The elephant eventually walked up to the Velliyar River and stood with her mouth and trunk in the water, trying to get some relief for the pain. Photos on the internet of the elephant standing in the river with her mouth and trunk in water has surfaced. The forest officer believes that the animal may have done this to avoid flies and other insects on her injuries.
The forest officials brought two captive elephants, named Surendran and Neelakanthan, to lead her out of the river. "But I think she had a sixth sense. She did not let us do anything," Mohan Krishnan wrote.
With several hours put in to rescue the elephant, she died of injuries at 4 pm on May 27, standing in water. The elephant was taken back inside the forest in a truck, where the forest officials cremated her.
"She needs to be given the farewell she deserves. For that, we took her inside the forest in a lorry. She lay there on firewood, in the land she played and grew up. The doctor who did her post-mortem told me that she was not alone. I could sense his sadness though the expression on his face was not visible due to his mask. We cremated her in a pyre there. We bowed before her and paid our last respects," the forest officer expressed in a sentimental message.