| Families
of two deceased forest guards get compensatory
cheques under WTI's insurance scheme
New
Delhi, August 29, 2001: The Wildlife Trust
of India (WTI), as a part of its Van Rakshak Project,
provided a great morale booster to all field staff in
protected areas, by providing them with an insurance
cover.
The scheme was launched on March 30, 2001,
and covers all 50,000-field staff in India's protected
areas. This landmark scheme brings all the field staff
of the forest departments, working on wildlife duties
in protected areas, under a single insurance scheme.
The scheme covers employees of the rank
of range forest officer and below on field wildlife
duties. Even temporary employees who have been on the
rolls for at least three years and are on field wildlife
duties are eligible.
The first cheque of Rs 100,000 was handed
over on August 29 to a forest guard's widow in Corbett
National Park. Reva Devi received the cheque Mr. AS
Negi, chief wildlife warden of Uttaranchal, Mr Anniruddha
Mukherjee, Director, Wild Aid, WTI. The cheque was handed
over at her residence at Pirumadara village adjacent
to the park. (picture below)
Ram Singh was on a tiger census and was
returning after a morning's work with three of his colleagues
on May 20. They had to cross a mountain stream called
Ram Ganga near their range. It had been raining in the
last few days. The river was swollen and flowing fast.
While his colleagues crossed the river safely, Ram Singh
slipped and was knocked unconscious against a rock.
He
could not recover and his body was found floating down
stream in the afternoon.
The
second cheque of Rs 100,000 will be soon handed over
to the father of forest guard Paramvir Khati. Mr. Pushpa
Khati. Khati was trampled to death by a wild elephant
on April 19 in Golaghat area of Mahananda Wildlife Sanctuary,
West Bengal. He was riding his motorcycle, when the
elephant attacked him. Khati was he was heading towards
another part of the park, while on his beat duty.
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