MONGOOSE
SPP. UPGRADED TO PART II OF SCHEDULE II
New Delhi, October 23, 2002:
The Union Ministry of Environment and Forests has
upgraded all species of genus Herpestes (mongooses)
to Part II of Schedule II of the Wildlife Protection
Act, 1972. The notification to do so was issued on
September 30, 2002 and was published in the Gazette
of India, Extraordinary, on October 11, 2002. Earlier,
mongooses were in Schedule IV of the Act which accorded
limited protection to the species.
It
was known for many years that the hair of mongooses
were in a bloody trade - the hair was being used to
manufacture paintbrushes. It was not documented how
widespread the trade was, or what was the impact on
the species. In April 2002 , a study into the trade
was initiated by filmmaker Syed Fayaz and Wildlife
Trust of India (WTI).
The trade was documented, the centres of trade and
manufacturing were located, and footage of the trade
was recorded. Wildlife authorities were alerted and
there were simultaneous raids in New Delhi, Tamil
Nadu, Mumbai, Kolkata, and two important locations
in Uttar Pradesh - Moradabad and Sherkote. The biggest
seizure, assisted by WTI, took place at Moradabad
where the haul was equivalent to 50,000 dead mongooses.
The footage, made into a short documentary titled
"A Brush with Death", was shown to officials
of Ministry of Environment and Forests, the media,
and wildlifers.
Acting swiftly enough, the MoEF issued an order on
September 2002 uplifting the species, which became
effective on October 11, 2002 upon publication in
the gazette. The penalty for violation of the law
with regard to species included in Part II of Schedule
II is the same as that for Schedule I. The punishment
is imprisonment for a term not less than one year
but can extend to six years or seven years if the
charge is illegal trade.
According to Mr Ashok Kumar, Senior Advisor and Trustee
of WTI, "The trade may not end immediately because
in some states, specially Delhi, there are licensed
manufacturers of mongoose hair. The trade can also
go underground. Wildlife Trust of India will remain
with the subject by awareness campaigns to wean users
of mongoose hair brushes and keeping a watch on the
trade."
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