MONGOOSE HAIR
TRADER PAYS RS 5 LAKH AS FINE
New Delhi, December 23, 2002:
A major manufacturer of mongoose hair paintbrushes
has been fined Rs 5 lakh for illegally obtaining mongoose
hair and manufacturing mongoose hair brushes, according
to wildlife officials. Weldon Company of Moradabad,
Uttar Pradesh, has paid Rs 5 lakh as fine (technically
compounding fee) for the offence.
A
seizure of mongoose hair and brushes which would have
resulted in the death of nearly 50,000 mongooses took
place from the premises of Weldon on June 8, 2002
by wildlife and police authorities. Wildlife Trust
of India (WTI) assisted in these seizures.
In the first week of June this year, wildlife officials
and the police conducted the raids on manufacturers
of mongoose hair brushes in Moarabad and Sherkote
in Uttar Pradesh, besides Delhi, Kolkata and Chennai.
The raids yielded over 1,000kg of mongoose hair illegally
used by some of the best-known producers of painbrushes
brushes in the country, including Weldon Company.
These brushes were also being exported.
At that point of time, the mongoose was listed in
Schedule IV of Wildlife (Protection) Act and therefore
the offence could be compounded by payment of an amount
to be determined by wildlife officials. Since December
11, 2002, all mongoose species have been placed in
Part II of Schedule II which enhances the penalty
to a minimum imprisonment of one year and a fine of
rupees five thousand.
Mr Ashok Kumar, Senior Advisor and Trustee, WTI,
said, “It is to the credit of wildlife officials
that despite pressures, an amount as large as Rs 5
lakh was determined to be the compounding fee. This
should sent strong signals to wildlife traders.”
Each animal yields about 20 grams of usable hair after
the raw material is cleaned and graded for making
brushes. The animals are trapped and then bashed to
death or stunned. The hair is then plucked by hand,
sometimes when the animal is still alive, and packed
in gunny bags and sent to production centres.