Showing posts with label elephant rides ban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elephant rides ban. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 04, 2018

PETA India Founder to be Chained in Animal Rights Day Appeal to End Elephant Slavery


For Immediate Release:

4 December 2018

Contact:

Radhika Suryavanshi; RadhikaS@petaindia.org

Garima Jain; GarimaJ@petaindia.org

Trio of Protesters Will Raise ‘Bloody’ Hands to Say, ‘Ban Elephant Rides’

Jaipur – Ahead of Animal Rights Day (December 10), People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) India founder Ingrid Newkirk and two volunteers will make an appeal for 2019 to mark the end of elephant rides. Already this year, five major steps towards this goal have been taken (see below). The trio will wear elephant masks, chains, and shackles and hold out the palms of their hands – painted blood-red – while holding placards that read, “End Elephant Slavery in 2019” and “Ban Elephant Rides.

When: Wednesday, 5 December, 12 noon sharp

Where: Outside Albert Hall Museum, Museum Road, Ram Niwas Garden, Kailash Puri, Adarsh Nagar, Jaipur 302 004

There have been five major victories for elephants in 2018:

1. TripAdvisor – the largest travel site in the world – as well as Expedia and more than a hundred travel companies and travel-book publishers ended promotions of captive-elephant attractions.

2. Tourism Minister KJ Alphons issued a letter to state tourism secretaries regarding concerns about cruelty to elephants used for tourist attractions.

3. Rajasthan’s former Principal Secretary for Tourism agreed to increase the number of charging stations for electric carts that would replace elephants and other animals used for rides.

4. The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare directed the Government of Rajasthan to screen all elephants for tuberculosis after 10 out of the 91 elephants at Amer Fort tested reactive for it and to quarantine all those infected.

5. The Rajasthan High Court permitted PETA India to approach the Supreme Court in a matter about captive elephants that’s pending before the apex court.

“Kind tourists and tourist agencies worldwide have shown that they want animal slavery to be abolished. In just the last year, five major steps have been taken to help end elephant abuse, and now, we need one more jumbo step: a government decision to end all elephant enslavement,” says PETA India founder Ingrid Newkirk. “Beating and chaining elephants are indefensibly cruel actions that have no place in civilised society.”

A recent report by inspectors authorised by the government’s Animal Welfare Board of India found that the elephants being used for rides at Amer Fort included animals with a visual impairment or who tested reactive for tuberculosis, which is transmissible to humans. PETA India – whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to abuse in any way” – notes that elephants used for rides are trained through violence and that while in nature, these animals travel as far as 50 kilometres per day, those in captivity often suffer from foot problems and arthritis because they’re chained on hard surfaces for long periods. Many also suffer from malnutrition or dehydration or die prematurely.

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https://www.petaindia.com/media/peta-india-founder-to-be-chained-in-animal-rights-day-appeal-to-end-elephant-slavery/

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

PETA founder meets Tourism Minister Alphons, seeks ban on elephant rides

NEW DELHI: PETA founder Ingrid Newkirk met Tourism Minister K J Alphons today and submitted 63,000 digitally-signed appeals from tourists requesting a ban on elephant rides, the animal rights organisation said.

The appeals were signed last week, after a video showing an elephant used in tourism being beaten so hard that the animal's leg broke spread across the globe.

"Earlier this week, PETA supporters...took part in a demonstration calling for a ban on elephant rides," the statement from PETA said.

Alphons watched the video during the meeting with the PETA founder and assured her that he would put his office to good use to prevent cruelty to elephants.

"Representing tourists from all over the world, who would rather take home photographs of elephants living in nature than memories of a trip ruined by the sight of broken beasts, it was heartening to hear the minister express his compassion and respect for the plight of these social, intelligent and sensitive beings and pledge to help," Newkirk said.

PETA said that Alphons has assured Newrick that he will issue an advisory to state governments and union territories on the matter.

Earlier, the ministry had also received a letter from Academy Award winner Anjelica Huston requesting the minister to stop cruelty towards elephants.

According to figures compiled by the Heritage Animal Task Force, between 2001 and 2016, captive elephants killed more than 526 people in Kerala alone.

In 2016, the Animal Welfare Board of India issued an advisory to the Ministry of Environment Forests and Climate Change in favour of a ban on training, exhibition and use of elephants for performances in India.

Please credit and share this article with others using this link:http://www.newindianexpress.com/nation/2017/dec/08/peta-founder-meets-tourism-minister-alphons-seeks-ban-on-elephant-rides-1722319.html

Anjelica Huston Wants Cruel Elephant Rides Banned

Motivated by a viral photograph showing a mother Indian elephant and her baby desperately trying to outrun flaming projectiles being thrown at them by a mob, Academy Award winner and star of The Darjeeling Limited Anjelica Huston sent a letter on behalf of PETA calling on the Indian Ministry of Tourism to ban cruel elephant rides. The Darjeeling Limited was shot mostly in Rajasthan – a state where numerous elephants, such as those around Amer Fort, are used for rides.

PETA notes that elephants used for rides are typically beaten into submission; denied adequate food, water, and veterinary care; and made to stand on hard concrete surfaces, leading to painful and crippling foot ailments and arthritis. Unsurprisingly, captive Indian elephants, who are often kept chained when not being used, exhibit signs of severe psychological distress, such as swaying, head-bobbing, and weaving, and have been known to lash out in frustration, injuring and even killing nearby humans.

Huston was PETA US’ Person of the Year in 2012. Her past work in behalf of animals includes supporting legislation to phase out New York’s archaic horse-drawn carriage industry and sending a letter to the Irish government urging the country to honour its commitment to banning fur farms.

Please credit and share this article with others using this link:https://www.petaindia.com/blog/anjelica-huston-wants-cruel-elephant-rides-banned/

Sunday, December 24, 2017

PETA seeks ban on use of elephants for recreational rides

Wearing elephant masks, a group of animal rights activists, under the banner of PETA, today demonstrated in central Delhi's Connaught Place area, seeking a ban on the use of the animal for recreational rides.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) India supporters appealed to the Union Tourism Ministry to impose a ban on the use of elephants for recreational rides, saying it amounted to animal cruelty.

Nikunj Sharma, Lead, Public Policy at PETA India office, was among those who joined the protest, a spokesperson said.


"PETA founder Ingrid Newkirk is in Delhi right now. She plans to deliver a letter on behalf of tourists to the Ministry of Tourism later this week, seeking a ban," he said.

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Thursday, October 05, 2017

No elephant ride at Amber during Navratri festival

Elephant rides will remain suspended at Amber Fort during the upcoming festival of Navratri.

The rides at the massive courtyard of Jaleb Chowk and the popular Shila Mata Temple have been halted from today till the end of the month.

However, the light and sound show in English at 8.30 pm will go as usual during the auspicious Navratri festival.

Also, on the World Tourism Day (September 27) the entry to Amber Palace will be free for all.

The rides will resume from October 1 and continue till March 2018, a government release said.

Elephant ride at Amber, is one of the highlights of a visit to the stunning Amer Fort. Elephants will be decorated with traditional painted patterns and effortlessly transport visitors up the steep slope to the fort.

Please credit and share this article with others using this link:https://www.oneindia.com/india/no-elephant-ride-at-amber-during-navratri-festival-2547381.html