MP Shringla Urges Wildlife-Sensitive Development After Assam Elephant Deaths

Rajya Sabha MP Harsh Vardhan Shringla has called for a compassionate and comprehensive approach to development that safeguards both people and wildlife. He cited the recent death of seven elephants hit by a train in Assam as a stark reminder of the urgent need for more sensitive planning. Shringla highlighted existing solutions like the Kaziranga Model's elevated corridors and proposed new measures including wildlife-sensitive Special Zones and AI-enabled intrusion systems on railways. He emphasized that India, as a global biodiversity leader, must set a benchmark for development where humanity and nature thrive together.

Key Points: MP Calls for Urgent Action on Wildlife Safety Amid Development

  • Urgent action on human-wildlife conflict
  • Cite Kaziranga Model corridors
  • Propose AI detection on train routes
  • Push for Local Conservation Councils
2 min read

Rajya Sabha MP Harsh Vardhan Shringla urges urgent action on wildlife safety amid development push

Rajya Sabha MP Harsh Vardhan Shringla urges a compassionate approach to human-wildlife coexistence, citing recent elephant deaths in Assam.

"development cannot come at the cost of life - Harsh Vardhan Shringla"

New Delhi, March 25

Rajya Sabha MP Harsh Vardhan Shringla on Wednesday called for a comprehensive and compassionate approach to human-wildlife coexistence, stating that India's development must protect both its citizens and its natural heritage.

Speaking in Parliament on Wednesday, he said that as a country leading global biodiversity efforts and hosting the Global Big Cat Alliance, India has a responsibility to demonstrate that growth and ecological balance can go hand in hand.

Drawing from India's civilisational ethos, Shringla recalled Prime Minister Narendra Modi's emphasis on conservation as an integral part of the nation's culture. He said the recent death of seven elephants in Assam after being hit by a train was a stark reminder that development cannot come at the cost of life, and called for more sensitive planning in ecologically fragile regions.

Highlighting solutions, he pointed to the Kaziranga Model, where elevated corridors are being developed to restore wildlife movement while supporting infrastructure growth. He also underlined India's increasing use of technology in conservation, including satellite-tagging of the Ganges River Dolphin, the first DNA-based elephant census, and focused protection efforts for species such as the Great Indian Bustard, Gharial and Sloth Bear, along with Cheetah translocation initiatives.

Shringla proposed the creation of wildlife-sensitive Special Zones in vulnerable corridors, the formation of Local Conservation Councils involving gram panchayats and biodiversity bodies, and the deployment of AI-enabled intrusion detection systems in trains passing through elephant routes, particularly in North Bengal and Assam.

He said India must now set a global benchmark by building a model of development where humanity and nature thrive together, rooted in both compassion and innovation.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good points, but I'm skeptical. We hear these speeches every time a tragedy happens. Where is the action? AI in trains sounds fancy, but will the funds be allocated? Will the forest departments get the resources? Talk is cheap, implementation is everything.
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Aditya G
This is the India I want to see! Leading with innovation and ancient wisdom. Using DNA for elephant census and satellite tagging for dolphins is brilliant. Our civilizational ethos has always respected nature. Jai Hind!
M
Meera T
Involving gram panchayats in Local Conservation Councils is a fantastic idea. The people living near forests are the real custodians. Top-down policies often fail. This approach could actually work if done sincerely.
D
David E
As someone working in conservation here, this is a welcome focus. The Special Zones proposal is critical. The pressure on wildlife corridors from highways and railways is immense. We need legal protection for these spaces, not just speeches.
S
Sneha F
What about the human cost? Farmers near forest areas lose crops and sometimes lives to animals. Any plan must also robustly compensate and protect them. Coexistence is a two-way street.

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