TURTLES
Slaughter RitesThe death toll rises horrifically as preservation laws fail.
By Ruben Banerjee
The first ominous signs washed up on the
shores in a trickle. For some weeks beginning November last year, carcasses would come
floating in ones and twos. But in the last two months, it has turned into a deluge with
every breaker throwing up telltale remains of a mass-murder that continues unhindered
somewhere in the deceptively calm sea.
The Orissa coast -- the world's largest rookery of the
endangered Olive Ridley sea turtles -- is now famous for being its biggest grave. Check
the figures: in November, the sea washed up 26 dead turtles, in December it was 652 but in
January this year, the number shot up to 4,682 carcasses. With the nesting season still on
(it lasts till April), the death toll is expected to mount rapidly with experts saying the
mortality rate this year could well be an all-time high.
"It's one of the greatest conservation disasters
confronting the world," says Bivash Pandav of the Wildlife Institute of India. These
senseless killings, however, can be prevented. All it needs is the attachment of
turtle-extruder devices (TEDs) costing Rs 5,000 to the fishing nets of trawlers scouring
the sea waters just off the Orissa shore. Most of the deaths here are directly related to
trawler activity: turtles get stuck in the fishing nets, and rather than release them by
cutting the net fishermen break their backs or slit their throats. Though TEDs are
mandatory today, nobody enforces the law and as a result nobody follows it.
Last year, Union Environment Minister Suresh Prabhu
promised to launch Project Sea Turtle -- with a Rs 5 crore budget and ambitious plans to
patrol the coast as well as enforce the TEDs rule. But nothing has happened. Soon, say
experts, the huge mortality rates could make the Olive Ridley a mythical turtle in Orissa. |