belfasttelegraph

Friday 24 May 2013

Sri Lanka begins elephant count

The Sri Lankan Wildlife Department has begun its first national count of the country's dwindling wild elephant population (AP)

Thousands of wildlife officials and volunteers have taken up positions in treetop huts near reservoirs and watering holes for Sri Lanka's first national count of its dwindling wild elephant population.

The Wildlife Department says the three-day census is aimed at gathering information to help the government formulate a plan to protect the elephants.

However, conservation groups allege the count is a smokescreen for capturing and domesticating the remaining wild elephants and have refused to participate.

Up to 4,000 wildlife workers, farmers and villagers have spread out to more than 1,500 locations across the country to physically count elephants as they come to drink from water holes and reservoirs.

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