July 23, 2020
2 mins read

Sri Lanka To Investigate Leopard Deaths

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa has instructed the wildlife department to probe the incidents of the deaths of leopards killed in snares in recent weeks.

The Prime Minister directed Wildlife Director General M.G.C Sooriyabandara to conduct a prompt investigation and initiate legal action against those responsible after at least four leopards were killed in recent days.

The latest killing was reported on Monday after a female leopard was killed after being caught in a snare in northern Sri Lanka while three other deaths were reported from other areas which included a rare black leopard, Xinhua news agency reported.

Rajapaksa said it was the responsibility of the government to protect these endangered species and issued a directive to the Wildlife Department to educate plantation communities to ensure that such incidents are prevented in the future and steps are taken to protect the wildlife.

Wildlife officials in Sri Lanka have said the survival of the Sri Lankan leopard is threatened due to habitat loss and fragmentation primarily due to poaching and human-related leopard deaths.

Last month Sri Lanka opened the world’s first Leopard Information Centre at the country’s most famous wildlife park, the Yala National Park, in southeastern Sri Lanka.

No lockdown

Last week, the Prime Minister said that the island country will not face a lockdown nor curfew following the detection of a new COVID-19 cluster at a rehab centre.

Speaking to heads of media institutions and senior editors, Rajapaksa said the patients detected recently were not from the society but all from quarantine camps or were the associates of camp employees or inmates from the Kandakadu Drug Rehabilitation Centre, reports Xinhua news agency.

“This is not a second wave. All these contacts have been traced and quarantined,” Rajapaksa said, adding that all steps were being taken to prevent any social transmission of the virus.

Commander of the Army and Head of National Operation Centre for Prevention of COVID-19 Outbreak Lt. Gen. Shavendra Silva said more than 4,000 PCR tests had been performed for the contacts of Kandakadu in recent days, but so far all indications were that there was no local transmission of the virus at large.

Also Read-Afghan Girl Avenges Parents’ Murder

Previous Story

Covid Tally In India Crosses 12 Lakh Grim

Next Story

UK Borrows Record £128bn Amid Pandemic

Latest from FOREIGN

Peru To Continue Emergency For 90 Days

Peru has extended the national state of emergency for another 90 days due to a resurgence of Covid-19 cases. “As of July of this year, an increase in Covid-19 cases has been

Shinzo Abe Announces Resignation

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday announced that he was resigning from the post due to health concerns. The 65-year-old made the announcement at a press conference in Tokyo, reports Xinhua
Go toTop