Abused elephant Sunder Found Wounded on Kore’s Property.PETA-Warananagar, Maharashtr)

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NEW DELHI (AP) — A 14-year-old elephant whose abuse outside a Hindu temple inspired a protest by Paul McCartney is still living in horrific conditions, with shackles around his legs and regular beatings, an animal rights group said Friday.

The Indian government had ordered the elephant, named Sunder, returned to the wild after McCartney highlighted the animal's plight during a 2012 trip to India.

Instead, a local politician took Sunder home and shackled him outside a poultry shed, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said. The group also released a video that it says shows Sunder in December, writhing in pain and struggling to stand as a handler strikes him with a pole.

The local politician, Vinay Kore, could not be reached for comment. But Tara, one of Kore's household servants who goes by one name, confirmed Sunder stays outside the residence.

"The elephant is kept at the poultry shed and is healthy and fine," Tara said by telephone Friday.

Manilal Valliyate, PETA's director of veterinary affairs in India, said domestically kept elephants face a grim existence in India. Many Hindu temples keep elephants outside their doors to give blessings to visitors, but the animals are often poorly treated.

"The way elephants are kept and treated here in India violates almost all norms," he said. "Sunder is just one example."

McCartney was moved by the poor treatment of Sunder — which means beautiful in Hindi — outside Jyotiba Temple in Kolhapur, about 380 kilometers (240 miles) south of Mumbai. In July 2012, he wrote a letter to India's forest minister denouncing the abuse.

"I have seen photographs of young Sunder, the elephant kept alone in a shed at Jyotiba Temple and put in chains with spikes," McCartney wrote. "... I appeal to you to do what is right here and get Sunder post-haste to rehabilitation in the forest."

A spokesman for McCartney did not immediately return a call for comment. The former Beatle has been a longtime supporter of PETA.

Ref: Elephant in India thought rescued by Paul McCartney is still being abused  - NY Daily News

https://www.facebook.com/events/438037036321689/

 
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RE: Indian elephant abuse goes viral.

PETA members from across the world have threatened not to use any Indian products if this issue is not immediately resolved and started to do mass campaigns on all trip advisor against the Jyotiba Temple in Kolhapur, Maharastra that has Elephant in its procession.
 
RE: Indian elephant abuse goes viral.

The Indian government had ordered the elephant be returned to the wild.

An animal rights group says a 14-year-old elephant is still being abused despite a 2012 appeal by former Beatle Paul McCartney.

The Indian government had ordered the elephant, Sundar, be returned to the wild after McCartney highlighted its plight during a 2012 trip to India.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) says a local politician instead took Sundar home and shackled him outside a poultry shed. The group released a video that it said showed Sundar in December, writhing in pain and struggling to stand as a handler struck him with a pole.

Calls to the local politician were not immediately returned.

Ref: http://www.thehindu.com/news/elephant-sundar-still-being-abused-peta/article5844465.ece
 
RE: Indian elephant abuse goes viral.

Free Sunder: Keeping elephant chained is cruel, Bombay high court says
Vijay Singh,TNN | Mar 3, 2014, 09.40 PM IST

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MUMBAI: On Monday, during a Bombay high court hearing, Peta's lawyers Shiraz Rustomjee and Rohan Rajadhyaksha presented finding by elephant experts Dr EK Easwaran, assistant director, department of animal husbandry, Kerala and Dr Yaduraj Khadpekar, senior veterinary officer, Wildlife SOS-India who visited 14-year-old elephant Sunder on February 19 and argued that Sunder is being kept so harshly chained that he's unable to lie down. The findings showed that Sunder is displaying signs of severe frustration and mental distress through constant head wobbling, swaying, and other abnormal repetitive movements. As per the report and evidence submitted to the court, Sunder was displaying aggressive behaviour only towards his own mahout, Hyder, and no aggression towards other people during the inspection, indicating that Sunder feels threatened by his own mahout. Sunder is at the centre of a case in which Peta is calling for the animal's release to a sanctuary.

Member of legislative assembly Vinay Kore donated Sunder to Jyotiba temple in 2007, and the elephant has been kept chained since then. In December 2013, Peta obtained video footage showing that Sunder's mahout violently beat him with a pole near a poultry shed where he had been moved at the behest of Kore. That same month, the high court of Bombay ordered Sunder's transfer to a sanctuary, but he is yet to be released by principal chief conservator of forests Sarjan Bhagat. Kore and the Kolhapur division of the forest department claimed this is because Sunder is in musth (a period of heightened sexual urge, which can make captive bull elephants aggressive from frustration) and cannot be transported.

However, the recent experts' report clarified that Sunder is not showing signs of normal musth condition, but 'moda' (adolescent) musth, and pointed out that Sunder can be transported to a sanctuary and that he should be, to avoid further damage to his mental status. The report also confirmed that Sunder's current housing facilities are grim and do not even meet the minimum basic standards.

After hearing the arguments by Rustomjee and seeing the experts' report, the court acknowledged that the mahout is untrained and that it is cruel to keep an elephant chained in this way. Peta continues to call for Sunder to be released to a sanctuary where he can live chain-free and in the company of other elephants.

Among stars who have taken to Twitter or joined the #FreeSunder campaign in other ways are Amitabh Bachchan, Madhuri Dixit, Arjun Rampal, R Madhavan, Gulshan Grover and many others.

The matter is adjourned to March 11, 2013 for final hearing. A copy of Peta's affidavit and the experts' documentation is available upon request.

For more information, please visit PETA India: India's Animal Rights Organisation | PETAIndia.com

==

Ref: Free Sunder: Keeping elephant chained is cruel, Bombay high court says - The Times of India
 
RE: Indian elephant abuse goes viral.

This is why sometimes elephants become violent and kill people. They have good memory. Its post traumatic stress.
 
RE: Indian elephant abuse goes viral.

srinivas33 said:
This is why sometimes elephants become violent and kill people. They have good memory. Its post traumatic stress.

Yes, it would be better if people limit the elephant usage and ensure the forests are not encroached upon so elephants can have a normal life like we humans do.
 
Written by PETA

Posted 05-20-2014, 10:21 AM

During a recent veterinary inspection by an elephant expert, 14-year-old elephant Sunder was found with what the health examination report calls a “MASSIVE wound … as a result of constant tying with heavy chains”. The expert’s report also states that Sunder should be moved from Kolhapur to an elephant-care centre in Bangalore “on an emergency basis”, as directed by the Bombay High Court. The court had ordered the Maharashtra Forest Department to move Sunder to the centre before the monsoon season.

But Maharashtra Member of the Legislative Assembly Vinay Kore – who is not the legal owner of Sunder and has kept him on his property illegally – has attempted to block the order by filing an appeal with the Supreme Court.

PETA has been campaigning for Sunder’s release since 2012 and has been represented before the Supreme Court by leading animal advocate Raj Panjwani.

The finding comes on the heels of the December 2013 video footage showing that Sunder’s mahout beat him with a pole on Kore’s property.

All the paperwork for Sunder’s transfer has been completed, and now the Maharashtra Forest Department simply needs to set a date for the move. The health examination report also stated that Sunder’s wound can be dressed, he is not in musth (a period of sexual urge in elephants that can make them difficult to handle) and he can and should be transported to Bangalore quickly.

Ref: http://www.petaindia.com/blog/
 
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