First it was the death of
The monkey reportedly tried to snatch several infants before being beaten back
by residents armed with sticks and metal bars.
"Primal Invasion" read the headline in the Hindustan Times.
Authorities are struggling to contain primates that are stubbornly resisting
efforts to portray
The city of 14 million people is growing quickly and experts say monkeys are
increasingly being forced out of forests to lead urban lives, putting them on a
collision course with humans. It is a
pattern seen across
Monkeys are a regular sight in
Faced with what many saw as a monkey plague on
homes, offices and ministries, this year city authorities started to capture
and send them to a sanctuary on
But a spate of high-profile monkey attacks has made headlines and increased
public pressure for the government to act quicker.
"The latest attack was unprecedented," said J.K. Dadoo,
environment and forest secretary in the
Experts say there is a growing pattern of lone attacks that may highlight the
random way authorities are trying to reduce the monkey population in the city.
"Incidents of lone monkey attacks were almost unknown until
recently," said Sonya Ghose, founder of Citizens
for the Welfare and Protection of Animals and a member of an enforcement panel
overseeing the monkey relocation campaign.
"I fear that monkeys are being trapped in a haphazard manner. Monkey
catchers are breaking up troupes of monkey families, leaving some monkeys alone
without their families."
"Then they have nothing to lose and turn aggressive."