Kanchanpur, Nov 25 : Thagi Kadara and his family – a resident of Laljhadi Rural Municipality-4, Khallajai was compelled to take shelter at neighbour's home for the past one week after a herd of wild elephants broke down his house.
The rampaging tuskers also ate up
grains stored inside his house. The Kadara family was forced to take a shelter
at a neighbour's house with remaining grains and clothes.
"We usually visit our house in
the afternoon", he said, adding, "Everyday we go to the neighbour's
house before the evening to take shelter".
Kadara family has abandoned staying
at the home since a week back, fearing that the herd of elephants will come
again and create havoc. "The elephant almost took our life, fortunately we
escaped the tragic incident and survived", Thagi's wife said.
She narrated, "We came to know
the rampage of the tuskers when they started demolishing the house wall in the
midnight. The entire house was fearfully shaken. We ran away carrying my ailing
husband who had recently undergone abdominal surgery".
The herd of tuskers had eaten up
eight sacks of paddy kept inside the house, she said, adding the mammoths also
made the utensils useless.
Like the Kadara family, the houses
of Harilal Tamta and Raj Tamta, who take shelter in their neighbour's home,
have also been destroyed by elephants.
The elephants ate the grain inside
the house of both Tamta families. All three families who were rendered homeless
after demolition are living in a worried state.
Raj Tamta said that the elephant
rampage forced them to ask for food from others every day.
Chief of Laljhadi Sub-Division
Forest Office, Karunakar Joshi said seven employees of the office, who had been
working for a month after leaving the forest conservation work, had to join
hands with local residents to chase away the rampaging tuskers.
"The elephants have destroyed
sugarcane farming in ward no. 4", he shared. Besides creating public
awareness to protect the general public from elephants, arrangement of lights
on the roads, sirens and honking of tractors have also been carried out to
prevent further human loss, he added.
According to him, the number of
elephants including cubs in the nearby forests has reached 24. (RSS)