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‘0’ Rhino Poaching Incident Recorded in 2 Ranges of KNP In Nagaon In 2019

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Nagaon Police has ensured zero Rhino poaching incident in the two forest ranges of the Kaziranga National Park in the calender year of 2019.
The two forest ranges that fall under the Nagaon district are Bagori and Burhapahar.

As per Assam Tribune reports (an English daily) , Nagaon Superintendent of Police Shankarbrata Rai Medhi informed that the persistent anti-poaching mission has yield the remarkable results. He told that the Nagaon Police was able to nab 21 poachers in 2019 debarring the poaching attempts.

51 incidents of poaching were reported between 2011 and 2018 in both the ranges under Jakhalabandha police station.

“We were able to expose the lynchpin of the Churachandpur gang of Manipur by arresting the gang members that were predominantly accountable for poaching of one horned rhinos. The Nagaon Police also retrieved a huge stash of arms and ammunition. Rai Medhi mentioned thst “better intelligence networking and cooperation among various stakeholders including police and the forest department came handy and very effective.”

“The hilly terrain and lack of formal supervision in the forests of Karbi Anglong bordering Kaziranga, made the Burhapahar range hard to reach. Our team, especially the Jakhalabandha Police, was able to tighten the knots around the gang of poachers,” he told.

Rai Medhi also said that the investigators also made sure to charge-sheet the case within the specified time, which was a huge setback to the poachers.
     
A facebook post by Kazaringa National Park

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Manas National Park to reopen for tourists on Oct 1

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The Manas National Park and Tiger Reserve in Assam is all set to re-open for the tourist season 2023-2024.

The national park will be opened for tourists on October 1. This was announced by Rajen Choudhury, the Field Director of Manas National Park in an official communiqué issued on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, reports said that a special event has been organized at the Bahbari Range of the national park in lieu of this. Notably, the national park was reportedly closed since June 5 this year owing to the monsoon season.

The official notice read, “Consequent to completion of the stipulated monsoon closure period as prescribed by the Government of India, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, National Tiger Conservation Authority letter no. 15-1(17)/2015-NTCA dated August 18, 2015, it is hereby informed that the Manas National Park and Tiger Reserve, will be open for the 2023-24 ecotourism season with effect from October 1, 2023, subject to relevant provisions of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 and the Assam Wildlife (Protection) Rules, 1997, till further notice.”

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1 horned Rhino Found Dead in Manas National Park; Horn recovered

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Rhino

Another skeleton of a One horned Rhino recovered at Manas National Park near Rupohi camp in the Bhuyanpara range on Saturday.

Dr. Vaibhav C. Mathur, the field director of the park reached the site after the incident took place. Prompt action was taken by the authorities to recover the rhino’s carcass.

Although the horn has been recovered from the spot, the actual cause of the rhino’s death is yet to be officially ascertain.

Earlier on August 2, the skeleton discovered at Manas National Park in Assam. Sources said the skeleton was recovered from the Bansbari zone in the national park.

The forest officials reported that the rhino might have lost its life during a fight against an adult bull.

Last month, another skeleton was recovered from a dense forest inside Manas National Park where the horn is missing from the spot.

Meanwhile, Greater Manas Conservation demanded proper investigation into the case.

What’s so special about the horn?

The Rhinos horn is the most expensive product in the black market fetching more than gold, platinum and diamond. It is used in Chinese medicine.According to traditional Chinese texts, such as Li Shih-chen’s 1597 medical text “Pen Ts’ ao Kang Mu”, rhino horn has been used in Chinese medicine for more than 2,000 years and is used to treat fever, rheumatism, gout, and other disorders. It also states that the horn could also cure snakebites, hallucinations, typhoid, headaches, carbuncles, vomiting, food poisoning etc.

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A pig heart transplant in Assam by Dr.Dhaniram Baruah in 1997

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Pig heart transplant

On January 7, doctors at the University of Maryland Medical School in the U.S. made news (of pig heart transplant) when they transplanted a genetically modified pig heart into a 57-year-old man.

Few remember now that Dhaniram Baruah, a cardio-thoracic surgeon based in Sonapur near Guwahati, transplanted the organs of a pig into a human body in 1997. However, Dr. Baruah’s xenotransplantation procedure ended badly.

Xenotransplantation is the process of grafting or transplanting organs or tissues between members of different species.

“It is not easy for a human body to accept the organs of a pig. Time will tell whether the human body will accept the organ of a genetically-altered pig,” the 72-year-old doctor, who lost his voice after undergoing throat surgery some time ago, said via S.A. Achrekar, a senior scientist at his research institute in Sonapur.

At an international conference in 1995, Dr. Baruah had said pigs are close to humans in various aspects. He had at the time developed an “electric motor-driven artificial biological heart made of ox pericardium that was implanted in a pig”.

Dr. Baruah said he had carried out 102 animal experiments on xenotransplantation. He transplanted a pig’s heart, lung and kidneys to Purno Saikia, a 32-year-old end-stage organ failure patient, on January 1, 1997. Jonathan Ho, a Hong Kong-based doctor, had assisted him in the transplantation at his research centre.

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But Sakia died a week later, triggering an uproar. The two doctors were arrested on January 10 under the Transplantation of Human Organs Act, 1994, booked for culpable homicide and imprisoned for 40 days. Subsequently, the Assam government formed an inquiry committee that found pig heart implants to be unethical and unlawful. Source- The Hindu.

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