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Taj Mahal City’s Battle with Stray Animals: Monkeys and Bulls Raising Alarms

India’s tourist destination number one, the Taj city, has raised an alarm against stray animals on the roads. Not just ordinary people, but even tourists have been targeted by monkeys and rampaging bulls. On several occasions in the past, government offices, police stations, and hospitals have been ransacked by monkeys and dogs whose population is competing with the human population in the city.

The district and other government hospitals in Agra have run short of anti-rabies vaccines, as hundreds of cases are being daily reported of dog bites. Concern has been raised as there have been several deaths in rural areas due to rabies. Vaccines have not been supplied to the primary health centres in time and the delay results in horrible deaths, says a former village panchayat member Laxman.

While the locals blame the government agencies for failure to round up stray dogs, the Agra Municipal Corporation claims to neutralize hundreds of dogs to control the exploding canine population. The Corporation veterinarian said, “Each day our teams do the rounds in different parts of the city to catch the stray dogs who are vaccinated, and neutered before releasing them”.

Also Read: Tourists at the Taj Mahal Are Scared of Simian Attacks

After the bovine and simian attacks on citizens and tourists, it’s now the canine nuisance that is worrying the local population. Each day cases of dog bites are multiplying, with no relief in sight, as vaccines are in short supply.

The stray dog’s menace has hit outlying colonies in the city.  “Morning walkers and late-night returnees face hordes of dogs chasing mobiles or cycles. People either fall off or are bitten. So many complaints have been filed but the action is never prompt,” says Gajendra, a school teacher of a colony. Dogs are everywhere, even near monuments and hotels on the Fatehabad road. Children can not be left alone to play in parks, complains a homemaker Rajni.

“Agra faces not just a canine threat but also is plagued by the simian menace for decades, with the monkey population exploding at a threatening pace,” says a resident of the Yamuna Kinara road, Jugal Kishor Pandit. Residents of the city often have to restrict their day-to-day activities too due to fear of the monkeys. People have stopped going to their terraces as the ferocious monkeys target children and women. The Medical College in Agra has been badly hit by the simian menace. 

“Patients are bitten, food packets snatched away, and sometimes the monkeys run away with medicines. They are all over the place. They(monkeys) run away with cough mixtures, glucose bottles or just anything they can lay their hands on, including spectacles. There have been so many cases of monkey bites in the premises,” a junior doctor said. The locals are continuously waging a war against the marauding monkeys whose population has crossed 50,000. Even the rural hinterland is seriously affected by simian nuisance.

“We have noticed a change in the behaviour of monkeys who are becoming much more aggressive and violent these days. The shrinking green cover all around Agra has forced the monkey population to migrate to the city where enough litter is available to sustain them,” says Eco Club President Pradip Khandelwal, who thinks greenery has suffered a lot due to these monkeys. Local citizens are helpless against stray animals whose population shows no signs of decline. 

“Stray dogs and rampaging bulls are ubiquitous, even in tourist areas. The administration is totally helpless for want of a clear policy direction.” 

In fact, these animals have made life hell for residents of the whole of the Braj mandal. From Vrindavan to Mathura and Gokul, and from Goverdhan to Barsana, the bovine, canine, and simian nuisance is causing alarm after a series of attacks on women, children, and pilgrims. The local residents complain that despite numerous complaints to authorities, neither the Uttar Pradesh Forest Department nor the municipal authorities have shown any interest in containing the growing menace.

The crux of the problem is the rule book that says monkeys can attack humans but humans are not permitted to kill or shoot them. Raising his hands in helplessness, a Forest department official said “We have no funds for these activities. Moreover when you can’t kill the monkeys where would you keep them?”

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