This Article is From Feb 18, 2023

Watch: 12 More Cheetahs Arrive At Madhya Pradesh National Park

The cheetahs - seven males and five females - were released into their quarantine enclosures at the Kuno National Park.

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India News Reported by , Edited by
New Delhi/Gwalior:

Twelve cheetahs from South Africa arrived in Madhya Pradesh today, months after eight big cats had been ferried from Namibia.

The cheetahs - seven males and five females - were released into their quarantine enclosures at the Kuno National Park by Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan and Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav.

An Air Force aircraft carrying the cheetahs landed at the Gwalior Air Force base at 10 am. They were then brought to Kuno National Park in helicopters.

"Madhya Pradesh has got a gift on Mahashivratri. I thank PM Modi, it is his vision. 12 Cheetahs will be rehabilitated to Kuno. The Cheetahs that had come earlier have now adapted to the situation very well," the Chief Minister said.

10 quarantine enclosures have been created at the reserve for the big cats, officials said. As per Indian wildlife laws, the animals are required to be kept in isolation for 30 days after arrival in the country.

Last year in September, eight cheetahs from Namibia were flown in to India. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had released the big cats to the Kuno National Park on his birthday - September 17.

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The eight Namibian cheetahs are now in a hunting enclosure - a six square km-area where they can interact with each other - and will soon be released into the wild.

The relocation of 12 cheetahs from South Africa comes three years after the idea was mooted by the Centre - the world's first intercontinental translocation project that aims at reintroducing the big cats in the country.

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The last cheetah died in India in1947, and the species was declared extinct from the country in 1952.

Efforts to reintroduce the animals gathered pace in 2020 when the Supreme Court ruled that African cheetahs, a different subspecies, could be brought into the country at a "carefully chosen location" on an experimental basis.

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According to the project, around 12-14 big cats that are ideal for establishing a new cheetah population would be imported from South Africa, Namibia and other African countries as a founder stock for five years initially and then as required by the programme.

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