This Article is From May 27, 2023

Kuno National Park Cheetah-Tracking Team Mistaken For Cattle Thieves, Attacked, 1 Injured

A female cheetah, Aasha, had ventured out of Kuno National Park, after which the national park's authorities sent out a team to track the big cat

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A Kuno National Park cheetah-tracking team was mistaken for cattle thieves

Bhopal:

A team from Madhya Pradesh's Kuno National Park tasked with tracking a cheetah that had strayed out of the protected area was attacked by villagers last night over suspicion that they were cattle thieves, the police said.

A member of the tracking team was injured, the police said, adding he is being treated at a hospital.

A female cheetah, Aasha, had ventured out of the protected area, after which the national park's authorities sent out a team to track the big cat.

The cheetah-trackers set out to look for the animal in a Bolero SUV.

When the team reached village Burakheda near Kuno National Park, some people stopped the SUV and without any warning attacked them.

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Visuals of the attack site shows the rear windshield of the SUV shattered and the vehicle stopped in front of a tree, indicating an impact.

"We have identified 10-15 suspects and are questioning the villagers to catch those who attacked the cheetah trackers," a police officer told reporters.

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The cheetahs at Kuno National Park were brought from South Africa and Namibia.

Under the reintroduction programme, the first group of eight female cheetahs from Namibia were brought into a quarantine enclosure at Kuno. In the second translocation, 12 cheetahs were flown in from South Africa and released into Kuno.

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Three out of four recently born cheetah cubs have died.

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