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By Press Trust of India: Twelve cheetahs brought from South Africa to India in February this year have been released in the acclimatisation enclosure of the Kuno National Park (KNP) in Madhya Pradesh’s Sheopur district, an official said on Thursday.
The felines, comprising seven males and five females, were released in the quarantine bomas (enclosure) of the KNP on February 18 – the day they were brought here from South Africa.
“The twelve cheetahs have been released in the acclimatisation enclosure, aka soft or pre-release enclosure, after a go-ahead from the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying (DAHD),” Principal Chief Conservator of Forests JS Chauhan told PTI over phone.
He said the MP forest department got the clearance from the DAHD three days ago.
READ | Cheetah from Namibia sneaks out of Kuno National Park, strays into faraway village
“We started releasing them and completed the process in the last three days,” Chauhan added.
After one month, a call would be taken on releasing them into the wild, he said adding that cursorial predators would be set free in an a phased manner, like two or three in the first batch after studying their behaviour.
In September last year, the first lot of eight cheetahs, the fastest land animal, was brought to the KNP from Namibia in Africa.
The inter-continental translocation of the cheetahs is part of the Indian government’s ambitious programme to reintroduce these animals in the country, seven decades after they became extinct.
The country’s last cheetah died in Koriya district of present-day Chhattisgarh in 1947 and the species was declared extinct in 1952.
On September 17, 2022, Prime Minister Narendra Modi released eight felines brought from Namibia into the KNP.
Last month, five-year-old female cheetah Sasha, brought from Namibia, died of a kidney-related ailment.
READ | Cheetahs seen in the wild in India after 70 years at Kuno National Park
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