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Digital Desk: On Thursday, the Indian High Commission in Namibia published a photo of an aeroplane that had landed there to transport eight cheetahs to Kuno National Park in Madhya Pradesh, where they will establish a new home.

 

The creatures, which were extinct in India for more than seven decades, will be reintroduced on Saturday, September 17. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who will turn 72 this year, celebrates his birthday on this day.

 

The Indian aircraft's front has been painted to resemble a cheetah's face, as shown in the high commission's tweet.

The tweet from the Indian high commission stated, "A special bird touches down in the Land of the Brave to bring goodwill emissaries to the Land of the Tiger."

 

Eight cheetahs, five female and three male, will be kept in the main cabin of the aeroplane, and veterinarians will have complete access to the large cats for the whole flight. In order to keep the animals from getting motion sickness throughout the lengthy intercontinental travel, they won't be fed.

 

In order to get to Kuno-Palpur National Park in Bhopal, the plane would first land in Jaipur, Rajasthan, according to principal chief conservator of forests for Madhya Pradesh JS Chauhan. On Saturday between six and seven in the morning, the cheetahs will arrive in Rajasthan, where they will be transferred to a helicopter and flown to Kuno.

 

To greet the huge beasts, Modi will be present in the national park.

According to Chauhan, the cheetahs will spend their first month in India in modest enclosures before being moved to larger ones for a few months to assist them acclimate to their environment. They will later be released into the wild, he continued.

 

The two cheetahs that are "best friends" and stay together at all times have received vaccinations and satellite collars. Their arrival in India will mark the conclusion of a 12-year cooperation effort between the Indian government and experts and Namibia's Cheetah Conservation Foundation (CCF) to rescue cheetahs in the wild.

In May, the agreement between Namibia and India was completed. CCF founder Laurie Maker expressed her "thrill" and "extraordinary pride" regarding the translocation project. This effort would not have been possible without thorough research and commitment to cheetah conservation, she continued.

 

After the last one died in 1947, the cheetah was formally declared extinct in India in 1952. Cheetahs, one of the oldest large cat species, had a once-vast distribution across Asia and Africa and had ancestors that date back around 8.5 million years. Less than 9% of the big cats' historical habitat is already occupied, and there are just about 7,500 left in the wild.

2009 saw the beginning of the African Cheetah Introduction Project in India. Due of the Covid-19 outbreak, big cats at Kuno were not reintroduced by November of last year, according to officials.


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