/ 16 May 2007

Monkey business in India’s Parliament

Indian MPs demanded protection on Wednesday from hordes of monkeys that have invaded the Parliament building, ministries and departments in the national capital.

The debate coincided with court orders on Wednesday to transport captured monkeys from New Delhi to a nearby wildlife sanctuary.

Opposition parliamentarian K Malaisamy said the creatures were creating havoc in the heart of New Delhi.

“Monkeys come in battalions, break cables, mock at passers-by and harass them and even decamp with belongings of children from playgrounds,” he said as other MPs in Parliament’s Upper House joined the emotionally charged debate.

“In the name of environmental protection, we cannot afford to remain silent spectators to this monkey menace in South Avenue, where several government offices and flats of MPs are located,” Malaisamy said.

“The monkeys are even invading kitchens in MPs’ apartments,” shouted Ramdeo Bhandary, of the regional RJD party, which backs India’s ruling Congress government.

Parliamentarians from various groupings urged Environment Minister T Baalu to capture the monkeys, which roam free in ministry lobbies and often break into the fortified office of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

The Defence Ministry has, however, recruited bands of ferocious langurs — long-tailed Asian monkeys — trained to attack the smaller breed of simians inside military facilities in New Delhi.

While MPs wanted action, the Delhi High Court on Wednesday warned the New Delhi administration to avoid scandals in transporting captured monkeys to a nearby sanctuary.

“The same set of monkeys may be caught and transported several times on record for making the process a money-making business,” judges Tirath Singh Thakur and SN Aggarwal told the city government in an order.

Several city residential districts petitioned the court in 2001 to initiate steps to make New Delhi “monkey-free”. — AFP