A wild elephant in India’s eastern state of Orissa has been waylaying motorists who complain that the animal refuses to let their vehicles pass unless they give it food, a media report said on Monday.
Witnesses told the Hindustan Times daily that the elephant has been scouting for food on a highway in the northern Keonjhar district, forcing motorists to roll down windows and get out of their vehicles.
”The tusker then inserts its trunk inside the vehicle and sniffs for food,” Prabodh Mohanty, who has had two encounters with the elephant, told the newspaper. ”If you are carrying vegetables and bananas inside your vehicle, then it will gulp them and allow you to go.”
But if the motorist does not roll down the glasses of the vehicle or resists opening the vehicle door, the pachyderm pushes the vehicle and stands right in front of it until the driver allows him to carry out its routine check.
Forest officials said the elephant is old and looking for easy food. ”We are telling commuters regularly not to tease the elephant,” said Sirish Mohanty, a forest ranger. ”So far it has not harmed anybody. But if people don’t heed our advice and harass the tusker, then it can retaliate.”
India is home to nearly half the total population of wild Asian elephants. Of the 10 000 elephants in the country, more than 60% live in the eastern states.
According to wildlife experts, the Indian elephant, a subspecies of the Asian elephant, is typically a timid animal, more ready to flee from a foe than to attack.
But widespread deforestation and human encroachment is making them aggressive and leading to human-elephant conflicts as the pachyderms often ravage fields of cultivated crops and kill villagers who get in their way. — Sapa-dpa