Tag: matter

  • Hyderabad’s air quality to be improved by reducing particular matter

    Hyderabad’s air quality to be improved by reducing particular matter

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    Hyderabad: Implementation of an action plan for reducing air pollutants, e-waste and construction and demolition (C&D) waste processing to improve the air quality in the city was reviewed by the Telangana State Pollution Control Board (TSPCB).

    Special chief secretary, of environment, science and technology, Rajat Kumar, conducted a review meeting with a team from IIT-Kanpur, member secretary of the board Neetu Prasad, and others on Monday.

    A presentation made by an academic from IIT-Kanpur, Mukesh Sharma, on a source apportionment study carried out in the city revealed that major sources that added to air pollution were identified as road dust, vehicular emissions, open burning, secondary pollutants and industries.

    Particulate matter of sizes less than 10 and 2.5 microns in the air are the add-ons to the pollution, stated Mukesh during the meeting.

    Deliberations about the additional measures to be taken for an immediate reduction in the particulate matter were discussed by the officials who decided to conduct a series of workshops to brainstorm on the action plan.

    Speaking during the meeting, Rajat Kumar said that the Centre is releasing funds under the 15th Finance Commission to Hyderabad for taking up important activities to reduce air pollution.

    “Based on the results of the study, the Air Quality Monitoring Committee (AQMC) will allocate the funds to different activities in the proportion to the source contribution,” he added.

    Citing the reduction in air pollution in Nalgonda town owing to various interventions, Rajat Kumar said the focus is now on Hyderabad.

    He further reviewed the implementation of the e-Waste Management Rules and noted that there has been an improvement in e-waste collection from 30,000 tonnes to 44,000 tonnes per year.

    The main challenge still remains with e-waste collection from the domestic sector and also with training of the informal sector for scientific processing of the same.

    Rajat Kumar directed the TSPCB to increase awareness programmes through different media to sensitise all sections and improve the collection mechanism from the domestic sector.

    The construction and demolition waste management was also reviewed which revealed that the total capacity has been increased from 1000 tonnes per day to 2000 tonnes per day.

    Rajat Kumar further instructed that the C&D processed material should be made mandatory for re-use in different projects and made suggestions for the study of such policies in other states

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Court junks Nirav Modi sister’s plea for ED intervention in US bankruptcy matter

    Court junks Nirav Modi sister’s plea for ED intervention in US bankruptcy matter

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    Mumbai: A special court on Monday rejected a plea of Purvi Mehta, sister of fugitive diamond trader and PNB scam accused Nirav Modi, seeking a direction to the Enforcement Directorate to intervene in bankruptcy proceedings underway against him in the United States where she has been made a defendant.

    In the plea, filed in April last year before the special court for cases under the Fugitive Economics Offenders (FEO) Act, Mehta (47) had said the ED should be directed to intervene in the case before a US court and seek injunction at least with respect to assets concerning her.

    She has turned an approver in the bank fraud case filed under provisions of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).

    Special judge S M Menjoge, after hearing prosecution and defence sides, rejected Mehta’s plea, saying there was no provision in the FEO Act by which the relief sought by her can be granted.

    This court cannot prevent any person from prosecuting any matter either in India or outside the country, the judge observed.

    Nirav Modi, a key accused in the Rs 13,000-crore scam at state-run Punjab National Bank (PNB), was declared a fugitive economic offender in December 2019. The 51-year-old diamantaire is currently lodged in a UK prison.

    In June 2020, a special PMLA court in Mumbai ordered confiscation of his properties which the ED claimed had been bought using proceeds of crime.

    In her plea, Mehta, who has turned an approver in the PMLA case against Nirav Modi and others, said she had been made a defendant in bankruptcy proceedings against her brother in a US court.

    It means her properties are also being considered by the US court and its proceedings overlap with those in India related to her, Mehta’s plea had said.

    The ED should be directed to intervene in the case before the US court, and seek an injunction at least with respect to assets concerning her, said the plea.

    Lawyers representing PNB, which is the victim of the multi-crore fraud, submitted before the court that Mehta’s plea was not maintainable.

    The ED also strongly objected to her plea, saying Mehta’s properties had been already attached as per provisions of the FEO Act.

    There was no provision in the FEO Act to direct the central agency to intervene in US court proceedings, it told the court.

    The special court, while rejecting Mehta’s plea, pointed out that she’s an approver in the PMLA case and not in this matter (filed under the FEO Act) and therefore she cannot claim be an interested party.

    Nirav Modi and his uncle Mehul Choksi, owners of prominent jewellery firms, are accused of cheating the nationalized bank to the tune of Rs 13,000 crore by fraudulently obtaining Letters of Undertaking which act as bank guarantee while taking loans in foreign countries.

    Purvi Mehta and her husband Maiank Mehta were made approvers in the bank fraud case in January 2021 on condition of making full and true disclosure before the PMLA court.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Matter related to Jamia violence transferred after judge recuses himself

    Matter related to Jamia violence transferred after judge recuses himself

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    New Delhi: A matter related to the Jamia Nagar violence was on Monday transferred to another court after a sessions judge, who had recently discharged 11 accused including student activist Sharjeel Imam in another case linked to the 2019 incident, recused himself.

    Additional Sessions Judge (ASJ) Arul Varma on Friday withdrew himself from hearing a case in connection with the violence in Jamia Nagar in December 2019. The case was registered against several people, including student activist Asif Iqbal Tanha.

    The matter is likely to be heard by Additional Sessions Judge Sonu Agnihotri on March 18, a source said.

    Earlier, citing personal reasons ASJ Varma had requested the Principal District and Sessions Judge of the Saket Court here to transfer the case.

    The accused in the present case include Tanha, Meeran Haider, Ashu Khan, Qasim Usmani, Mohammad Hassan, Mohd Jamal, Mohd Sahil Muddassir, Faheem Hasmee, Sameer Ahmad, Mohd Umar, Mohd Adil, Roohul Ameer, Chandan Kumar and Saqib Khan.

    The Jamia Nagar police station had registered an FIR in connection with the violence that erupted after a clash between police and people protesting against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA).

    ASJ Varma, while discharging the accused, including Iman, had rapped the police, saying as they were unable to apprehend the actual perpetrators, the 11 accused were booked as “scapegoats”.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Charminar Pedestrianisation Project is matter of prestige: KTR in Assembly

    Charminar Pedestrianisation Project is matter of prestige: KTR in Assembly

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    Hyderabad: Telangana MA&UD minister KT Rama Rao (KTR) on Saturday said that the Charminar Pedestrianisation Project (CPP) is a matter of prestige for the state government and citizens will see good results in the coming six months as works are happening in a brisk pace.

    “Our agenda is to get the World Herigate Status to Hyderabad. If we want that tag from UNESCO, its important to maintain and improve Charminar,” he remarked.

    Responding to questions on the project from AIMIM legislators, the minister assured that he is personally monitoring the works as Charminar is a matter of pride for Hyderabad.

    “Charminar will always be the emblem of Hyderabad irrespective of the number of tall and new buildings we get,” KTR remarked.

    “Restoration and redevelopment of Lad Bazaar, redevelopment of Sardar Mahal, pedestrianisation bridges on Musi, multilevel car parking and khilwat and old RTC bus station, restoration of Badshahi Ashoorkhana, restoration of Gulzar Houz, restoration of Kali Kamaan, redevelopment of Mir Alam mandi, redevelopment of Murgi Chowk are part of the project,” he said.

    KTR also said that the cooperation of bodies that are responsible for 29 structures which have been affected by the CPP project works like Mosques, Temples, chillas, will be asked for. “I ask the AIMIM MLAs for cooperation to move works forward,” he added.

    “Works of the Outer ring road (5.4 km), inner ring road (2.3 km) are happening; The construction of granite pavements from Charminar to Gulzar, Charminar to Sardar Mahal, granite pavement at Lad Bazaar, granite cobblestone at Mecca Masjid, street scaping of the old city from Madina to Pattarghatti, construction of a duct are completed. The Construction of central median will be taken up after finishing road widening works along with HMR metro rail works, central lighting will be taken up, road markings will be done,” he informed.

    KTR said that along with this, works are in progress to setup an adequate number of bollards that are needed for the project. “I will need your (AIMIM MLAs) help as there is political resistance there. Also, works to replace the existing cobblestone at Lad Bazaar are happening,” he stated.

    Road widening works under the CPP project

    The Minister informed that road widening works from Char Kaman to Agra Hotel, from Charminar Police Station to Kali Kamaan and BSNL office via Darul uloom High School (except one property of the school which is currently discussion with the education department) are complete. “Also, from Mitti ka sher to Zulu khaana works were stayed by the High Court. So works are delayed,” he added.

    “From Mahajareen Camp to Julu Khana market, consulations are happening with the minority welfare department as the roads are going through their property. From Himmatpur to Fateh Darwaza, a total of 172 properties should be acquired for road widening works. 102 have already been demolished. 70 are still pending. We will try to complete them in 2-3 months. From Hussaini Alam to Doodh Bowli, a total of 192 properties are on the list. 83 have already been demolished. 109 are still pending. We will try to complete them in 2-3 months. Funds have been allocated,” he further said.

    For a hawker’s parking place under the CPP, KTR said that the government has proposed the Old Charminar bus stand as the suitable place. “4000 sq yards land has been allocated. A detailed project report is ready. I will soon lay a foundation,” he said.

    KTR said that the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) and the Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority have allocated the sums of Rs 75 crore and Rs 25 crore respectively. “Even if another Rs 35 crore is required, HMDA is ready to provide,” he added.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Put conversion matter before five-judge bench, says fresh application in SC

    Put conversion matter before five-judge bench, says fresh application in SC

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    New Delhi: A fresh application has been moved before the Supreme Court urging that the matters related to alleged forcible religious conversions be taken up by a larger bench of five judges as they involve the interpretation of the Constitution.

    A three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice DY Chandrachud is scheduled to hear the batch of pleas on Monday against anti-conversion laws of several states regulating religious conversion due to interfaith marriages and on matters related to alleged forcible conversions.

    The fresh application is filed by advocate Ashwini Upadhyay, who is among the petitioners. He has asked the court to refer the petitions to a larger bench saying there are several questions of laws involved which require the interpretation of the Constitution.

    He raised questions like whether the previous judgments of this Court interpreting Article 25(1) of the Constitution are grossly erroneous in so far as they upheld the word “propagate” would include entitlement to convert.

    “Whether the word “propagate” needs to be construed in a manner which is not detrimental to fraternity, unity, dignity and national integration…,” Upadhyay’s fresh plea said.

    It should also not lead to communal conflagration on account of religious communities trying to convert the weaker section of other religious communities and “attempting to make demographic changes as witnessed in the nine states/UTs (Ladakh, Lakshadweep, Kashmir, Mizoram, Nagaland, Meghalaya, Manipur, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh) and around 200 districts of India”, the application said.

    In another application, Upadhyay has sought modification of the order dated January 9 in which the apex court had directed that the matter be listed under the title of “In Re: The issue of Religious conversion” to the original title.

    On January 16, the top court asked the parties challenging the anti-conversion laws of several states to file a common petition seeking the transfer of cases on the issue from various high courts to the apex court.

    It had asked senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for one of the parties, to file a common petition seeking the transfer of all the pleas from high courts to the top court.

    The top court had taken note of the submission of senior advocate Dushyant Dave that one of the petitions, filed by Upadhyay, casts aspersions on Christians and Muslims and asked senior lawyer Arvind Datar, appearing for Upadhyay, to file a formal plea for deletion of the “objectionable portions”.

    Datar, however, said he was not pressing the alleged contents.

    The plea by Upadhyay against alleged “forceful religious conversions” was earlier being heard by another bench led by Justice MR Shah before it was transferred to the bench headed by the CJI recently.

    Attorney General R Venkataramani, who is assisting the bench in one of the matters, had said the high courts should be permitted to continue with the hearing of petitions challenging the local laws.

    Solicitor General Tushar Mehta had challenged the locus of NGO Citizens for Justice and Peace’ of activist Teesta Setalwad, who is one of the petitioners.

    Mehta, however, did not elaborate on the reasons for questioning the locus of the NGO.

    The top court had noted that there were at least five such pleas “before the Allahabad High Court, seven before the Madhya Pradesh High Court, two each before the Gujarat and Jharkhand High Courts, three before the Himachal Pradesh, and one each before Karnataka and Uttarakhand High Courts” and said a common petition for their transfer can be filed.

    Besides those, two separate petitions have been filed by Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh challenging the interim orders of the respective high courts staying certain provisions of their law on conversion.

    Earlier, a bench headed by Justice M R Shah had said religious conversion was a serious issue that should not be given a political colour.

    It had sought the assistance of the attorney general on the plea filed by Upadhyay.

    Another bench headed by the CJI had on January 2 sought to know the status of cases pending before different high courts challenging controversial state laws regulating religious conversion due to interfaith marriages, and said if all cases are similar in nature it may transfer them all to itself.

    It had asked NGO ‘Citizens for Justice and Peace’ and the states of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh to apprise it about the status of cases challenging the state laws on conversion through marriage.

    The apex court had on January 6, 2021 agreed to examine certain controversial new laws of Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand regulating religious conversions due to such marriages.

    The controversial UP law relates to not only interfaith marriages but all religious conversions and lays down elaborate procedures for any person who wishes to convert to another religion.

    The Uttarakhand law entails a two-year jail term for those found guilty of religious conversion through “force or allurement”. The allurement can be in cash, employment, or material benefit.

    The plea filed by the NGO alleged the legislations violate Articles 21 and 25 of the Constitution as they empower the state to suppress an individual’s personal liberty and the freedom to practise the religion of one’s choice.

    Jamiat Ulama-I-Hind has also moved the Supreme Court challenging the anti-conversion laws of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh, saying they have been enacted to “harass” interfaith couples and implicate them in criminal cases.

    The Muslim body, in its PIL filed through advocate Ejaz Maqbool, said the provisions of all the local laws of the five states force a person to disclose their faith and, consequently, invade their privacy.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • On the edge of extinction: why western chimpanzees matter – photo essay

    On the edge of extinction: why western chimpanzees matter – photo essay

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    Pepe is starting to be fond of school. He often struggles to stay focused, since engaging in rough-and-tumble play with his new peer, Michelle, is much more fun. This baby chimp belongs to the most endangered subspecies of chimpanzees – western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus).

    Portrait of Pepe, a one-year-old baby chimp

    • Pepe, a one-year-old baby chimp rescued from poaching by the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre, enjoying one of the school sessions in the forest.

    At a very young age, he became an orphan when his mother was killed by poachers. For the group of resident orphans at the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre (CCC) in Guinea, “going to school” means daily excursions into the lush forests of the High Niger national park, where caregivers teach them the skills they will need to navigate the challenging environment and the complex social lives of their wild counterparts. It takes several years before the young chimpanzees are ready to be released, and successful recovery is far from granted.

    A group of ‘teenagers’ walk in the forest around the area controlled by the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre
    Caregiver Antoine plays with an orphaned chimp

    • Caregivers are essential to baby chimps’ education. They play a crucial role in fostering social bonds of chimpanzees. Here, Antoine is playing with one of the orphans before they start their daily walk through the forest.

    Once common throughout equatorial Africa, chimpanzees have disappeared from most of their historic range. In 2003, a population of 170,000-300,000 wild individuals was estimated across a highly discontinuous distribution covering 1m sq miles (2.6m sq km). There are four recognised subspecies of chimpanzees, among which western chimpanzees stand out for their many unique behaviours. Some communities of this subspecies have been shown to manufacture wooden spears to hunt down other primates, crack nuts open by balancing them on a root and pounding them with a stone, soak themselves and play in water to cool down on hot days, travel and forage at night, and regularly gather in caves to socialise and sleep. Many of these behaviours could be culturally transmitted through social learning across generations.

    Young chimp plays with another in the forest

    Researchers are understandably excited by the prospect of understanding this rich cultural diversity, though sadly they are under considerable time pressure. After reports of unprecedented decline, in 2016 the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) upgraded the western chimpanzee’s threat status from endangered (the status of every other subspecies) to critically endangered. According to the western chimpanzee conservation action plan 2020-30, 10,000-52,000 wild chimpanzees are thought to remain in west Africa, with Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone being the strongholds of the subspecies. Guinea harbours more than 60% of the remnant population. Importantly, more than 80% of chimpanzees in Guinea are found outside protected areas, so that remoteness and inaccessibility are the main factors ensuring the viability of wild populations.

    Chimpanzees socially interacting

    “Guinea is rich in mineral resources such as bauxite (used in electronic devices), and this sector is expanding rapidly. Deforestation and habitat fragmentation caused by large-scale development projects (such as mines and their associated infrastructures), as well as the expansion of subsistence agriculture (due to increased demographic growth and soil infertility), are gradually taking chimpanzee territory,” says Tatyana Humle, the board chair of the CCC. Although traditional (and correct) beliefs of kinship have historically helped chimpanzee conservation in some areas of Guinea, poaching to sell the babies as pets and adults as bushmeat is becoming one of the most severe problems for their conservation. “This is an unfortunate byproduct of the rapid conversion of natural chimpanzee habitat for human activities. Chimpanzees living in forest-farm mosaics often rely on crops and fruit orchards to compensate for the loss of their natural food resources, which frequently results in retaliatory killings and orphaned chimpanzees as a byproduct,” she says. Nearly half of western chimpanzees live within 5km of a human settlement or a road, and remoteness will continue to dwindle if urgent measures to control anthropogenic pressure are not implemented.

    An aerial view of the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre in High Niger national park, Guinea

    More than a sanctuary

    Started in 1997, the CCC aims to rehabilitate and release chimpanzees that are victims of illegal trade, or that have been injured, or orphaned as a result of retaliatory killings. After almost 26 years, the CCC has grown into a leading institution in the conservation of African apes, and its message has permeated the different layers of Guinean society.

    A worker at the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre classifying food for the chimpanzees

    • A worker at the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre classifies and manages the food, mainly vegetables, fruits and cereals, to be given to the chimpanzees.

    Workers from the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre driving
    People sell their products to be used as food for chimpanzees

    • Workers from the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre rush to support national authorities when chimpanzee poaching victims are found. Right: People sell their products to be used as food for chimpanzees. This becomes a continual source of money for communities that contributes to raising environmental awareness about the importance of protecting chimpanzees.

    Most importantly, by ensuring the lifelong care and welfare of confiscated individuals, the CCC plays a fundamental role in supporting national authorities in combating the illegal trade of live chimpanzees. They boost the local economy by feeding chimpanzees with local produce (vegetables, fruits and cereals), which also helps to raise environmental awareness about the importance of protecting this threatened subspecies.

    Cédric Kambere, a Congolese vet who is a key part of the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre
    A young chimpanzee in the forest
    Chimpanzee being monitored by a vet.
    Pepe a baby chimpanzee being fed by its carer
    An intimate moment between Pepe and his caregiver Michelle after playing in the forest

    • Pepe is a baby chimpanzee whose diet is still milk-based. Michelle, his caregiver, feeds him before their time together in the forest. An intimate moment between Pepe and his caregiver Michelle after they were playing for almost an hour in the forest. The trust built between them will help Pepe grow up under a healthy context of sociality. Nonsocial animals are not only difficult to rehabilitate but also difficult to integrate into family groups.

    Cédric Kambere, a Congolese veterinarian with a great deal of experience working with apes, is a key part of the project. His expertise becomes particularly critical when sick chimpanzees, often recently orphaned babies, arrive at the sanctuary. There are currently 62 chimpanzees living at the sanctuary, 18 of which are still infants or sub-adults that have a lot of learning to do if they are ever to be released back into the wild. The stories surrounding their arrival to the sanctuary are heartbreaking. Marco, a four-year-old unweaned baby, was rescued after his mother was shot for meat. The bullet hit the baby’s mouth, forcing vets to remove several teeth. Sewa, a six-year-old female, was rescued from a home where she was kept as a pet. The owners had dressed her in children’s clothes and shaved her head in imitation of a human haircut. Together with Tola, Bomba, Bingo, and another two babies who did not overcome injuries from poaching, one-year-old Pepe was among six baby chimps to arrive at the sanctuary in 2022.

    A young chimpanzee in a tree
    Biologist Miguel García plays with a young rescued chimpanzee

    Notably, the CCC is the only chimpanzee sanctuary currently releasing individuals back into their natural habitats. But the situation is looking increasingly dire for the release project. “Many recovered chimpanzees cannot be released simply because of the physical or psychological trauma they experienced prior to their arrival. Worse still, loss of habitat coupled with human expansion is hampering the availability of suitable release sites,” says Miguel García, a Spanish primatologist in charge of the CCC’s conservation activities, including the release project. Suitable release sites need to encompass the typical home range of a chimpanzee community (ranging between 15-60 sq km) and provide sufficient food and water all year while not being part of the existing territory of another group. Four areas have been recently assessed to date, and none met the requirements for a release. A promising assessment study is ongoing at the Ndama reserve in northern Guinea, close to the border with Senegal. The recently established Moyen Bafing national park offers yet another note of hope. This park harbours 15% of the chimpanzee population in the country, and was established to offset the impact of two bauxite mining companies in the Fouta Djallon region. But Tatyana Humle has concerns. “There is a growing commitment from the Guinean government to make offsets compulsory for the mining sector; however, offsets should be a last resort and a push for avoiding impacts on chimpanzees and other threatened species should be preferred.” Securing sustainable funding for this national park and for sanctuaries such as the CCC would make a world of difference for chimpanzee conservation in Guinea.

    Adult chimpanzees rescued from poaching by the Chimpanzee Conservation Centre

    Why care about western chimpanzees? Throughout history, the erroneous intuition that humans are radically different (even superior) to other animals has been used to justify our exploitative attitude towards nature. By holding a mirror up to ourselves, apes force us to abandon this “human exceptionalism”. In 1758, the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus not only dared to place humans alongside monkeys and apes within the “primate” order, but even assigned humans and apes the same genus, Homo. Later genomic analyses would vindicate Linnaeus’s intuition, confirming that indeed chimpanzees and bonobos are more similar to humans than to gorillas. Our striking parallels with chimps become evident when considering almost any aspect of our biology. For instance, our immune systems are so alike that many infectious diseases that affect humans are also able to infect chimps, gestation also lasts around nine months, and infants have a prolonged childhood (up to 10-12 years) where they need to remain close to their mother and learn a set of skills that will be crucial in their adult life. At the same time, almost weekly we are shown new evidence suggesting that tool use, empathy and other capacities widely believed to be exclusive to our species are also present in other primates. As Darwin suspected, the gap between humans and apes (once thought an impassable abyss) seems to be “one of degree, and not of kind”. By fixing humans firmly within the animal kingdom, our ape relatives provided us with the right framework to understand our place in nature, and replace our dismissive attitude towards other animals with one founded on respect and curiosity. Paradoxically for the self-appointed “thinking ape”, we’ve been so obsessed with finding what makes humans “uniquely human” that only recently we’ve started to appreciate what makes chimps “uniquely chimpanzee”.

    A portrait of an adult chimpanzee in an enclosure

    We should act now if we intend to preserve the rich cultural heritage of our closest relatives. Failure to implement urgent measures in order to balance chimpanzee conservation and the cumulative impact of large-scale development will mean not only that rescued orphans at CCC will never know freedom again, but also the irreversible extinction of western chimpanzees.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )