NEW DELHI, Nov 13: Just weeks after the Indian capital’s deputy mayor toppled to his death fending off a pack of monkeys, the animals have gone back on the attack, sparking fresh concerns about the simian menace.
One woman was seriously hurt and two dozen other people were given first aid after monkeys rampaged through a neighbourhood in east Delhi over the weekend, media reports have said.
“There were about three or four monkeys involved,” deputy police commissioner Jaspal Singh said.
“Wildlife officials are trying to find them. As police we’re not experts in dealing with monkeys. We can deal with mad bulls but monkeys are more difficult,” he said.
Along with an estimated 35,000 sacred cows and buffaloes that roam free in the capital, marauding monkeys have been longstanding pests.
They routinely scamper through government offices, courts and even police stations and hospitals as well as terrorise neighbourhoods.
But the issue boiled over in late October when the city’s deputy mayor, Sawinder Singh Bajwa, 52, fell to his death driving away monkeys from his home.
He was on his balcony reading a newspaper when four monkeys appeared. As he waved a stick to scare them away, he tumbled over the edge, his family said. In the latest incident in Delhi’s Shastri Park area, residents reported the monkeys appeared late on Saturday and rampaged for hours.
“I was talking to someone at my door at around 11 pm when a monkey appeared,” said Naseema, who goes by one name, told the Times of India. “As I moved inside, the monkey followed and sank its teeth in my baby’s leg.” Estimates of the size of Delhi’s monkey population range from 10,000 to over 20,000.
In 2001 residential districts petitioned courts to make Delhi “monkey-free.” And last May, federal lawmakers demanded protection from the simians.
But there has been little visible progress.
“We’re trying to catch them but the difficulties are a shortage of monkey catchers. We’re not able to take full action at full speed,” A.K. Singh, a senior municipal official, said.—AFP