India to get 12 more cheetahs from Africa in reintroduction effort

India will receive 12 cheetahs from South Africa next month, which will join eight others it received from Namibia in September as part of an ambitious plan to reintroduce the animals in the country after 70 years. Cheetahs were once widespread in India but disappeared by 1952 because of hunting and loss of habitat.

India plans to transport an additional 12 annually for the next eight to 10 years as part of an agreement signed by the two African countries, India’s Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change said Friday.

Cheetah populations in most countries are declining. South Africa, where the cats are running out of space, is an exception.

South Africa’s National Biodiversity Institute, National Parks, the Cheetah Range Expansion Project and the Endangered Wildlife Trust will collaborate with their Indian counterparts, the ministry said in a statement.

A cheetah lies inside a transport cage before traveling to India, at the Cheetah Conservation Fund in Otjiwarongo, Namibia, Friday, September 16, 2022.

The eight cheetahs flown from Namibia in September were released in sprawling Kuno National Park in central India.

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India hopes that importing African cheetahs will aid efforts to conserve the country’s threatened and largely neglected grasslands.

There are fewer than 7,000 adult cheetahs in the wild globally, and they now inhabit less than 9% of their original range. Shrinking habitat, due to the increasing human population and climate change, is a huge threat.

Le Monde with AP

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