Elephant Jeymalyatha at Srivilliputhur Temple Caught on Video Being Beaten Again; PETA India Demands Her Urgent Rescue

For Immediate Release:

27 June 2o22

Contact:

Hiraj Laljani; [email protected]

Khushboo Gupta; [email protected]

Chennai – Following a second viral video of elephant Jeymalyatha on the premises of the Srivilliputhur Nachiyar Thirukovil temple being severely beaten by a mahout, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) India sent an urgent appeal to the chief wildlife wardens of Assam and Tamil Nadu urging them to enforce the Wild Life (Protection) Act (WPA), 1972, and to seize the abused elephant immediately and rehabilitate her at a sanctuary where she can live free from beatings and chains. The letter also urges them to register a preliminary offence report against the mahout for violating the WPA and the Tamil Nadu Captive Elephants (Management and Maintenance) Rules, 2011. The video shows the helpless elephant tightly chained by her legs crying out pain, while repeatedly being beaten. The elephant is from the Assam government and has reportedly been forced to remain at the Tamil Nadu temple past the lease agreement, in violation of the WPA.

The video and PETA India’s letters to the chief wildlife wardens are available upon request.

The first video, which surfaced in February 2021, showed Jeymalyatha being beaten at a rejuvenation camp and led Tamil Nadu’s Hindu Religious & Charitable Endowments Department to suspend two mahouts involved. The forest department booked them under Rule 13 of the Tamil Nadu Captive Elephants (Management and Maintenance) Rules, 2011, and Section 51 of the WPA.

“Intelligent and sensitive elephants endure physical and psychological trauma in captivity for use in temple festivals, rides, circuses, and other spectacles, and in Jeymalyatha’s case, the cruelty has been caught on camera twice,” writes PETA India Chief Advocacy Officer Khushboo Gupta. “PETA India urges temples to carry out rituals using palanquins, chariots, or life-like mechanical elephants and urge devotees to donate to genuine elephant sanctuaries, where these animals are permitted to live in the company of other elephants and kept free from chains.”

The Srivilliputhur Nachiyar Thirukovil temple has reportedly kept Jeymalyatha in captivity illegally for more than a decade, as she was never returned to the Assam Forest Department. The Assam government has already requested that Tamil Nadu send the elephant back due to her abuse and because the custodian apparently does not have required documentation.

Noting the exploitation of elephants in captivity, the Honourable Madras High Court has directed the Tamil Nadu state government to form a policy on the ownership of elephants. The court stated that all elephants – privately owned or owned by a temple – must come under the care of the forest department and that future private ownership of elephants must be prohibited. Indian and international public opinion is becoming increasingly opposed to elephant captivity.

PETA India – whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to abuse in any way” – opposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information, please visit PETAIndia.com or follow the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.

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