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With parts of its brain spilling out of its mouth, a brown dog lies dead on the floor. Near it, is the body of another dog twitching in pain, with its mouth severely injured. It shudders in pain for another five minutes before succumbing to its injuries. This horrific tale of death from Trichy, Tamil Nadu was a result of country bombs meant to snare jackals near the National Institute of Technology.
Set by members of a local tribal community, it has resulted in furore over the cruelty it has resulted in. The police are now in the process of filing an FIR against the members of the community, after an animal activist filed a complaint.
The dying dogs were discovered on 21 December night by Arjun, an animal rights activist and final year engineering student at NIT. A tea shop owner who lost his dog in the incident informed Arjun at 6:30pm on Thursday, following which he rushed to the spot.
The jackal is protected under Schedule II of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. But getting the police to file a case turned out to be harder than expected for the young activist.
According to the activist, this was the first case reported against the poaching. "We don't know how many animals have been already killed because of this practice," he says.
(This article has been published in an arrangement with The News Minute.)
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