Friday, September 12, 2025
spot_img

Letter to the editor

Date:

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img
To Sunday Shillong,
Global wildlife has been devastatingly impacted by infrastructural development causing deaths of helpless animals being crashed under motor vehicles and railway engines.
There is no doubt that any modern nation will need infrastructure development in the form of motor able roads, highways, bridges, railways to connect different strategic parts for rapid transportation of passengers and goods and build economy at the same time. But unfortunately, not much care and attention is given to such infrastructure development when they traverse through ecological sensitive areas, densely wooded forests or mountainous areas that have been traditionally used by wildlife to cross from one end of the forests to another.
Motor and railway engine collisions in sensitive ecological areas in developed as well as developing and under developed nations are resulting into serious collisions and causing deaths of helpless wildlife around the planet. Unless serious monitoring and comprehensive, long term policy to protect wildlife is initiated by local and individual governments and the national and/or provincial administration in sensitive ecological areas; deaths
due to motor and railway engine collisions will continue to haunt wildlife conservation.
Thanking you
Saikat Kumar Basu
spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

Great Nicobar Island project will transform region into major maritime hub: PM Modi shares column

New Delhi, Sep 12: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday shared an article on the Great Nicobar Island...

Mauritius PM Ramgoolam offers prayers at Ram temple in Ayodhya

Ayodhya, Sep 12: The holy city of Ayodhya witnessed a very special moment when Mauritius Prime Minister Dr...

PM Modi’s two-day visit to Assam, Manipur, Mizoram to launch developmental projects

Imphal/Guwahati, Sep 12: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will begin a two-day visit to Assam, Manipur and Mizoram from...

Australia faces rising dementia burden with over 1 million cases by 2065

Canberra, Sep 12: More than 1 million Australians are projected to have dementia by 2065, a government report...