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Sri Lanka train kills mother elephant, two calves

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Tue, September 18, 2018

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Sri Lanka train kills mother elephant, two calves In this photograph taken on July 30, 2018, Sri Lankan baby elephants play with each other in Kaudulla national park in Habarana. The Sri Lankan elephant is one of three recognised subspecies of the Asian elephant, native to Sri Lanka. ISHARA S. KODIKARA / AFP (AFP/Ishara S. Kodikara)

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train transporting oil in eastern Sri Lanka hit and killed two baby elephants and their pregnant mother on Tuesday, police said, the second jumbo tragedy in a month.

The three elephants, part of a larger herd, were crossing the railway track at dawn in jungle near Habarana, 180 kilometres (110 miles) northeast of Colombo, when they were hit.

The train was derailed and several tankers began spilling fuel, police said, adding that they set up a cordon to prevent villagers trying to salvage the oil.

"It is a very hazardous accident scene. We have pushed back many people who tried to collect the spilling oil," a police officer in the area told AFP by telephone. 

He said railway authorities were holding a separate investigation into whether the train driver had followed standard procedures while operating in jungle areas with elephant populations. 

Drivers are usually expected to move slowly and sound the horn continuously to warn any wild animals on the track.

Tuesday's accident came three weeks after seven elephants drowned in a swamp in the same district. Six of the seven victims were below the age of 12. 

Sri Lanka considers elephants a national treasure and they are protected by law. 

However, human-elephant conflicts near wildlife sanctuaries have led to the death of 375 people in the past five years, according to official figures. Enraged villagers have also retaliated by slaughtering nearly 1,200 of the beasts.

Last month the government said authorities would begin constructing 2,651 kilometres (1,556 miles) of new electric fencing to keep elephants away from villages bordering wildlife reserves.

The Sri Lankan elephant population in the wild is estimated at 7,500.

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