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Valuable Indian lessons on human-elephant conflict

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By JAGATH C. SAVANADASA
Email- jaysavana123@gmail.com

It is an absorbing and insightful success story about the management of the most visible and emotional man versus animal conflicts between humans and elephants.

This article examines the methods and techniques deployed at times using modern technology by India, to minimise damage besides conserving elephants and protecting human life.

This is indeed an object lesson on how a huge complex yet powerful nation has achieved success to preserve a large elephant population

This article is culled from a news magazine India Today published weekly, which has a worldwide circulation.

At the centre of the conflict is the ultimate tragedy – the deaths of both humans and the animals.

Briefly, it begins with the encroachment of the elephant habitat by man. This forces these animals to venture out of their forest confines in search of food. The result more often than not is a deadly clash.

In legal and glorified terms it could be called territorial aggrandizement either way by man or elephant.

Of course, there are other relevant factors like the unavailability of water for elephants following persistent droughts, and changing climatic patterns and damage to cultivation by elephants, leading to grain and food shortages for villagers.

But let us begin this narrative with an incident relating to recent elephant deaths in India.

Out of a herd of 13 elephants, seven had died following their contact with a loosely dangling live K.V line in a paddy field in the district of Odisha, due to electrocution. This led to an immediate response, signifying how alert the relevant authorities are in India. An institution named The National Green Tribunal, through a newly formed committee, had examined carefully the actual cause of the tragedy. Following its findings, the committee called on the local power utility to make a deposit of I.R. 1 crore the equivalent of I.R. 10 million, since it held that the deaths of the precious animals were due to apathy and negligence of the utility.

The deposit was to be made to the warden of wildlife.

 

The Indian elephant population

It is interesting to note that the Indian population of elephants which is between 27,000 and 30,000 is the largest of the species of a single country in Asia, which currently has a population of 40,000. These figures are, however, subject to dispute.

In terms of the deaths of these animals, each year it ranges from 100-120.

In contrast, arising from the conflict between the two, about 1300 people have died in India over the last 4 years.

One reason adduced to this situation, based on research, clearly shows the depletion of forests is the prime factor. Arising from this is the fact that the depletion impels the elephants to search for new habitats, which often go into villages.

Thus there emerges a disastrous situation, the Indian report opines.

On the other hand, “India Today” contends that her elephant population has stabilized, and that it is not the human- elephant combat that is at the heart of the issue but the destruction of forests.

 

Mega herbivores

Elephants are a large migratory species. It is reported to have a travel range of approximately 150-350 sq. kilometers annually.

Elephants also have, on the basis of their huge body proportions, an equally huge appetite and in order to satisfy their needs, they target fields and plantations nearby their usual habitats. Each elephant consumes on an average 150 kg of food and 200-300 litres of water daily.

Quite often one could see, in the media, these lovable creatures in desperate search of food, making forays into places outside their usual domain, only to be mowed down by rail. One could also see pictures of men lying on the ground killed by elephants when they enter fields.

Evidence in India, as much as in Sri Lanka, the latter to a limited extent points to the fact that it is mainly development projects such as roads and transmission lines, apart from mines and dams that make great inroads into the elephant habitat and disrupt their life patterns.

Additionally in India a big canal in extent 16 km for a hydro-electricity project in Uttarakhand resulted in paving the way to destroying an existing elephant boundary. Adding fuel to this problem, is the open border between India and Nepal, only for humans.

Elephants are kept out of it through a 17 k.m fence. The Indian elephant population, the article reveals, had been subject to forced migration due to rampant mining activity in Odisha. Such activity had begun in the 1980s and as a result today about 300 elephants are relocated within 30000 Sq Km of forest in Chhattisgarh. Similar changes have been carried out in Jharkhand and every year about 150 elephants are moved into this territory.

A local terrorist group called Bodo, which was active for about a decade in the 1980s, had led to the death of about 100 elephants annually from 1980-1990.

 

Project Elephant

In 1992 India introduced the Project Elephant plan incorporating Elephant Reserves. Conceptually the plan was designed to create Elephant Reserves that should encounter minimum resistance from the local populace. 30 such reserves are in existence today, and their combined land area is approximately 60,000 SQ Km.

Significantly this has led to impressive results. In the last 37 years the elephant population doubled to 30,000 on the basis of a 2017 census.

However a resultant major issue is the presence of a big elephant population in areas that cannot support them.

 

Habitat Management

India, in the manner of Sri Lanka, though ours is of a lesser magnitude, considers habitat management a formidable task. Though India has identified some 160 odd elephant corridors (which unlike Sri Lanka) includes 17 international corridors between India and Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar and Nepal, all inter-connected nations of course on one or single land mass. Only these 17 are considered a safe passage for elephants.

They are spread over an area of 1600-2000 Sq km. but in terms of area only about 600 to 800 Sq km’s are genuinely safe areas.

 

Poaching

Poaching in India is severely curtailed, thanks to remedial action and also due to shortage of tuskers. This menace is likely to return once the elephants born in the 1980s would have grown tusks.

Also, according to the Wildlife Institute of India (W.I.I) the population of elephants need monitoring scientifically. Especially, the mother-to-calf ratio, or the number of breeding cows per 100 specimens

However, it needs to be mentioned that policies applied in respect of tiger conservation, which India carried out successfully, cannot be applied to elephant conservation. The rationale is that you could keep tigers within their reserves, but this is not possible in case of elephants.

But in certain areas of India a degree of success has been achieved, and inviolate habitats for elephants are created by moving human populations outside the areas reserved for elephants.

 

New conservation measures

An innovation that seems successful is the installation of bio-acoustics based sensors along rail tracks in Assam and West Bengal. It is reported that these sensors are able to track the sounds arising from elephant movement and transmit them to a control centre. As a result 10 drivers could initiate evasive action.

Bio-acoustics are already utilized in the oceans which monitor movement of whales and dolphins. The objective is to prevent them from swimming onto ships and other sea borne vessels .

Professor Michael Andrew of the University of Catalina, Spain a global expert in Bio Acoustics who is responsible for its introduction to India, calls this a major breakthrough. He adds passive acoustics technology offers a unique opportunity to balance human interests and wildlife conservation, but another view notes that sensors are just one way to detect the presence of elephants. In other words it is just a tool. According to a leading Indian expert Prof. Raman Sukumar of the Indian Institute of Science, sensors need to be supplemented with other techniques.

Despite a few drawbacks, one could visualize the coherent and cogent policies India has applied in preventing elephant deaths and also minimizing damage in this seemingly intractable conflict between man and elephant.

 

 



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Opinion

Capt. Dinham Suhood flies West

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A few days ago, we heard the sad news of the passing on of Capt. Dinham Suhood. Born in 1929, he was the last surviving Air Ceylon Captain from the ‘old guard’.

He studied at St Joseph’s College, Colombo 10. He had his flying training in 1949 in Sydney, Australia and then joined Air Ceylon in late 1957. There he flew the DC3 (Dakota), HS748 (Avro), Nord 262 and the HS 121 (Trident).

I remember how he lent his large collection of ‘Airfix’ plastic aircraft models built to scale at S. Thomas’ College, exhibitions. That really inspired us schoolboys.

In 1971 he flew for a Singaporean Millionaire, a BAC One-Eleven and then later joined Air Siam where he flew Boeing B707 and the B747 before retiring and migrating to Australia in 1975.

Some of my captains had flown with him as First Officers. He was reputed to have been a true professional and always helpful to his colleagues.

He was an accomplished pianist and good dancer.

He passed on a few days short of his 97th birthday, after a brief illness.

May his soul rest in peace!

To fly west my friend is a test we must all take for a final check

Capt. Gihan A Fernando

RCyAF/ SLAF, Air Ceylon, Air Lanka, Singapore Airlines, SriLankan Airlines

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Opinion

Global warming here to stay

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The cause of global warming, they claim, is due to ever increasing levels of CO2. This is a by-product of burning fossil fuels like oil and gas, and of course coal. Environmentalists and other ‘green’ activists are worried about rising world atmospheric levels of CO2.  Now they want to stop the whole world from burning fossil fuels, especially people who use cars powered by petrol and diesel oil, because burning petrol and oil are a major source of CO2 pollution. They are bringing forward the fateful day when oil and gas are scarce and can no longer be found and we have no choice but to travel by electricity-driven cars – or go by foot.  They say we must save energy now, by walking and save the planet’s atmosphere.

THE DEMON COAL

But it is coal, above all, that is hated most by the ‘green’ lobby. It is coal that is first on their list for targeting above all the other fossil fuels. The eminently logical reason is that coal is the dirtiest polluter of all. In addition to adding CO2 to the atmosphere, it pollutes the air we breathe with fine particles of ash and poisonous chemicals which also make us ill. And some claim that coal-fired power stations produce more harmful radiation than an atomic reactor.

STOP THE COAL!

Halting the use of coal for generating electricity is a priority for them. It is an action high on the Green party list.

However, no-one talks of what we can use to fill the energy gap left by coal. Some experts publicly claim that unfortunately, energy from wind or solar panels, will not be enough and cannot satisfy our demand for instant power at all times of the day or night at a reasonable price.

THE ALTERNATIVES

It seems to be a taboo to talk about energy from nuclear power, but this is misguided. Going nuclear offers tried and tested alternatives to coal. The West has got generating energy from uranium down to a fine art, but it does involve some potentially dangerous problems, which are overcome by powerful engineering designs which then must be operated safely. But an additional factor when using URANIUM is that it produces long term radioactive waste.  Relocating and storage of this waste is expensive and is a big problem.

Russia in November 2020, very kindly offered to help us with this continuous generating problem by offering standard Uranium modules for generating power. They offered to handle all aspects of the fuel cycle and its disposal.  In hindsight this would have been an unbelievable bargain. It can be assumed that we could have also used Russian expertise in solving the power distribution flows throughout the grid.

THORIUM

But thankfully we are blessed with a second nuclear choice – that of the mildly radioactive THORIUM, a much cheaper and safer solution to our energy needs.

News last month (January 2026) told us of how China has built a container ship that can run on Thorium for ten years without refuelling.  They must have solved the corrosion problem of the main fluoride mixing container walls. China has rare earths and can use AI computers to solve their metallurgical problems – fast!

Nevertheless, Russia can equally offer Sri Lanka Thorium- powered generating stations. Here the benefits are even more obviously evident. Thorium can be a quite cheap source of energy using locally mined material plus, so importantly, the radioactive waste remains dangerous for only a few hundred years, unlike uranium waste.

Because they are relatively small, only the size of a semi-detached house, such thorium generating stations can be located near the point of use, reducing the need for UNSIGHTLY towers and power grid distribution lines.

The design and supply of standard Thorium reactor machines may be more expensive but can be obtained from Russia itself, or China – our friends in our time of need.

Priyantha Hettige

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Opinion

Will computers ever be intelligent?

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Alan Turin and the Turin machine

The Island has recently published various articles on AI, and they are thought-provoking. This article is based on a paper I presented at a London University seminar, 22 years ago.

Will computers ever be intelligent? This question is controversial and crucial and, above all, difficult to answer. As a scientist and student of philosophy, how am I going to answer this question is a problem. In my opinion this cannot be purely a philosophical question. It involves science, especially the new branch of science called “The Artificial Intelligence”. I shall endeavour to answer this question cautiously.

Philosophers do not collect empirical evidence unlike scientists. They only use their own minds and try to figure out the way the world is. Empirical scientists collect data, repeat and predict the behaviour of matter and analyse them.

We can see that the question—”Will computers ever be intelligent?”—comes under the branch of philosophy known as Philosophy of Mind. Although philosophy of mind is a broad area, I am concentrating here mainly on the question of consciousness. Without consciousness there is no intelligence. While they often coincide in humans and animals, they can exist independently, especially in AI, which can be highly intelligent without being conscious.

AI and philosophers

It appears that Artificial Intelligence holds a special attraction for philosophers. I am not surprised about this as Al involves using computers to solve problems that seem to require human reasoning. Apart from solving complicated mathematical problems it can understand natural language. Computers do not “understand” human language in the human sense of comprehension; rather, they use Natural Language Processing (NLP) and machine learning to analyse patterns in data. Artificial Intelligence experts claim certain programmes can have the possibility of not only thinking like humans but also understanding concepts and becoming conscious.

The study of the possible intelligence of logical machines makes a wonderful test case for the debate between mind and brain. This debate has been going on for the last two and a half centuries. If material things, made up entirely of logical processes, can do exactly what the brain can, the question is whether the mind is material or immaterial.

Although the common belief is that philosophers think for the sake of thinking, it is not necessarily so. Early part of the 20th century brought about advances in logic and analytical philosophy in Britain. It was a philosopher (Ludwig Wittgenstein) who invented the truth table. This was a simple analytic tool useful in his early work. But this was absolutely essential to the conceptual basis of early computer science. Computer science and brain science have developed together and that is why the challenge of the thinking machine is so important for the philosophy of mind. My argument so far has been to justify how and why AI is important to philosophers and vice versa.

Looking at computers now, we can see that the more sophisticated the computer, the more it is able to emulate rather than stimulate our thought processes. Every time the neuroscientists discover the workings of the brain, they try to mimic brain activity with machines.

How can one tell if a computer is intelligent? We can ask it some questions or set a test and study its response and satisfy ourselves that there is some form of intelligence inside this box. Let us look at the famous Alan Turing Test. Imagine a person sitting at a terminal (A) typing questions. This terminal is connected to two other machines, (B) and (C). At terminal (B) sits another person (B) typing responses to the questions from person (A). (C) is not a human being, but a computer programmed to respond to the questions. If person (A) cannot tell the difference between person (B) and computer(C), then we can deduce that computer is as intelligent as person (B). Critics of this test think that there is nothing brilliant about it. As this is a pragmatic exercise and one need not have to define intelligence here. This must have amused the scientists and the philosophers in the early days of the computers. Nowadays, computers can do much more sophisticated work.

Chinese Room experiment

The other famous experiment is John Sealer’s Chinese room experiment. *He uses this experiment to debunk the idea that computers could be intelligent. For Searle, the mind and the brain are the same. But he warns us that we should not get carried away with the emulative success of the machines as mind contains an irreducible subjective quality. He claims that consciousness is a biological process. It is found in humans as well as in certain animals. It is interesting to note that he believes that the mind is entirely contained in the brain. And the empirical discovery of neural processes cannot be applied to outside the brain. He discards mind-body dualism and thinks that we cannot build a brain outside the body. More commonly, we believe the mind is totally in the brain, and all firing together and between, and what we call ‘thought’ comes from their multifarious collaboration.

Patricia and Paul Churchland are keen on neuroscientific methods rather than conventional psychology. They argue that the brain is really a processing machine in action. It is an amazing organ with a delicately organic structure. It is an example of a computer from the future and that at present we can only dream of approaching its processing speed. I think this is not something to be surprised about. The speed of the computer doubles every year and a half and in the distant future there will be machines computing faster than human beings. Further, the Churchlands’, strongly believe that through science one day we will replicate the human brain. To argue against this, I am putting forward the following true story.

I remember watching an Open University (London) education programme some years ago. A team of professors did an experiment on pavement hawkers in Bogota, Colombia. They were fruit sellers. The team bought a large number of miscellaneous items from these street vendors. This was repeated on a number of occasions. Within a few seconds, these vendors did mental calculations and came out with the amounts to be paid and the change was handed over equally fast. It was a success and repeatable and predictable. The team then took the sample population into a classroom situation and taught them basic arithmetic skills. After a few months of training they were given simple sums to do on selling fruit. Every one of them failed. These people had the brain structure that of ordinary human beings. They were skilled at their own jobs. But they could not be programmed to learn a set of rules. This poses the question whether we can create a perfect machine that will learn all the human transferable skills.

Computers and human brains excel at different tasks. For instance, a computer can remember things for an infinite amount of time. This is true as long as we don’t delete the computer files. Also, solving equations can be done in milliseconds. In my own experience when I was an undergraduate, I solved partial differential equations and it took me hours and a lot of paper. The present-day students have marvellous computer programmes for this. Let alone a mere student of mathematics, even a mathematical genius couldn’t rival computers in the above tasks. When it comes to languages, we can utter sentences of a completely foreign language after hearing it for the first time. Accents and slang can be decoded in our minds. Such algorithms, which we take for granted, will be very difficult for a computer.

I always maintain that there is more to intelligence than just being brilliant at quick thinking. A balanced human being to my mind is an intelligent person. An eccentric professor of Quantum Mechanics without feelings for life or people, cannot be considered an intelligent person. To people who may disagree with me, I shall give the benefit of the doubt and say most of the peoples’ intelligence is departmentalised. Intelligence is a total process.

Other limitations to AI

There are other limitations to artificial intelligence. The problems that existing computer programmes can handle are well-defined. There is a clear-cut way to decide whether a proposed solution is indeed the right one. In an algebraic equation, for example, the computer can check whether the variables and constants balance on both sides. But in contrast, many of the problems people face are ill-defined. As of yet, computer programmes do not define their own problems. It is not clear that computers will ever be able to do so in the way people do. Another crucial difference between humans and computers concerns “common sense”. An understanding of what is relevant and what is not. We possess it and computers don’t. The enormous amount of knowledge and experience about the world and its relevance to various problems computers are unlikely to have.

In this essay, I have attempted to discuss the merits and limitations of artificial intelligence, and by extension, computers. The evolution of the human brain has occurred over millennia, and creating a machine that truly matches human intelligence and is balanced in terms of emotions may be impossible or could take centuries

*The Chinese Room experiment, proposed by philosopher John Searle, challenges the idea that computers can truly “understand” language. Imagine a person locked in a room who does not know Chinese. They receive Chinese symbols through a slot and use an instruction manual to match them with other symbols to produce correct replies. To outsiders, it appears the person understands Chinese, but in reality, they are only following rules. Searle argues that similarly, a computer may process language convincingly without genuine understanding or consciousness.

by Sampath Anson Fernando

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