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Sri Lanka Arrests Three Accused Of Killing Leopard For Asthma Cure

    Advertisement Sri Lankan police on Friday arrested three people suspected of trapping and killing an endangered leopard and trying to sell its meat … Continue reading Sri Lanka Arrests Three Accused Of Killing Leopard For Asthma Cure


Leopard killings
A Sri Lankan police Chief Inspector holds the severed head of a leopard who was entrapped in a snare and killed, in Ududumbara some 50 kms from the city of Kandy in central Sri Lanka on September 25, 2020. – Sri Lanka’s police on September 25 arrested three people, including a woman, for entrapping and killing of an endangered leopard and trying to sell its meat as a cure for asthma. (Photo by – / AFP) / Alternative crop

 

Leopard killings
A Sri Lankan police Chief Inspector holds the severed head of a leopard who was entrapped in a snare and killed, in Ududumbara some 50 kms from the city of Kandy in central Sri Lanka on September 25, 2020. – Sri Lanka’s police on September 25 arrested three people, including a woman, for entrapping and killing of an endangered leopard and trying to sell its meat as a cure for asthma. (Photo by – / AFP) / 

 

Sri Lankan police on Friday arrested three people suspected of trapping and killing an endangered leopard and trying to sell its meat as a cure for asthma.

The trio were detained after police raided their home following a tip-off that they had used a snare to catch the creature in the central highlands.

“They cut the head off and killed the animal after it got caught in the snare on Thursday,” chief inspector Dushantha Kangara told AFP by phone.

He said the suspects had thrown the leopard’s head in the forest and removed the carcass to sell the animal’s skin, meat and other body parts.

Several leopards have been trapped by snares in the region, some 175 kilometres (110 miles) east of Colombo.

Kangara said there was a popular belief that leopard meat could cure asthma.

Police seized 17 kilos (37 pounds) of leopard meat from the three suspects.

There are believed to be fewer than 1,000 leopards in the wild in Sri Lanka, and harming the big cat is punishable by up to five years’ jail.

Wildlife conservationists have asked the authorities to ban snares and to prosecute those who use them.

AFP