Poaching of urials goes unchecked
On Sept 29, the thick jungle near Ara village in the Salt Range echoed with a gunshot when the sun was about to set.
After an effort of two hours, a team from the wildlife department arrested two poachers and recovered a male urial from their possession which was killed by them.
The poachers had killed a male urial having horns of 24 to 26 inches which showed that they were after trophies to be placed in their drawing rooms as decoration pieces.
Both the poachers, residents of Ara village, were poor but the officials of the wildlife department were left surprised when the poachers immediately paid a fine of Rs110,000 on the spot.
Later, it transpired that both the men had killed the urial for an influential person who owned coalmines in the area.
This was the sole case of urial poaching in the last six months in which the poachers were apprehended.
The poaching of urial has increased alarmingly. Influential people are involved in the practice who go scot-free even when they are caught red-handed.
The hills of Salt Range, covered with thick forests, are the major habitat of Punjab Urial declared endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
To protect this threatened mammal, a national park, five wildlife sanctuaries and two game reserves were established in the region, consisting of four districts — Jhelum, Chakwal, Khushab and Mianwali — which fall between Jhelum and Indus rivers.
According to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) Pakistan, once the urials were present all over mountains in northern Punjab but for the last four decades its population has witnessed an alarming decline due to excessive and unabated hunting which prompted the IUCN to put the urial in the red list.
In 2004, a survey showed that the urial population had witnessed 56pc decline since 1980 as its total population was recorded to be 860 in the whole Salt Range.
This prompted the Punjab government to take measures to protect the population of urial.