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Elephant 'has leg broken' as it is beaten for India's tourist trade

Training process 'involves a tremendous amount of cruelty including starvation, beating and chaining them for days on end', charity warns

Samuel Osborne
Tuesday 05 December 2017 10:13 EST
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Elephant appears to have leg broken in punishment

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Disturbing video footage has emerged of an Asian elephant being beaten by its captors in an attempt to tame it for the Indian tourism trade.

The video shows the mammal with one of its front legs tied to a tree as three men take turns to beat it with canes.

The elephant drops to its knees before collapsing to the ground as the beating continues.

The men allegedly beat the animal so hard they broke one of its hind legs, animal charity Save the Asian Elephant (STAE) said.

Duncan McNair, STAE CEO, told Mail Online: "This horrific brutality filmed in India by an undercover supporter of STAE is another variation of torture called ketti azhikkal, intended to remind the elephant after coming out of musth - period surrounding mating where testosterone gets very high - of its human domination."

Nuggehalli Jayasimha, director of Humane Society International in India, told The Independent: "The practice of using and abusing elephants to serve the tourism industry in India is rampant and unethical to say the least.

"Elephants, by nature, do not perform the tricks essential to satiate the demands of this ever growing industry and hence the process of training the elephants to perform involves a tremendous amount of cruelty including starvation, beating and chaining them for days on end."

He added: "One of the easiest ways for people to put an end to this cruelty is to not participate in elephant rides. It's time for the Government of India to implement already existing guidelines to manage elephants in captivity."

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