100,000 turtles sacrificed in ritual slaughter to celebrate Hindu festival
by Daily Mail Reporter, 10/27/11 

You must see the pictures that go with this article go to 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2054278/100-000-turtles-sacrificed-ritual-slaughter-
celebrate-Hindu-festival.html#ixzz1c67wbOqs

Comment from someone who has lived in S Asia and SEAsia for 20 plus years.
- it's Hindus and Muslims each using loopholes in their respective religious 
tenets to make a buck 
for anunwarranted 'tradition'. Travesty.

THE ARTICLE

A Hindu festival that celebrates light has been shrouded in darkness following 
the sacrificial 
slaughter of up to 100,000 turtles. 

Shown in these horrifying images, critically endangered species including the 
northern river 
terrapin and the black soft-shell turtle, are sacrificed in the name of 
religion. 

The ancient ritual takes place during the celebration of Kali Puja, which 
started in Bengal yesterday.
Held once a year, and corresponding with the festival Diwali, sacrifices are 
made to Kali, the Hindu 
goddess of power. 

During Kali Puja, market streets are teeming with devotees who purchase and 
consume thousands 
of turtles. 

One of the species found on Dhaka's markets is the northern river terrapin.

On paper it is offered the same level of protection as a tiger. 

Another targeted species is the black soft-shell, which has only recently been 
officially been found 
in the wild and it has a single population in a pond in the region of 
Chittagong.

Even though many of the turtles are critically endangered and feature on 
Schedule 1 of the Indian 
Wildlife Protection Act, the slaughter is often overlooked by authorities. 

The act has enraged conservation groups in India and abroad.

"Since the killing of turtles was made illegal, this mass slaughter has been 
carried out in the name 
of 'religion'," said Dr Rashid of Centre for Advanced Research in Natural 
Resources & Management 
(CARINAM) in Bangladesh.

'It's because of this that the authorities turn a blind eye - they are too 
scared of causing social 
unrest." 
At Dhaka's Tanti Market, the turtles are butchered and their meat, limbs and 
organs are then sold 
to customers. 

The meat sells for between $10 - $60 per kilo (£6-£37), depending on the 
species. 
Followers believe that by eating the turtle, they will take on its strength and 
longevity.
During festival, the majority of Bangladesh's Hindu population consume turtle 
meat. 

Businessman Sunil Kumar Bala commented: "We have been eating turtles during 
Kali Puja for a long 
time. It is a tradition that we will maintain even if the government tries to 
stop us."
The turtle trade offers a source of income to up to 30,000 people.

Hari, the longest serving trader of turtles in Dhaka's markets, estimates he 
has been responsible 
for killing around 20,000 tons of turtles.
 
"If this this trade stops, many people's livelihoods will suffer," he said.

"I have been doing this for the last 40 years, if you stop this now, what will 
I do?"

Turtle conservationists, however, are up in arms.

"The Kali Puja turtle market is a wildlife travesty of the worst kind," said 
Rick Hudson of the Turtle 
Survival Alliance (TSA) in Fort Worth, US.

"The brutality with which turtles are slaughtered is gruesome, shocking and an 
abomination of 
nature."

Once the market concludes, the shells are cleaned, scraped of meat and then 
dried. 

The dried shell has multiple uses. It is processed and fed to fish and chicken. 

The pharmaceutical industry uses it to make the containers of capsules for 
antibiotics and other 
drugs.

However, the majority of dried shell is shipped to south east Asia where it is 
used in traditional 
medicine. It is believed that consuming turtle shell increases virility.

As night fell in Dhaka yesterday, the ceremonies began. During sacrifices to 
Kali, goats were 
beheaded and turtles impaled upside down on poles. 

As they tried to escape, their head and legs were chopped off.

Turtles have been on earth for over 220 million years, even surviving K-T 
boundary that wiped out 
the dinosaurs. 

Now they are amongst the world's most endangered animals; around half of their 
300+ species are 
threatened with extinction.

"Turtles are being collected, traded, and eaten or otherwise used, in 
overwhelming numbers.

"They are used for food, pets, traditional medicine-eggs, juveniles, adults, 
body parts-all are 
exploited indiscriminately, with little regard for sustainability. On top of 
the targeted onslaught, 
their habitats are being increasingly fragmented, destroyed, developed, and 
polluted," from 
"Turtles in Trouble" by the Turtle Conservation Coalition.

Over recent years Bangladesh has become a hot spot for the illegal turtle 
smuggling trade. 

Animals are smuggled in from neighbouring nations and then re-exported due to 
Bangladesh's 
porous border security. 

The current outlook for many of the species is grim.

"This situation is completely unsustainable. Unless the trade for turtles stops 
and a slaughter in the 
name of religion is regulated, a number of species will be lost forever," said 
Dr. Rashid.

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