Key PointsRhesus monkeys are a menace in lots of areas of India’s nationwide capital.The G20 summit will happen in New Delhi subsequent week.Authorities are additionally offering meals to monkeys in forested areas to make sure they don’t wander past the boundaries.
Life-size cutouts of langurs have sprung up in a number of elements of New Delhi over the previous few days as officers look to forestall the smaller rhesus monkeys from taking part in spoilsport through the G20 summit that may happen subsequent week.
Rhesus monkeys are a menace in lots of areas in India’s nationwide capital, working throughout busy roads with out warning – placing each themselves and motorists in danger – and infrequently attacking unsuspecting pedestrians or residents.
The langur – an even bigger primate with a black face – is often utilized by authorities within the metropolis to scare away monkeys, with the antidote already working effectively on this occasion, officers mentioned.
“We can’t hurt them or take away them (the monkeys), our solely possibility is to restrict them to their (forested) areas,” mentioned Satish Upadhyay, the vice-chairperson of the New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC), which is finishing up the work.
Aside from putting the cutouts of langurs alongside main roads and in areas that monkeys are inclined to frequent, the NDMC has deployed “30 to 40 folks” who mock their sounds to create the impression that the animals are alive and shifting.
As well as, the authority has began offering meals to monkeys in forested areas to make sure they don’t wander past the boundaries.
“We began putting these cutouts within the metropolis during the last week and are already seeing a optimistic influence. Monkeys have stopped going to the areas the place these are current,” Upadhyay mentioned.
This isn’t the primary time New Delhi has turned to langurs to resolve its monkey downside throughout a serious worldwide occasion.
Langurs have been rented and placed on obligation when the Commonwealth Video games have been held within the metropolis in 2010.