Sunday, July 26, 2009

My lord abhi to do order.

Taj ke tandoor mein jala do kasab ke tang. Gateway ke dome mein do kasab ko phasi. Nariman house ke terrace se phek do kasab ki lash. Anda cell mein kasab ka kar do omlette. Tie him on the Taj dome and blowup the dome. Throw his body pieces in sea from where he came .. these are very less way’s people can do for Kasab.

Almost every Indian blood is boiling watching everyday legal proceedings. Its almost taking patience of all police staff family who died on 26/11 Mumbai attack. The Legal proceedings are so slow that a legal expert has said, that even if he is being given “hang him till death order”, it will take few more years since there is a long queue for mercy plea with President of India. Huss !!!! that is India… I think US had done a quick job of executing Mr Sadam.

God knows how much time it will take for the legal process to set his neck with a tight noose. What I feel is for such special cases, Indian Govt should allow to stone the terrorist till death in streets, same which is done in some Gulf countries. Indian Govt is spending crores for this coward terrorist just to protect. He does not deserve such luxury.

Mr Kasab is literally doing timepass to divert legal proceedings and just giving time to plan his rescue efforts by his people. Though he is a small kid but he is being trained, to tackle legal queries. He will not give up so soon as he knows the Indian Legal system will keep him alive, atleast for few more years.. till then another plane hijack or attack to release this fellow.

Pakistan the heaven for terrorist is always ready with new plans to put down India. They have open camps along the borders which train them, provide huge money to these young people and keep their family happy. Money coming from growing opium in Afghanistan and selling high end drugs all over the world. So this terrorism is not only killing us externally but also internally through drugs.

My request to court is please handover Kasab to public and let them take care of him and not waste time and money for futile issues.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Elephant rage

Elephants are among the world's most potentially dangerous animals, capable of crushing and killing any other land animal, from humans to lions and even rhino. They can experience unexpected bouts of rage, and can be vindictive. In Africa, groups of young teenage elephants attack human villages in what is thought to be revenge for the destruction of their society by massive cullings done in the 1970s and 80s. In India, male elephants attack villages at night, destroying homes and killing people on a regular basis. In the Indian state of Jharkhand, 300 people were killed by elephants between 2000 and 2004, and in Assam, 239 people have been killed by elephants since 2001. In India alone there are up to 200 elephant-caused human deaths every year, and in Sri Lanka around 50 per year.

Musth:
Adult male elephants naturally enter the periodic state called musth (Hindi for madness), sometimes spelt "must" in English. It is characterised by very excited and/or aggressive behavior and a thick, tar-like liquid secretion that discharges through the temporal ducts from the temporal glands on the sides of the head. Musth is linked to sexual arousal or establishing dominance, but this relationship is far from clear. A musth elephant, wild or domesticated, is extremely dangerous to humans. Domesticated elephants in India are traditionally tied to a tree and denied food and water for several days, after which the musth passes. Inzoos, musth is often the cause of fatal accidents to elephant keepers. Zoos keeping adult male elephants need extremely secure enclosures, which greatly complicates the attempts to breed elephants in zoos.
Musth is accompanied by a significant rise in reproductive hormones. Testosterone levels in an elephant in musth can be as much as 60 times greater than in the same elephant at other times. However, whether this hormonal surge is the sole cause of musth, or merely a contributing factor is unknown: scientific investigation of musth is greatly hindered by the fact that even the most otherwise placid of elephants may actively try to kill any and all humans. Similarly, the tar-like secretion remains largely uncharacterised, due to the difficulties of collecting a sample for analysis.

Although it has often been speculated that musth is linked to rut, this is unlikely, because the female elephant's estrus cycle is not seasonally-linked. Furthermore, bulls in musth have often been known to attack female elephants, regardless of whether or not the females are in heat.

The Hindi word "musth" is from the Urdu mast, which in turn is from a Persian root meaning "intoxicated".

The Story below is fiction based and nothing related to actual behaviour of an elephant.

I was traveling across the villages of assam in a bus last summer. I had heard lot about elephants around the jungles and stories about their rages. These giant tusked animals are basically used in jungles for carrying logs of wood and taming other wild elephants.

While traveling by the bus I suddenly heard a thump noise behind the bus. The bus was traveling a very low speed in the jungle ghat and it was an annoyed elephant banging the bus behind. The bus driver got scared and started galloping the bus, but the huge tusk animal did not leave the trail. Some how we managed to get down the ghat safely but the mammoth was still behind us. The locals got scared and were murmuring definitely something is wrong with this guy. As the bus stopped for people to get down the elephant had almost got one guy from the window but just missed few inches as the bus just started and moved along. The conductor informed the driver about the incident and asked him to move ahead, with out stopping till we reach the city.

Since it was a very rough terrain bus moved slowly and we could see the elephant following us. One of the Sadhu co passenger started his speeches…. Telling everybody who ever has done maximum sins he will be smashed by the elephant. Luckily the elephant got stuck in a big pothole on the road, we sighed a huge relief. But still few meters ahead we still saw following us. This continue for few hours and atlast we reached the city and the elephant vanished.

Later on the driver came out of his cabin and declared why she was behind us. Since the very bus had killed his baby elephant last year and its being behind the bus for quite a long time. I never traveled by road when in Assam and took airways to travel. Never know when a giant one will get musth.