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India.com
5 days ago
- General
- India.com
Gangtok's Himalayan Zoo Welcomes Twin Red Panda Cubs As Lucky Turns Mother
Two tiny red panda cubs recently made their debut at the Bulbulee Himalayan Zoological Park in Gangtok. With their large eyes and close-knit presence, the newborns add fresh hope for conservation amid declining wild populations. For now, they'll stay with their mother in a secure enclosure for approximately one year before being gradually introduced to the public, Says BJP Leader Dilip Ghosh on X. Four tiny eyes,huddled together in silence.2 new guests have arrived at Gangtok's Bulbulee #HimalayanZoologicalPark .Red panda'Lucky'gave birth to two cubs. For now, they will remain with their mother in enclosure for a year, after which they will be introduced to the visitors. — Dilip Ghosh (Modi Ka Parivar) (@DilipGhoshBJP) August 1, 2025 The birth of Lucky's cubs is particularly significant because red pandas (Ailurus fulgens) continue to be under threat from habitat destruction, poaching, and illegal wildlife trade. According to ICUN, less than 10,000 individuals remain, with only 2,500–6,000 in India, scattered across high-altitude regions like Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Darjeeling, and Meghalaya. Red pandas in India are primarily found in the Eastern Himalayas, specifically in Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, and the Darjeeling and Kalimpong districts of West Bengal. They inhabit high-altitude, temperate forests with bamboo undergrowth. Red pandas rely on dense bamboo forests in the Eastern Himalayas, but rapid deforestation, habitat fragmentation from logging and road-building, and illegal poaching for fur and exotic pet trade have drastically reduced their numbers. Despite international protection under CITES Appendix I and India's own Wildlife Protection Act, enforcement gaps persist. Community-based conservation efforts and captive-breeding programs—such as those at Darjeeling's Padmaja Naidu Himalayan Zoological Park—are critical. The Park recently pioneered rewilding programs and genetic biobanking, and now hosts a "frozen zoo" to preserve endangered species' DNA, including that of the red panda. "Wild Wonders: These Rare Creatures Will Melt Your Heart" They are of two dfferent species: Himalayan red panda (Ailurus fulgens fulgens), resides in the mountains of northern India, Tibet, Bhutan, and Nepal, and the Chinese red panda (A. fulgens styani), lives in China's Sichuan and Yunnan provinces. Red pandas are mostly solitary animals, except during mating season or when a mother is raising display dense reddish‑brown fur on top, black underside, with a white face and tear‑like markings under the eyes. Their bushy tail has faint rings, Reports Britannica


Deccan Herald
30-07-2025
- Politics
- Deccan Herald
Arunachal BJP MP requests Indian government to confer Dalai Lama with Bharat Ratna
Today during Matters of Public Importance in Parliament, I urged the Govt of India to confer the Bharat Ratna on HH the 14th Dalai Lama ji; he being the messenger of global symbol of peace, non-violence, and compassion. 1/3 — Tapir Gao (Modi Ka Parivar) (@TapirGao) July 30, 2025 Only the Tibetan spiritual tradition holds that right as his reincarnation is done through the spiritual traditions of Nalanda Buddhism of Tibet. #DalaiLama #PadmaShri #Peace #Parliament #Tibet #SpiritualFreedom 3/3 — Tapir Gao (Modi Ka Parivar) (@TapirGao) July 30, 2025


News18
05-05-2025
- Politics
- News18
Woman Removes Pakistani Flag From Stairs At Mumbai Station, Sparks Row
Last Updated: In the video, the burqa-clad woman can be seen scratching the flag pasted on the stairs at the railway station. A clash broke out between a burqa-clad woman and crowd after the former was seen trying to remove a Pakistani flag pasted on staircase outside Mumbai's Vile Parle railway station. A video of the incident went viral on social media platforms. In the video, the burqa-clad woman can be seen scratching the flag pasted on the stairs at the railway station. Later several people expressed their anger over the woman's act. Look at the incident at Vile Parle railway is more fanatic than Abdul. Remember, They have nothing to do with our these people living in India support Pakistan & other Islamic at how fanatic their women too, Hindus. #Traitor_Jihadi … — #ModiKaParivar #मोदीजी400पार (@deepakdkokha) May 5, 2025 Later the crowd and the woman got engaged in verbal quarrel. Netizens on social media platforms expressed their outrage over the woman's act. 'Look at the incident at Vile Parle railway station. Fatima is more fanatic than Abdul. Remember, They have nothing to do with our India," an X user said. 'We as Indians can never be united to fight our enemy neighbour until we have such people around us who love Pakistan more than India," commented another. The Pakistani flags were pasted in protest against the neighbouring country over alleged cross-border links in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam carnage last month, that claimed the lives of 26 individuals, including a foreign tourist. The protest was intended as a symbolic act, allowing people to trample on the flag in anger against Pakistan. The student, a Class 11 girl from Bahadur Nagar, was on her way home on a scooty when she noticed the flag stuck in the middle of the road. Seeing the flag, the girl stopped and attempted to remove it. Her actions were recorded by someone nearby, and the short video – about 12 seconds long – quickly spread on social media. What Happened In Pahalgam? In one of the biggest attacks in Jammu and Kashmir, Lashkar-linked terrorists opened fire on a group of tourists in Pahalgam on Tuesday, April 22, killing at least 26 people, including foreign tourists, and injuring many others. The Resistance Front (TRF), a Lashkar offshoot, claimed responsibility for the attack, although it later backtracked after massive global outrage. After the attack, the diplomatic ties between India and Pakistan were downgraded with New Delhi announcing several punitive measures, including suspension of Indus Water Treaty, cutting Islamabad Mission strength, closing its airspace for Pakistani airlines and expulsion of its military attaches. In response, Pakistan undertook tit-for-tat measures and suspended the Shimla Agreement. First Published: May 05, 2025, 12:05 IST