MP: Kuno National Park reopens for tourists

Later, 12 cheetahs were brought from South Africa in February 2023 as part of the Indian govt's project to reintroduce cheetahs into the country.

Sheopur: The Kuno National Park in Madhya Pradesh, the only home of cheetahs in the country, reopened for tourists on Sunday, October 6 after being shut for the annual monsoon season.

But, the two-year wait of visitors to get a glimpse of the cheetahs is not yet over as the felines have not been released into the wild so far.

Nearly eight decades after the cheetahs were hunted to extinction, eight large carnivores were brought from Namibia to the KNP in September 2022 and put in bomas (enclosures) to revive their population in India.

Later, 12 cheetahs were brought from South Africa in February 2023 as part of the Indian government’s project to reintroduce cheetahs into the country.

The park, spread over an area of 1,235 sq km including a 487 sq km buffer zone, has reopened and visitors are allowed from 6.30 am to 10 am and from 3 pm to 6 pm, KNP’s director Uttam Sharma told PTI on Sunday.

He said the park is home to 24 cheetahs, the fastest land animals, including 12 adults brought from Namibia and South Africa.

Asked when tourists will get an opportunity to see the cursorial predators, Sharma said talks were on over it.

“The call on it will be taken by the Government of India which is spearheading the inter-continental translocation project,” another forest official said.

All the national parks in MP, except KNP, reopened on October 1 after remaining closed from July 1 due to the rainy season and mating period of wild animals.

On the delay in reopening of KNP, Sharma said it was due to excess rainfall in Sheopur district.

Roads inside the park were in bad shape due to torrential rains.

Sheopur district received the highest 1,323.2 mm rainfall in MP during the just concluded monsoon season from June 1 to September 30, against its average rainfall of 666.4 mm.

The district recorded 99 percent more rainfall than normal, said P K Raikwar, meteorologist with the India Meteorological Department’s (IMD) Bhopal Centre.

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