The Supreme Court today said "status quo" should be maintained on the relocation of alleged "man-eating" tiger -- called T-24 or 'Ustaad', from the Ranthambore reserved forest to an Udaipur zoo.
A vacation bench of Justices A K Sikri and U U Lalit also asked the Rajasthan High Court to expeditiously decide the plea of environmentalist Chandra Bhal Singh.
Singh has challenged the decision to shift the tiger on the grounds that it had never before attacked the hundreds of tourists visiting the forest.
"Let status quo be maintained till the petition is decided by the High Court," the apex court said while disposing of Singh's plea on the issue.
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The plea alleged that the wildlife department in Rajasthan had failed to take the requisite permission under section 12 of the Wildlife Protection Act before proceeding to relocate the tiger to the Sajjangarh Biological Park in Udaipur and hence the move was illegal.
The PIL said that the Tiger, on May 8, had attacked and killed a Forest Guard in "self defence" and a decision was taken the very next day to translocate it "without scientific probe or investigation into the circumstances of the attack."
"The tiger was alleged to be man-eater even though it has never attacked any of the thousands of pilgrims that frequent the Ganesh temple in the Ranthambhore Fort. Reason for attack was the encroachment on the tiger's territory," it said.