City
Epaper

BJP, Congress spar over monkey menace in Rajasthan Assembly

By IANS | Updated: February 23, 2026 21:55 IST

Jaipur, Feb 23 The growing problem of monkeys entering residential areas and attacking people was raised in the ...

Open in App

Jaipur, Feb 23 The growing problem of monkeys entering residential areas and attacking people was raised in the Rajasthan Assembly on Monday, with Congress MLA from Shahpura, Manish Yadav, flagging the issue through a Calling Attention Motion.

Responding to the motion, Minister of State (MoS) for Urban Development, Jhabar Singh Kharra, said that increasing monkey populations, food shortages, and human encroachment into forest areas have forced monkeys to migrate into villages and cities.

"Monkeys are moving between villages and urban areas, and many of them are mischievous. They attack children and the elderly. Local bodies capture them and release them elsewhere, but they return within a week," MoS Kharra said, adding that the state Forest Department needs to provide designated feeding and habitation zones as a long-term solution.

He added that the state government is making continuous efforts to release monkeys into natural habitats and is working on a permanent solution based on suggestions from legislators.

Fifty to sixty years ago, monkey jugglers would bring monkeys to villages and towns and show them to children, told them that they were also animals.

There are two types of monkeys: the Hanuman monkey and the red-faced monkey, which biology suggests are human ancestors.

Humans, too, evolved from monkeys to humans.

"The Forest Department has now delisted monkey from the wild animal category, and now it is neither a wild animal nor a village-city animal. When monkeys are captured and released into the wild, they return to villages and cities within a week. The only solution is for the Forest Department to provide them with a place to eat and food."

MoS Kharra told the House that in the Shahpura Assembly constituency, 664 monkeys were captured and released in 2019–20, 310 in 2020–21, 919 in 2021–22, and 191 in 2022–23.

He invited suggestions from all MLAs to help the state government take concrete decisions to address the issue.

Congress MLA Manish Yadav said the problem is severe, claiming that 4,200 people in his Assembly constituency were vaccinated for rabies in 2025, and a 90 per cent of these cases were due to monkey bites, which he added is a serious public health concern.

State Forest Minister Sanjay Sharma said the Urban Development Minister Kharra had addressed issues related to the Forest Department and assured that the suggestions would be implemented.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessS. Korea's exports top $80 billion for 2nd month in April

NationalGujarat Foundation Day: HM Amit Shah, Nitin Nabin highlight state’s development, legacy

InternationalUS Embassy in Lebanon says citizens "have opportunity to reclaim country"

Cricket"Players must be responsible": Sangakkara on RR's culture amid recent controversies ahead of DC clash

CricketTwo milestones within Yashasvi Jaiswal's reach ahead of RR-DC clash

National Realted Stories

National"No real improvement in workers' condition": BSP chief Mayawati raises concerns on Labour Day

NationalMamata Banerjee’s EVM apprehensions are imaginary, reflect fear of defeat: Suvendu Adhikari

National'Teachings of Gautam Buddha inspire non-violence, compassion and peace': Rahul Gandhi on Buddha Purnima

National"Political disturbance in Karnataka impacts the governance of current government": BJP Spokesperson Prakash Reddy

NationalAdani Group chairman Gautam Adani and his wife offer prayers at Kedarnath temple on 40th wedding anniversary