Late in the afternoon, I went visiting a friend. Incidentally, he has a shop selling poultry as his neighbour. The shop also incorporates a transit poultry shed which can house several hundred birds at any given time. As the shop was forced to close down, the transit shed had become a veritable poultry farm for several weeks until the birds were culled 2 days back.
The friend’s house is within the 5 kms radius where the culling of birds is still being in full swings.
My friend gave me an eye witness account of how a team of RRT(rapid response team) went on to cull birds on a given farm.
The team in their protective arrived at my friend’s neighbour late in the afternoon. First thing they asked for were sacks(Have you got any extra sacks?).
The look of their protective gears immediately attracted the attentions of the kids. As the team was preparing to get into action, the number of curious kids around the place also was gradually increased.
As it happened, the preferred method deployed by the team was first to hit the birds with an iron bar or a stout stick. They swung their iron bars or the sticks aiming at the heads of the birds! The immediate result was a mêlée in the shed—the croaks of the dying birds, the birds flying around and the birds running noisily to escape the swings of the iron bars or the sticks of the honourable team members of the RRT!
How kids love a melee?
All the kids immediately joined the actions, laying their small hands on the birds got hit by the RRT team or on the perfectly able birds running wildly in the shed. Then, they ran off to their houses with their prized catches!
That night the smell of chickens cooking wafted several houses across the shed in all four directions!
But what is truly alarming is that there are still birds in all the neighbouring households—the birds which were carried off by the kids on that day.
Finally, the RRT wrapped up their official duty by packing whatever chickens left behind in the sacks and rode off to bury the sacks in a designated spot.
The ongoing cull has just got the opposite impact: the scattering of live birds from within the confine of a farm to an even greater geographical area.
The scenario is truly frightening.
Friday, August 03, 2007
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