This Article is From Jan 25, 2019

Police At Taj Mahal Take Aim At Troops Of Monkeys With Slingshots

The marauding monkeys forage for food around the entrance to the 17th century monument in Agra, where visitors' bags are scanned and food thrown away.

Police At Taj Mahal Take Aim At Troops Of Monkeys With Slingshots

The head of the Taj Mahal security force said police received locally-made slingshots to fend off monkeys

NEW DELHI:

Police armed with slingshots are taking aim at troops of monkeys that harass visitors at Taj Mahal.

The marauding monkeys forage for food around the entrance to the 17th century monument in Agra, where visitors' bags are scanned and food thrown away.

Brij Bhushan, head of the Taj Mahal security force, said police received locally-made slingshots to fend off the monkeys.

"We found that monkeys get scared by just seeing us brandishing these slingshots," he told news agency Reuters.

There are 500-700 rhesus macaques living in and around the monument. Experts say they are becoming more aggressive as an expanding city encroaches on their natural habitats.

In November, a monkey snatched a 12-day-old boy from his mother outside Agra and killed him.

Taj Mahal guards have been told not to attack the monkeys but to scare them away from tourists, Mr Bhushan said.

Built by a Mughal emperor for his wife, the Taj Mahal has 25,000 visitors daily, rising to 80,000 during the peak tourist season.

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