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                                                    Imagine yourself happily walking down a lane along  with family and friends, when you suddenly find a tempting tasty morsel of food  you love dangled in front of you. You bite into it only to have a nasty sharp  hook imbedded in your cheek or gullet and the next instant you are hauled up to  the first floor of a building where you are battered to death. That’s what  angling is… shikar in Hindi. 
                                                      
Angling and hunting are cruel “blood sports”. 
 
Many packages for tourists and some holiday resorts are promoting fishing and  angling because they consider India to be the “upcoming paradise for anglers”.  They lure people with colourful advertisements into believing it is a family  activity that bonds children and parents outdoors. They go to the extent of  combining its promotion along with bird watching, trekking and mountaineering. 
 
Under political  patronage, the Kerala Homestay and Tourism Society (Kerala-HATS) held an  angling festival/contest on the Old Mattancherry Bridge at Kochi in July 2012.  Prizes were given to the person who caught the first, the biggest and the  highest number of fish. 
 
It is said that due to  greed of anglers, fish like the famous mahseer are fast depleting in number, nevertheless, trout, goonch (catfish), kalabasu and other fishing in India is being made popular by groups promoting holidays  as mentioned.  
 
Anglers hypocritically talk about their support to conservation and artificial  propagation of rare fishes and even demand a ban on illegal methods of fishing! 
 
Fish feel as much pain as humans. Aquatic lives feel stress and pain  when injured as they writhe and gasp for air. They all have complex nervous  systems and there is scientific evidence that they undergo suffering and  distress. Chased, confined, or otherwise threatened, they react as humans do to  stress with increased heart and breathing rates, and adrenal hormone release.  Bio-chemically and structurally the central nervous systems of fish closely  resemble that of humans. 
 
Tigers are not the only  attraction at Corbett National Park, people are known to step off the tiger  trail and go on a quest for the mahseer for which paid fishing licences are issued because this freshwater carp is  endangered and can only be found in the Ramganga and Cauvery rivers. 
 
So much for conservation… killing mahseer is not  allowed and within a stipulated time the fish hooked on purpose has to be  compulsorily put back into the water: the “playing” of fish is barbaric as it  puts the fish through a long ordeal of stress, pain, fear, struggle, agony and  torture. The average time it takes to land a mahseer is 1:1 ratio weight/minute – its weight is then recorded  and photographed with the torturer by which time irreversible damage is done  even though the fish gets thrown back into the water. The hook (even if  barb-less) injures and traumatises the fish which will probably die of shock, inability  to eat, or of microbial or fungal infections. Cutting the line and leaving the  hook in the fish is worse. 
 
In August 2011 Beauty Without Cruelty wrote a detailed letter to the Union  Minister of Environment & Forests requesting that the intense cruelty  involved in angling fish like the endangered mahseer be looked into and to ban the cruel practice of catching  and returning/releasing fish back into the water. 
                                                     
                                                     Instead of writing yet again to the  Ministry of Environment & Forests, in March 2013 BWC approached the Chief  Conservators of Forests and Chief Wildlife Wardens about the cruelty and  illegality involved in angling fish like the mahseer, trout and others. Several confirmed that taking necessary  steps to stop anglers from catching and returning/releasing the fish back into  the water. 
                                                    
                                                     Many anglers try to entice  their friends to join their tribe. They consider fishing a rewarding “sport”  and feel it helps them unwind and relax during the time they patiently wait  with their fishing rods in hand. 
   
                                                     Those who accompany anglers to rivers and lakes indirectly support fishing. It  is akin to giving company to a murderer on his mission. 
                                                      
                                                     Pledge never to go fishing  – even accompany anglers. 
                                                      
                                                     For detailed information on Angling please read 
                                                     http://www.bwcindia.org/Web/Awareness/LearnAbout/Angling.html  
                                                                                                   
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