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The Division Forest Office has distributed fruit plants to 60 affected farmers of the district whose crops were damaged by wild animals such as monkeys and wild boars in the past years. There are also farmers who have suffered human losses due to leopard attacks.
District Coordination Committee Chief Jeevnarayan Koirala, Chief District Officer Gopal Aryal and Forest Office Chief Mohan Shrestha distributed saplings to 60 farmers at the Forest Office on Thursday. Information officer Keshar Khadka said that the Forest has been distributing hundreds of timber and fruit plants including timur produced in different places to the farmers.
The aggrieved farmers requested help from the forest office after the wild animals destroyed the grain crops that had started to be produced in the fields. On the basis of the demand, the forest asked to plant fruit plants that are not damaged by wild animals. The forest has also requested to grow plants to sell fruits.
"You cannot kill wild animals according to various rules and laws," Prazia Aryal said, "There is a complaint that wild animals including monkeys and boars have caused a lot of damage to the grain crops. It is appropriate to go for crops that are not damaged by wild animals such as Timur, Tejpat.
The food crops produced by the farmers of the village were damaged by wild animals last year. As a form of relief, the Division Forest Office has provided mango, lychee, orange, avocado and other fruit plants to the farmers. The farmers are happy after getting the seedlings. Monkeys and wild boars have damaged agricultural production in Arghakhachi.
