Sri Lanka’s long-standing challenges in animal welfare have once again come into sharp focus, as conservationists and activists renew calls for urgent legal reform, humane population management, and stronger habitat protection for wildlife.

In a detailed appeal addressed to Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara of the Huong Dạo Vipassana Bhavana Centre in Fort Worth, Texas, a group of Sri Lankan animal rights activists and conservationists outlined what they describe as an escalating humanitarian and ecological crisis affecting both street animals and wildlife.

“We respectfully and warmly welcome you, together with the venerable monks and dear Aloka, to Sri Lanka,” the letter begins, acknowledging the monk’s spiritual mission and his association with compassionate initiatives for animals.

The appeal highlights Sri Lanka’s estimated street dog population—believed to be around three million—describing their widespread suffering due to inadequate sterilisation programmes, limited adoption systems, and lack of sustained national policy intervention. It notes that many animals live in conditions marked by disease, injury, starvation, and neglect, with survival largely dependent on community goodwill and under-supported volunteer networks.

The letter also draws attention to the worsening Human–Elephant Conflict, which remains one of Sri Lanka’s most pressing conservation issues.

Citing recent data, the activists note that between 2016 and recent years, more than 3,700 elephants have died due to various causes, including habitat loss, electrocution, gunshot wounds, and use of explosive bait to maim and eventually kill the majestic animals. In 2023 alone, 488 elephant deaths and 187 human fatalities were recorded, while early figures from the current year also indicate continued losses.

Forest cover, now estimated at less than 16%, has forced elephants into human settlements in search of food, intensifying the conflict and deepening ecological stress.

“These are not just statistics; they reflect a deep imbalance between development and ecological responsibility,” said Panchali Panapitiya, speaking on behalf of the group.

She emphasised that elephants, revered culturally and religiously in Sri Lanka, are increasingly becoming “internally displaced beings,” pushed out of their natural corridors and exposed to constant risk.

A central concern raised in the letter is Sri Lanka’s outdated legal structure for animal protection. The current law, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Ordinance of 1907, is described by activists as insufficient for modern animal welfare standards.

Despite years of discussion, a comprehensive Animal Welfare Bill has yet to be enacted, leaving what activists describe as a critical legal gap.

“The absence of updated legislation means cruelty often goes inadequately punished, and systemic protection for animals remains weak,” said Panchali Panapitiya.

The group has urged the government to prioritise the long-delayed Animal Welfare Bill, introduce nationwide sterilisation and adoption programmes for street dogs, and strengthen protection of elephant habitats and migratory corridors.

They also call for science-based wildlife management policies, stronger enforcement against cruelty, and improved coordination between wildlife authorities and local communities.

“These issues are not separate—they are interconnected aspects of how a society treats the most vulnerable forms of life,” Panapitiya noted.

The letter frames the issue not only as a policy matter but also as a moral and spiritual responsibility, invoking Buddhist principles of karuṇa (compassion) and metta (loving-kindness).

It expresses hope that with the guidance of the visiting monastic delegation, greater awareness can be built around animal welfare challenges in Sri Lanka, and that renewed attention can be directed toward ethical coexistence between humans and animals.

“We humbly seek your guidance and compassionate support in bringing attention to this suffering,” the letter states, adding that Sri Lanka has the potential to become a society that truly embodies compassion toward all living beings.

As Sri Lanka continues to grapple with environmental pressures, urban expansion, and biodiversity loss, animal rights advocates argue that the issue is no longer peripheral but central to the country’s ethical and ecological future.

For activists like Panchali Panapitiya and her colleagues, the message is clear: reform is overdue, compassion is urgent, and the responsibility is shared across both policy-makers and citizens.

Only through legal modernisation, habitat protection, and a cultural shift toward empathy, they argue, can Sri Lanka begin to address what they describe as a silent but growing crisis affecting countless sentient beings across the island.

By Ifham Nizam