No Approval to Move Elephant Madhuri by Supreme Court High Powered Committee—Public Promises of Her Return to Kolhapur are Baseless

For Immediate Release:

24 June 2026

Contact:

Sanskriti Bansore; [email protected]

Vikram Chandravanshi; [email protected]

Kolhapur Yesterday, a meeting of the High Powered Committee (HPC) appointed by the Supreme Court under the Chairmanship of Justice Deepak Verma (Retd.), which legal and policy representatives for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals India (PETA India) attended,  exposed that noise being made in the media about elephant Madhuri’s return to Kolhapur’s Nandini Math (Swastishree Jinsen Bhattarak Pattacharya Mahaswami Sansthan Math) from Radhe Krishna Temple Elephant Welfare Trust (RKTEWT), commonly referred to as Vantara, in Jamnagar are baseless and at best premature. Photographs and video footage submitted to the HPC by the Math demonstrate that the Math plans to jail her in the same shed where she spent 33 years alone, this time, with paintings of plants and a water stream on the wall. Last year, Madhuri was moved to Vantara for permanent rehabilitation following orders of the HPC, the Bombay High Court, and the Supreme Court. The move came after she killed the Math’s chief priest in pain and frustration, attacked a man during a procession and was determined by experts to be in an extremely deteriorated state of physical and mental health.

An application has been submitted to the HPC by Kolhapur’s Nandini Math, seeking Madhuri’s transfer back to her old, but recently repainted, shed. The application aims to rip Madhuri from her vast forested home at Vantara and from the elephant company that she relies on for her psychological well-being. This is despite Madhuri’s irreversible physical ailments being caused by a lifetime of chaining in the very same shed on the Math’s premises, including chronic foot disease and arthritis. Experts have also noted that Madhuri displays behavioural signs of trauma resulting from prolonged solitary confinement at the Math.

A video created by PETA India of Madhuri’s plight and the Math’s proposal is available upon request.

While the HPC has not approved Madhuri’s transfer to Kolhapur and the Bombay High Court’s direction for her rehabilitation at Vantara remains in force, public announcements have nevertheless been made, promising her relocation back to Kolhapur by the Math and Vantara (presumably under duress), raising concerns regarding compliance with judicial orders and the prioritisation of Madhuri’s welfare. PETA India has filed objections to this proposal before the HPC, praying for Madhuri’s continued and permanent residence at Vantara, in accordance with previous judicial orders. As per the oral observations by the HPC Chairman Justice Deepak Verma (Retd.) during the meeting yesterday, an inspection of the so-called improvements made to the old shed is to be carried out by a committee comprising representatives from the Maharashtra Chief Wildlife Warden, the Central Zoo Authority, HPC’s veterinary expert, in the presence of a representative from PETA India.

PETA India’s Vice President of Policy Khushboo Gupta, who attended the HPC meeting, says, “An upset, lonely elephant cannot bless—she can only curse. And in Madhuri’s case, that curse has already been felt: years of frustration, pain, and isolation drove her to kill the Nandini Math’s chief priest in 2017. Anyone who truly cares about Madhuri would never support undoing her court-ordered rehabilitation by ripping her away from her deep bond with another elephant, the medical care she urgently needs, and her vast forested home at Vantara in Jamnagar—only to send her back to the same bleak shed where she suffered alone for 33 years. That is not devotion. That is betrayal.”

After being relocated to Vantara, Madhuri began receiving specialised veterinary care and was able to live in the company of other elephants for the first time in decades, essential for female elephants who in nature live in multi-generational family herds. Vantara reports show Madhuri is now deeply bonded to another elephant in Jamnagar, seeks her company and that they participate in activities together, attend joint hydrotherapy sessions and communicate in rumbles and trumpets.

Despite assurances in the media in 2025 by the Maharashtra government and Vantara (which suffered an orchestrated attack on its parent company, Reliance, for caring for Madhuri) of a state-of-the-art satellite Vantara facility to be established in Maharashtra, no such facility is being planned either for Madhuri or any other elephant. To appease the public who want the best for Madhuri’s welfare, public promises were made then for a Kolhapur centre equipped with 24/7 medical facilities and a “specialised hydrotherapy pond for joint and muscular relief, a…larger water body for swimming and natural movement, [and] a laser therapy and treatment room for physical rehabilitation”. The new application submitted to the HPC by the Math proves this to be fiction, with plans to jail Madhuri in the same shed she was confined to, alone, for decades, but soon-to-be adjacent to a newly planned public road.  Despite Madhuri’s elephant bond at Vantara and her painful foot and bone conditions that still require continued specialized veterinary treatment and monitoring, the Math proposes to transfer her some 30 hours by road from Jamnagar to the Math, away from the hospital and veterinary facilities.

PETA India asserts that the repainted shed at the Math is ideal for a mechanical elephant that can be used in processions instead.

PETA India—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to use for entertainment or abuse in any other way”—opposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information about PETA India, please visit PETAIndia.com or follow the group on XFacebook, or Instagram.

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