Delhi Govt creates 9 Wildlife Inspector posts to boost conservation

The Delhi Government has approved nine new Wildlife Inspector posts to strengthen wildlife conservation. This move aims to enhance ground-level enforcement, prevent poaching, and manage human-wildlife conflicts across the city’s field divisions.

The Delhi Government, under the leadership of Chief Minister Rekha Gupta, has approved the creation of nine posts for Wildlife Inspector (Direct Recruitment) in the Forests & Wildlife Department. These posts have been placed in Level-6 (Rs 35,400-₹Rs 1,12,400) of the Pay Matrix under the 7th Central Pay Commission and have been notified. This initiative reflects the government’s strong commitment to wildlife conservation and biodiversity protection amidst urban environmental challenges. The Recruitment Rules for Wildlife Inspectors have been amended with the approval of the Lieutenant Governor of Delhi Taranjit Singh Sandhu and notified in the Gazette.

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Strengthening Environmental Protection

Environment Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa stated, “The government is implementing necessary reforms to strengthen environmental protection. The deployment of Wildlife Inspectors across various field divisions in Delhi is a crucial step; it will enable our teams to protect wildlife, prevent poaching, and manage human-wildlife conflicts in a timely manner.”

Addressing Previous Shortfalls

Previously, the department had only one Wildlife Inspector post at the Headquarters, while the four field divisions had no dedicated staff. This hampered ground-level enforcement, the prevention of illegal activities, human-wildlife conflict management, and biodiversity management.

Boosting On-Ground Conservation Efforts

Out of these 9 posts, recruitment for 8 posts will be conducted through direct recruitment via the Delhi Subordinate Services Selection Board (DSSSB). The Minister further added, “This decision will strengthen conservation on the ground and ensure that Delhi’s biodiversity remains safe and prosperous despite urbanisation. From habitat protection to law enforcement, these inspectors will bring about a real change.”

The appointment of these Wildlife Inspectors will significantly enhance the department’s capacity, strengthening wildlife protection, prevention of illegal activities, human-wildlife conflict management, and biodiversity management throughout the city. This move is a vital initiative toward reinforcing the institutional framework for a sustainable urban ecosystem. (ANI)

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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