AHMEDABAD: The success of conservation efforts in increasing the population of lions in Gujarat — the only abode of the endangered big cats — makes it difficult to believe that as recently as 1964, you could legally hunt these lions just for a fee of Rs 300, And this was possible when Gujarat had come into existence as a state.

Records indicate that actual conservation of lions started only in 1972. National Wildlife Board member and lion expert H S Singh said that the last permission for hunting the cats was given in 1964. After that, all requests were rejected by collectors of the districts, except when a lion turned a man-eater.

The records of a debate that took place on June 29, 1960, during the first Gujarat assembly session reveal that hunting was allowed in special cases on payment of Rs 300. City-based historian Rizwan Kadri recently came across these records while researching for a project.

According to the records, when MLA Udaisinh Vadodiya asked the state government if hunting was permitted in Gir, deputy minister Bahadur Patel said that it was allowed only in rare cases.

Palanpur MLA Dungarbhai Parmar had asked whether the hunting of wild animals was allowed. In reply, home minister Hitendra Desai had said that 111 wild animals were hunted in 1957-58, followed by 50 in 1958-59 and 90 in 1959-60. Between 1957 and 1960, 89 people had sought permission for hunting wild animals.

In reply to MLA Madhavsinh Solanki’s question whether any lion was hunted in the state, Patel said: “Lion hunting is banned but permission is allowed in special cases on payment of Rs 300.”

Interestingly, in 1903, the Nawab of Junagadh had refused to allow Lord Curzon, the Viceroy of India, to hunt lions in his principality.