The donkeys were released from Orai District Jail on Monday. (Source: ANI) The donkeys were released from Orai District Jail on Monday. (Source: ANI)

Eight donkeys walked free from Orai District Jail on Monday after serving a three-day sentence for feasting on plants and destroying flower pots placed outside the prison gates for a ‘Swachh Bharat’ project.

Their deed, in which other animals were also allegedly involved, cost the jail administration a loss of “Rs 50,000”.

The donkeys were handed over to their owner after the latter gave an affidavit promising they would never be seen around the prison building again, said the jail administration, adding that they locked the animals in a room inside the prison premises “to teach a lesson” to owners who leave their animals loose.

When contacted, Superintendent of Orai District Jail, Sitaram Sharma, said, “We had been planning a plantation on jail campus under the Swachh Bharat Mission. We had brought some plants from Delhi and Agra. But in the last few days, goats, cows and donkeys destroyed these plants and flower pots worth over Rs 50,000. We caught these animals, traced the owners of the goats and cows and handed over the animals with instructions not to let their animals loose here.”

He added, “However, we failed to trace the owner of the eight donkeys. So we locked up these animals in an old empty building inside the jail premises day before yesterday.”

On Monday, Kamlesh Kumar, the owner of the donkeys, arrived. Jail officials released the equines after he “requested for forgiveness” and submitted an affidavit stating he would not leave the donkeys loose in the area again.

“It is a grave problem in the vicinity as these animals cross the boundary wall and come inside the jail campus. They destroy our plants, break the fencing and some even entered the house of a staffer once,” Sharma said.

Asked why the animals were locked up for so long, Sharma said, “I had instructed the jail staff not to let the donkeys go until the owner comes. Someone had to take a step and this was necessary as the animals were causing harm every other day.”

Asked whether they were fed during their confinement, Sharma said they fed on grass growing in the abandoned building they were kept in.

Inspector General of the Uttar Pradesh Prisons Department, P K Mishra, said he was unaware of the incident and that he would speak to the jail administration in this regard.

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