Ukraine disaster: Indian physician holed up in a basement for over every week refuses to go away his jaguar and panther, India News News

An Indian physician referred to as Girikumar Patil, who has been holed up in a basement of war-torn Ukraine has refused to go away with out his pets, which embody a jaguar, and a black panther.

Famously referred to as Jaguar Kumar, the physician mentioned, “My big cats have been spending nights in the basement with me. There has been a lot of bombing happening around us. The cats are scared. They are eating less. I can’t leave them.”

“This is the second war I am living through. But this is scarier.” 

He has lived for over six years in Severodonetsk, a small city situated within the Donbas area of japanese Ukraine. He hails from Tanuku in Andhra Pradesh’s West Godavari district.

Patil arrived in Ukraine in 2007 to review medication. Since 2014, he has been a practising orthopaedic and now works in a authorities hospital

“Initially, I wanted a Bengal tiger or an Asiatic lion as a pet. In 2020, while visiting a local zoo here, I saw the jaguar, orphaned and ill. With the permission of the authorities concerned, I took him to a veterinary hospital, provided treatment and adopted him,” he mentioned. 

“I used to take him on walks in the forest before the war. Those were the most joyful days in my life.”

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“I along with all my pets went into the bunker after the war started. They have been cooperative and silent. But it has now become difficult for me to provide them with sufficient meat, as I can’t go out frequently,” he expressed his issue.

“I will never abandon my pets to save my life. Of course, my family is urging me to return. My pets are my children. I’ll stay with them and protect them until my last breath,” he vowed. 

Giri, who’s single, has been stepping out of his cramped basement solely to purchase meals for his cats – the male jaguar is 20 months outdated and the feminine panther is a six-month-old cub – after the curfew ends early within the morning.

“I am the only Indian out here, and at night I am alone in the neighbourhood. Most of my neighbours have moved to nearby villages. I am going to hold out,” he mentioned.

 

(With inputs from companies)

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