MP CM releases 2 Botswana cheetahs into Kuno National Park forest
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav on Monday, 11 May released two female cheetahs brought from Botswana into the open forest area of Kuno National Park in Sheopur district, after the animals completed their quarantine and acclimatisation period. The release marks another milestone under the Centre's ambitious Project Cheetah, pushing India's total cheetah count — including cubs born in the country — to 57.
The Release
The two cheetahs, identified as CCV-2 and CCV-3, were released near the banks of the Kuno River in Sheopur. Both are female and were part of a batch of nine cheetahs — six females and three males — that arrived from Botswana in February 2025 under the third international phase of Project Cheetah. They had been kept in controlled enclosures since their arrival to help them adapt to local climatic and ecological conditions before their transition to open forest.
Chief Minister Yadav also conducted a tour of Kuno National Park following the release. He was accompanied by New and Renewable Energy Minister Rakesh Shukla and Madhya Pradesh Forest Development Corporation Chairman Ramniwas Rawat.
What the Chief Minister Said
Speaking at the occasion, Chief Minister Yadav said Madhya Pradesh had provided a suitable and secure environment for the rehabilitation of cheetahs, positioning the state as the leading centre for the conservation initiative in the country.
"The land of Madhya Pradesh has provided a favourable environment for cheetahs and has played an important role in their rehabilitation, making them a part of its family," Yadav said. He also noted that the cheetah reintroduction programme launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi nearly three-and-a-half years ago is progressing successfully.
"Today, the cheetah rehabilitation project in the country is moving ahead successfully with rapid progress. Madhya Pradesh is setting new milestones in this important initiative," he added.
Cheetah Count and Current Status
According to Kuno National Park's official statement, India's total cheetah population has risen to 57, including cubs born on Indian soil. Of these, 54 are currently housed at Kuno National Park, while three are at the Gandhi Sagar Sanctuary. The addition of the Botswana batch has significantly bolstered numbers that had faced setbacks due to mortality in earlier phases.
Project Cheetah: Previous Phases
Project Cheetah began with the arrival of eight cheetahs from Namibia on 17 September 2022, when Prime Minister Modi personally released them at Kuno in a high-profile ceremony. A second batch of 12 cheetahs from South Africa followed in 2023. The Botswana cohort represents the third and largest international intake, bringing cumulative international arrivals to 29 cheetahs. The cheetah had been declared extinct in India in 1952, making the reintroduction one of the most complex wildlife restoration efforts in the country's history.
What the Project Aims to Achieve
The Centre's Project Cheetah aims to restore the species in India, grow its population over successive generations, and eventually prepare the animals for free hunting and roaming in the wild without human support. Kuno National Park, spread across the Vindhyan plateau in Madhya Pradesh, was selected for its suitable prey base and forest cover. As the project matures, authorities are expected to explore additional sites — Gandhi Sagar Sanctuary's current three cheetahs represent an early step in that geographic expansion.