This has been reported in telegraphindia.com dated 13 December 2015.
Forest department people have informed that sandalwood trees grew naturally in Santiniketan and its neighborhood because of the laterite soil.
The thieves have made off with at least eight sandalwood trees this year from various places in Santiniketan which points the finger of suspicion on an organized racket with possibilities of involvement of a section of timber merchants of north Bengal because there are active tree-stealing rackets in the forests of north Bengal.
Sandalwood is quite costly since it is used to make medicines, cosmetics and artefacts and, a full-grown tree could cost around Rs 22 lakh. Obviously, trading in sandalwood is profitable.
The police suspect the thieves to be operating from the Bolpur area. The gang members would carry out regular reconnaissance of sandalwood trees in house compounds in Santiniketan and pick on their prey. There is no database on the number of sandalwood trees in Santiniketan and its neighboring forest areas of Sonajhuri.
(Image courtesy wikimediacommons.org)
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