
Mumbai, Maharashtra, 30th of May 2026 : Supreme Court Vindicates Vantara: Highest Court Affirms Lawful, World-Class Conservation And Recognises A “Settled And Vested Right” In Vantara’s Favour.
A Bench of the Supreme Court rejects every allegation, upholds the clean findings of a Court-appointed Special Investigation Team, and recognises the global significance of Vantara’s rescue and conservation mission.
Vantara today welcomed a comprehensive and emphatic order of the Supreme Court of India that brings final closure to a prolonged campaign of allegations concerning its wildlife rescue, rehabilitation and conservation work, and affirms the lawful and ethical foundation of everything Vantara does.
A Bench of Hon’ble Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra and K.V. Viswanathan dismissed a fresh application that sought to reopen matters already examined in exhaustive detail by a high-powered Special Investigation Team. That SIT, constituted by the Supreme Court itself, was presided over by a former Judge of the Supreme Court and comprised a former Chief Justice of a High Court, a former Commissioner of Police and a senior Customs officer, assisted by the nation’s premier enforcement and regulatory agencies.
The positive findings for Vantara are clear and complete. Examining every animal transfer jurisdiction by jurisdiction — across the UAE, Venezuela, Brazil, the Czech Republic, South Africa and beyond — the Court found each to be a lawful, non-commercial, zoo-to-zoo movement, supported by valid CITES export and import permits and the requisite approvals of the Central Zoo Authority. The Court affirmed that Vantara acted at all times in good faith, and that an irregularity, if any, by a foreign exporter in its own country cannot fasten liability on the Indian institution that received the animals lawfully.
The Court further recognised that conservation work of true global significance is being carried out at Jamnagar — including direct engagement with Brazil on the reintroduction of endangered macaws and a conservation breeding programme that advances worldwide species recovery. The Bench held that disturbing the settled, cared-for environment of rescued animals after their lawful arrival may itself amount to cruelty — an affirmation of the very welfare principles on which Vantara was founded.
Critically, the Court recognised that a settled and vested right has accrued in favour of Vantara, its trustees, directors and management, with that protection extending to its founding institutions, the Reliance Foundation and Radhe Shyam. The clear directions issued by the Court look firmly to the future, strengthening India’s CITES framework for the benefit of the country’s regulatory architecture.
Speaking on the order, Mr. Vivaan Karani, Chief Executive Officer of Vantara, said:
“This judgment affirms the truth that has guided us from the very first rescue—that every animal in our care arrived lawfully, was treated ethically, and is protected for life. The nation’s highest court has recognised yet again, not only the integrity of our work but the spirit behind it. At Vantara, conservation is not a claim; it is a daily act of compassion. To every sceptic, our answer remains the same as our promise to every creature we have ever healed—Every Life Matters. We are humbled, we are vindicated, and we are more committed than ever to the animals who depend on us.”
Vantara remains steadfast in its mission of rescue, rehabilitation and lifelong care, and in its commitment to the highest standards of animal welfare, transparency and international conservation cooperation.

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