Jaipur, March 4 -- An African cheetah from Madhya Pradesh's Kuno National Park has been sighted venturing in Baran's Ramgarh crater area, days after its sibling from the same tiger reserve was sighted in the same area, officials said. Deputy conservator of forest (DFO) in Rajasthan's Baran Bade Vivekanand Manikrao said, "The African cheetah, identified as KP-3, from Kuno National Park enteredthe Ramgarh area on Monday. It is the sibling of KP-2 who has also been venturing in the area since February 15. Both of them are constantly being tracked." He further added: "Its movement has majorly been traced around the 3-kilometer area at the crater. It has not hunted anything yet. Our forest staff spotted it on Monday." The Ramgarh crater is a meteor-impacted crater with a 3.5-kilometer diameter in the Kota plateau of the Vindhya range located adjacent to Ramgarh village in Baran district in Rajasthan. "The cheetah is safe. Our teams are constantly following it at a distance of 100 metres to 200 metres. We are also tracking its movement through the radio collar installed on its neck," said the officer. Earlier, KP-2 entered the area first on November 27 and returned to Kuno a month later. However, it returned on February 15 and is currently venturing in Mangrol forest range. Officials said that this is the fifth time in two years that a cheetah from Kuno has entered Rajasthan....