New Straits Times

ELECTROCUT­ED

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by armed rangers for the beast.

A court in Maharashtr­a state issued a shoot-to-kill order on Friday against the 2-year-old female tiger after its latest victim, a woman, died earlier this month.

But efforts to capture or kill the tiger were called off after it strayed against an electric fence near a village on Saturday, said Rishikesh Ranjan, field director of Pench Tiger Reserve.

“She died at 2.30am after getting electrocut­ed. We have recovered the body,” he said.

“The fencing was erected by the villagers to keep away wild animals, especially boars.”

The tiger named “Kala”, meaning black in Hindi, was initially captured in July after killing two villagers and injuring four in Brahmapuri in Maharashtr­a state.

It was fitted with a radio collar and later released into the nearby Bor Wildlife Sanctuary, but went on to attack and kill another two people.

Tigers do not attack humans, but some experts believe they can acquire a taste for human flesh after an initial attack.

India is home to more than half of the world’s tiger population, with some 2,226 of the animals roaming its reserves, according to the last count in 2014.

Dozens die every year, sometimes at the hands of poachers.

In October last year, forest guards shot dead a tiger blamed for killing three villagers outside Jim Corbett National Park in Uttarakhan­d state.

Villagers celebrated by parading the dead animal’s carcass for nearly three hours. AFP

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