Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

THERE’S A LEOPARD IN MY BACKYARD

-

The leopard in India is struggling for survival. In the last 20 years, the natural forests of India have sharply diminished because of illegal encroachme­nts, an enormous amount of illegal mining and agricultur­al conversion­s. Millions of livestock graze and degrade leopard habitat across this country and sharply reduce the availabili­ty of natural food. Blasted and battered in its natural habitat, the leopard has nowhere to go. Our nation has no vision or policy to protect the natural world. The politician­s and bureaucrat­s have seldom thought or implemente­d a land use policy that could have kept wildlife safe. With 1.3 billion people desperate for land and natural resources, the leopard has been cornered. Many patches of remnant forest have little food for the leopard to eat. He is then forced closer to human habitation, starting a vicious cycle of man-leopard conflict. Around human population­s, the leopard, now hungry and desperate, lives on stray dogs and small livestock. In daytime, the leopard finds a patch of trees or degraded wasteland to shelter in. It can vanish in such patch and remain invisible. As the sun sets, it moves towards human settlement­s to find food. Dogs are favoured. This is when it encounters man, and if detected, is chased, battered by sticks and stones and grievously injured or killed. To escape, it can race into a village hut or someone’s house. Then a forest team arrives and tranquilis­es it to take it either to a nearby forest where it is released or to a zoo where it ultimately dies. Huge errors are made in releasing leopards into forests especially if they are man-killers or man-eaters as in their struggling state they continue to attack man who has in their cycle of memory become their predator. Borivi in Maharashtr­a, Gir in Gujarat, Sariska in Rajasthan and dozens of other places across India have faced huge problems when problem leopards from miles away are released back in them. For those who govern such policies, ignorance is bliss. Such ignorant decisions have resulted in accelerati­ng human and leopard deaths in many places. Into this menu of disasters, we engage private hunters. Even though we have over two lakh trained forest staff and all the technology in the world, we issue licences to trigger happy private hunters to eliminate problem leopards. And endless innocent animals are injured and killed in the process. The vicious cycle goes on.

Let’s look at the big picture. In my opinion, there must still be 15,000 to 18,000 leopards in India, if not more. At least, 1000 leopards are killed each year either by poaching or legal eliminatio­n or just battered to death by locals. Probably, another thousand are rescued or tranquilis­ed and moved around to zoos and forests in the most chaotic and

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India