The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Is this terrifying moment that shows cruelty of humans has turned elephants againts us?

After a respected British naturalist narrowly survives a shocking charge in the jungle...

- By AMY OLIVER

LOOKING back over his shoulder, Ian Redmond could see the 8ft-tall, four-ton bull elephant charging towards him at ferocious speed. Glancing around, he realised his options were severely limited: there were no trees to climb and there was no way of outrunning the beast, capable of up to 25mph.

Within seconds, the angry elephant was upon him, ears flapping wildly and sharp tusks gleaming, and the air was filled with the huge animal’s deafening trumpet sound.

In an attempt to avoid being pierced by its tusks, Redmond rolled under the elephant but soon found himself being kicked around like a football.

Incredibly, he not only managed to escape with his life but also film the terrifying attack. In his remarkable footage, a serene family of elephants is first seen plodding along in the distance before a huge male spots Redmond and decides to charge, knocking him to the ground.

Yet he is no naive safari tourist who ignored warnings not to stray into dangerous territory. He is a very experience­d conservati­onist who co-founded Born Free’s famous Elefriends campaign and has worked closely with Gorillas In The Mist environmen­talist Dian Fossey and Sir David Attenborou­gh. He was awarded an OBE in 2006.

Despite his years of experience, he was left shaken by the incident, in which he could so easily have been crushed to death. But what has really disturbed him is the chilling conclusion­s he has drawn about the unprovoked attack.

Redmond believes that elephants, not normally prone to acts of aggression, now see humans as the enemy.

He says the animal, later named ‘Kali the Courageous Tusker’ by Redmond and his colleagues, charged deliberate­ly after suffering a previous trauma at the hands of poachers.

‘I’ve been given a friendly thump by a gorilla and had close encounters with elephants,’ Redmond says. ‘But this is the first time in 40 years that I’ve been hurt by a wild animal. The real point is not that I survived an elephant attack, it’s why did this elephant attack? What does it say about the state of elephant conservati­on when normally peaceful animals suddenly change?’ RECUPERATI­NG back home in Stroud, Gloucester­shire, the 62-year-old – sporting well-worn safari shorts – seems in good spirits. The home he shares with his therapist wife, Caroline, 61, contains many books on animals, ten of which he has written. The Born Free shirt he wears is his favourite. He had it on during the attack and it still bears Kali’s muddy footprints.

The father of twin boys, now in their 30s, was born in Malaysia but returned to Yorkshire as a toddler. He is perhaps best known for assisting Fossey, whose famous study of Rwandan mountain gorillas was portrayed in the 1988 film Gorillas In The Mist.

Such was his influence on the story, he spent a memorable night teaching Sigourney Weaver, who played Fossey, how to grunt like a gorilla. He also held the microphone for Attenborou­gh during his famous gorilla film for the 1979 series Life On Earth.

When we meet he is full of mirth despite his injuries, but he also has a serious point to make: elephants are having more negative experience­s with humans than ever before.

And he says that this, combined with past memories of family members being slaughtere­d for ivory, is having a lasting psychologi­cal effect on them and turning some against humans.

In February, British tourist Gareth Crowe, 36, was killed after being thrown from an elephant that turned on its handler during a trek in Thailand. It is thought about 500 people a year are killed by African elephants.

‘Often you see videos on YouTube of elephants chasing vehicles,’ says Redmond. ‘There’s a recent one of Arnold Schwarzene­gger being chased in a car while on safari.’

He had been on Mount Elgon, which borders Kenya and Uganda, attempting to film a mother and baby elephant when the attack happened.

On the first day, Redmond and the mountain’s elephant monitoring team spotted a group of about 40 within a couple of hours’ walk from a ranger station. The herd seemed agitated.

Next day they followed the herd to a grassy glade from where they could observe at a safe distance. Redmond noticed they were moving in tight formation, their pace quickening at the sound of human voices. One elephant,

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