Tiger death continues in India : 6 Death in one month

by Amitjha | November 18, 2008 at 09:50 pm
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6 tigers dead in just two months :India

6 tigers dead in just two months :India

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The human endeavour to kill all species of earth continues for its unnecessary needs.The national animal of India is vanishing fastly and the cause is not natural but human greed.The demand for the different parts of tiger in international market is very high, this demand drives the poachers to take risk and kill the tiger.

India's tigers continue to die. In the last 10 weeks, six more tigers have perished due to poaching, electrocution, accident or natural 



causes.

During the same period, police and forest officials have also seized four skins and 18 claws of the big cat, according to information collated by a wildlife NGO, from across the country.

On November 2, a tiger was electrocuted in Soutiya village, adjoining the buffer zone of the Kanha tiger reserve in Madhya Pradesh. Investigations showed that the villagers were laying out naked electricity wires to catch sambhar, a widespread deer species — but a tiger got enmeshed in the wires and was electrocuted.

"Every part of the animal, including nails, was intact. Which shows that poachers were not involved," says Ramesh Pratap Singh, field director of the tiger reserve. Seven villagers have been arrested.

Earlier, on October 21, one tiger skin was seized in Kerala leading to three arrests. K Ummer, DFO of Nilambur South, says: "One female tiger skin, five feet long, was seized from a car," he said. The job was not by professionals because the skin had plenty of holes, says the forest officer. "They were not gunshot holes. Only that the skinning wasn't professionally done," he says. However, the seizure of six iron tiger traps in Satara by Maharashtra forest department on September 29 shows that poachers remain extremely active in many parts of the country.

The latest census figures released this year showed a mere 1,411 tigers alive, compared to 3,508 in 1997, a drastic dip of 60%. "With such low numbers of wild tigers we simply cannot afford to lose so many of them to criminals," says Belinda Wright of Wildlife Protection Society of India, the NGO which has collated the statistics. Experts feel the government agencies need better training, more motivation and greater resources.

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