Most wild elephant attack deaths inside reserve forest areas, says Forest
dept. data; farmers groups oppose claim (Kerala)
The Hindu
January 7, 2025
Even as the number of wild elephant attack deaths rises in the State,
recent Forest department data reveal that seven out of 11 wild elephant
attack-related deaths reported in the State so far during the financial
year 2024-25 occurred inside reserve forest areas. However, according to
Forest department officials, wild elephants may not be attributed for the
death of the engineering student after a palm tree reported to have been
uprooted by a wild elephant fell on her. It was an accident and the wild
elephant would have uprooted the palm tree for its food. The Forest
department did not count it as a wild elephant attack related death, said
officials.
Chief Wildlife Warden Pramod G. Krishnan said that “six out of the 10
unfortunate incidents taken place during this financial year occurred
inside the premises of the reserve forests. The Forest department is trying
its best to mitigate the situation with the support of local people and
with the available resources. But there are complex challenges: ecological,
social, technological and political. One needs to exercise extreme caution
and vigil while moving through areas where elephant presence is reported
and to the extent possible may limit illegal and unnecessary travel into
the forests. We need to cooperate and collaborate,” said Mr. Krishnan.
“Due to climate change and other issues such as more people-elephant
interface the behaviour of wild elephants would have also changed resulting
in potential encounters,” said the official.
Meanwhile, Alex Ozhukayil, the chairman of the Kerala Independent Farmers
Association (KIFA), stated that the Forest department is fabricating
various excuses to conceal the reality. “The actual reason for the
increasing wild elephant deaths is the increasing number of wild elephants
inside the forests. Previously, the Forest department argued that wild
elephants had killed settled farmers and forest poachers. But now wild
elephant attacks are also claiming the lives of tribal individuals. In
addition, the absence of food availability inside the forests is the major
reason wild elephants venture into human habitations,” said Mr. Ozhukayil.
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/most-wild-elephant-attack-deaths-inside-reserve-forest-areas-says-forest-dept-data-farmers-groups-oppose-claim/article69068385.ece
Most wild elephant attack deaths inside reserve forest areas, says Forest
dept. data; farmers groups oppose claim (Kerala)
The Hindu
January 7, 2025
Even as the number of wild elephant attack deaths rises in the State,
recent Forest department data reveal that seven out of 11 wild elephant
attack-related deaths reported in the State so far during the financial
year 2024-25 occurred inside reserve forest areas. However, according to
Forest department officials, wild elephants may not be attributed for the
death of the engineering student after a palm tree reported to have been
uprooted by a wild elephant fell on her. It was an accident and the wild
elephant would have uprooted the palm tree for its food. The Forest
department did not count it as a wild elephant attack related death, said
officials.
Chief Wildlife Warden Pramod G. Krishnan said that “six out of the 10
unfortunate incidents taken place during this financial year occurred
inside the premises of the reserve forests. The Forest department is trying
its best to mitigate the situation with the support of local people and
with the available resources. But there are complex challenges: ecological,
social, technological and political. One needs to exercise extreme caution
and vigil while moving through areas where elephant presence is reported
and to the extent possible may limit illegal and unnecessary travel into
the forests. We need to cooperate and collaborate,” said Mr. Krishnan.
“Due to climate change and other issues such as more people-elephant
interface the behaviour of wild elephants would have also changed resulting
in potential encounters,” said the official.
Meanwhile, Alex Ozhukayil, the chairman of the Kerala Independent Farmers
Association (KIFA), stated that the Forest department is fabricating
various excuses to conceal the reality. “The actual reason for the
increasing wild elephant deaths is the increasing number of wild elephants
inside the forests. Previously, the Forest department argued that wild
elephants had killed settled farmers and forest poachers. But now wild
elephant attacks are also claiming the lives of tribal individuals. In
addition, the absence of food availability inside the forests is the major
reason wild elephants venture into human habitations,” said Mr. Ozhukayil.
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/most-wild-elephant-attack-deaths-inside-reserve-forest-areas-says-forest-dept-data-farmers-groups-oppose-claim/article69068385.ece