forest rights, conservation and dilemmas of growth
© mazoomdaar 2011
Who's Killing the Corbett Tigers?
Four tigers found dead in less than a month, within a triangular patch of about 40 sq km in the heart of one of India's
best reserves. Natural deaths? Infighting? Poaching? With the media rife with speculation, Open cuts through the
clutter to find some answers.
Jay Mazoomdaar | 13 February 2010 | OPEN
To understand the fuss about four dead tigers in Corbett tiger
reserve in one month-when 66 deaths were reported across India
last year-consider the larger picture. When India's tiger count is at
an all-time low of 1,411, Corbett stands out as a rare success story
where the numbers have been steadily on the rise. From 137 in
2001 to 164 in 2007, a thriving stock makes Corbett, at the
Himalayan foothills in Uttarakhand, north India's most densely
populated tiger forest.
So four deaths in quick succession in the heart of the reserve have
triggered panic: are we losing one of the few remaining
strongholds of the national animal?
With so many tigers at Corbett, four natural deaths in one month
is very much a possibility. But each of the four carcasses had
something or the other unusual about them, making the forest
authorities edgy and fuelling speculation of poaching in the media.
When a delayed transfer of the viscera to Bellary's Indian Veterinary Research Institute spoiled any chance of conclusive analyses,
rumblings of foul play just got louder.
THE CASE
Four tigers died one after the other dead-deep inside the Corbett core within 31 days in December and January.
•
The first casualty, an eight-year-old male, was reported on 13 December near Mota Sal, a giant tree that serves as a landmark
near Dhikala Chaur (grassland).
•
The second victim was an 11-year old tigress, found by the Ramganga river close to Sarpduli rest house on 16 December.
•
The third carcass was that of a four-year-old male, found on 5 January in Phuli Chaur near Dhikala tourist complex.
•
The fourth death was reported on 12 January when beat guards found a six-year-old tiger dead near Gaujra chowki at the edge of
the Dhikala range.
Of the four cases, the third appears to be the simplest. The young
male was the victim of a territorial fight, possibly over a kill that
was found half-consumed nearby. The tiger carcass had sharp
canine wounds and the paw pads had traces of fur that came off the
other tiger during the tussle. To bury speculation, a large male
tiger showed up graciously during the spot funeral, possibly in
honour of its vanquished rival.
The second death raised eyebrows as a shoe sole was found in the
stomach of the tigress. It is not unusual to find garbage by the
riverside, washed down from villages upstream Ramganga, and the
old tigress, too hungry and unable to hunt, was probably attracted
by the leathery smell of a wet shoe and chewed it up. The
undigested sole remained in her tummy and may or may not have
hastened her imminent end.
One may dismiss speculation of foul play in these two cases: the
young male found on Phuli Chaur was just unlucky, as death from in-
fighting is common in the wild; few animals survive long enough to die of old age like the Sarpduli tigress. But the other two deaths-
the first and the fourth-do raise uncomfortable questions.
Tigers can live up to 12 years in the wild. There was no injury mark whatsoever on the eight-year-old male found dead near Mota Sal; it
is anyway unlikely for such a mature tiger in its prime to have got into a territorial fight with an equal adversary. Typically, mature
tigers take on inexperienced youngsters or an old weakling, the results of which would be rather obvious.
Reliable sources say the internal organs of the tiger had "small blister-like eruptions" on them. The tiger defecated while dying,
possibly because of muscle relaxation or stress or intestinal trauma-but the sample was not tested. The officials claimed that the robust
male died due to "respiratory and cardio-vascular problems".
The fourth carcass at Gaujra, however, bore tell-tale signs. The tiger had retched before dying and the post-mortem revealed enough
indications of poison in its visceral organs. While the official jury is still out, even the top forest bosses present at the spot agree that
the tiger was poisoned.
THE MYSTERY
The hushed consensus about poisoning in the fourth case revived doubts over the first casualty, the eight-year-old male whose death
many felt was not satisfactorily explained.
The tiger that was poisoned at Gaujra was found at the edge of the Ramganga reservoir. Poison dehydrates animals and they try to
reach the nearest water body. But the first tiger found dead at Mota Sal, though not too far from the other bank of the reservoir, was
not exactly close to it. However, animals when poisoned also try to avoid the sun and heat. Since the carcass was found under a clump
of trees, only yards away from the Dhikala grassland, it is possible that the tiger drank at the reservoir and crossed the open grassland
(about 2 km) and lay down to die in the cool, shaded forest.
As crows fly, the distance between the spots where the first and fourth carcasses were found is less than 5 km. Though the Ramganga
reservoir lies in between, lack of rain last monsoon has shrunk the stretch of water, and it would not have been impossible for even a
poisoned tiger to swim across.
Could there be other tigers poisoned to death in this area that went unnoticed? Tiger carcasses rot quickly and are often scavenged
upon by hyenas and jackals, so it may not be possible to discover
each and every carcass.
The Corbett management admits as much. But be it one, two or
more, tigers are evidently being poisoned in Corbett.
Of course, tiger killings are not unprecedented in Corbett. In 1998,
a tigress and three cubs died after feeding on a poisoned cattle
carcass near Jamun village in the Kalagarh division. Only last year,
a decomposed carcass was found in Dhela range in March. In 2008,
a tiger was found dead in Jhirna range and was disposed of in a
hurry. In 2007, a tiger was camera-trapped with a deep snare-
wound on its neck and was subsequently found dead. In 2006, a
tiger was shot dead barely 7 km from the Corbett boundary by
poachers in the Terai West division.
But all these incidents happened in the peripheral forests of
Corbett. This time round, the killing zone is at the core of the
reserve. How are poachers getting there? Why are they risking going
so far in when they can easily target tigers at the periphery?
What is the motive, since poisoned tigers wander away and make it impossible to retrieve the carcass for skin, bones etc.? If these are
revenge killings, who can possibly have anything against tigers in the Corbett core, far away from human habitation? Or is the Corbett
management or someone higher up the real target?
FINDING ANSWERS
The forest staff obviously has the best access to these tigers. Those who man the two canteens-one with Kumaun Vikas Mandal and
another run privately-also stay at Dhikala. Then, there are the tourist guides and drivers who enter the Corbett tiger reserve's core
zone on a daily basis.
Following a hunt, a tiger consumes part of the kill and hides the rest to come back later for a second meal. Those looking to poison the
kill, therefore, must know the forest well and have free access to get there before the tiger returns to it. Canteen workers do not know
the forest so well. Accompanied by tourists and bound by timetables, guides lack the necessary access. And there are no opposing
lobbies in the Corbett forest management to trigger sabotage by the staff.
The rumour mill at Ramnagar, though, is circulating two conspiracy theories, woven around two "aggrieved insiders". Buddi Kala, who
ran the private canteen at Dhikala since pre-Project Tiger days, was ousted this year through an open tender that awarded the contract
to small-time BJP functionaries from Ramnagar. Jaswant Singh Pradhan, who has been in Corbett since 1993 as a guide and then as a
trainer, wanted to replace honorary warden Brijendra Singh, a conservationist close to the Gandhi family, but failed.
Kala, now the head of Dogudda village council near Kotdwar, does not even care to discuss "the angle", but the staff at Dhikala vouch
for him as "a family member". He would never harm the forest, they say, since "the sympathy of the department" was with him during
his fight to retain the canteen contract.
Pradhan, too, seems too busy with his flourishing hotel business. "As a local person who understands Corbett, I felt I qualified for the
warden's post. But it was up to the government. Everyone knows I have always helped the (forest) department," he says. A family
friend adds that Pradhan's sons are also doing well for themselves as guides at Corbett.
Brijendra Singh himself finds the sabotage theory rather imaginative. "I wouldn't be the honorary warden if the BJP government did
not want me to. I have never compromised Corbett's interests. Some local elements may resent some of my tough stands, but I doubt if
any of them would target the tigers," he says.
Since nobody seems to have any motive to kill tigers in Corbett's core, the investigation narrows down to the final and usual suspect:
local Gujjars. While much of Corbett is free of any human settlement, 20-25 Gujjar families camp in five different areas of the Kalagarh
range along the boundary of the core zone. One of these settlements is at Gaujra, where the fourth tiger was found dead. The forest
officials grilled the head of this extended Gujjar family (complete with his four wives and 22 sons), and made him dig up a cow kill he
had recently buried to "discourage the tiger".
The cow carcass "did not appear poisoned" and Gujjars got the
benefit-of-doubt given their lack of motive. Explains Heera Singh
Karmiyal, range officer, Dhikala: "These Gujjars are here for many
years. Sometimes, their buffaloes enter the core area and we fine
them. But that has been the only point of friction. There is no
history of these Gujjars targeting tigers because tigers rarely take
their buffaloes."
Due to their size and close-knit herds, buffaloes are not quite the
favourite with tigers in a forest with an abundant prey base. Cows,
on the other hand, are the easiest to hunt. But Gujjars, Karmiyal
points out, do not rear cows and have no reason to count the kills
as a loss.
But if Gujjars do not keep cows, how come cows are being killed
deep inside the forest? A site visit to Gaujra revealed dozens of
cows grazing alongside a few horses that Gujjars keep for
transporting milk. The forest staff promptly explained the lot as feral
cows-animals abandoned by villagers. Gujjars also maintained that they had nothing to do with the cows.
Reliable sources at Dhikala, however, confirmed that the presence of cows at Gaujra is a recent phenomenon, and the first few animals
were spotted possibly just a year ago. But what has triggered this sudden influx of cows?
Soon after coming to power, the BJP government in Uttarakhand replaced the Uttar Pradesh Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955,
with the stringent Cow Protection Act, 2007. Apparently, aimed at checking illegal smuggling of cows across India's eastern borders,
the new law banned cow slaughter and imposed tough regulations on the transport and sale of cows. It became almost impossible to
sell off non-milch cows even in Uttar Pradesh's grey markets.
Though the 2007 Act also prohibits abandoning cows, cattle owners soon started setting their unproductive cows free. Villages around
Rathuadhab found it convenient to send their cows to Gujjars inside forests. Local sources claim that Gujjars occasionally charge small
amounts per cow to allow the animal in. But that is not the real incentive. When some of these cows breed inside the forest, their
foster-owner Gujjars sell calves back to the villagers at price discounts ranging from 30 to 50 per cent of the market rate.
Last week, at least seven calves were spotted at Gaujra. No doubt, it has become a source of easy money for Gujjars in the area. This
new found stake in abandoned cows could be the missing motive for poisoning tigers.
SECURING CORBETT
With the onset of summer every year, a number of Gujjars from up north move in with buffaloes to join their brethren inside the
reserve and make the best use of the Ramganga reservoir. This summer is going to be particularly tough due to scanty rainfall last
monsoon. The Corbett management is anticipating a strong influx. With these Gujjars, fresh herds of abandoned cows will also move in
towards the Corbett core, lure more tigers and, in turn, trigger retribution.
This potential crisis can be averted if the park management
implements a longstanding plan for relocating Gujjar families
outside Corbett. A forested site near Haridwar has been procured,
but the law requires the state government to notify an equal area
under the Forest Protection Act. Since much of Uttarakhand is
already designated as 'protected forests', the state wants an
exemption on this. Many believe it will be wise to accord the state
a waiver to fast-track the rehabilitation process. The Centre offers
up to Rs 10 lakh per relocated family, and the forest department
has Rs 2 crore idling from funds earlier sanctioned by the
Uttarakhand government to implement its Gujjar Relocation Plan.
In the long term, however, removal of abandoned cows or
rehabilitation of Gujjars will not be enough to secure the future of
the tiger in Corbett. There are other equally or even more critical
factors-like increasing man-animal conflict and mindless tourism
pressure-that are threatening this reserve. But to be able to focus
on stakeholders along the reserve boundary, the authorities must
secure the heart of Corbett first. With just a couple of months to a dry summer, time is not on their side.
The author is an independent journalist
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