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When Tigers attack in India from WSJ

Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2014 3:13 am
by Sakobav
Anybody knows these gents??

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB1 ... reno64-wsj
From WSJ

When Tigers Attack in India
A man-eating tiger that has killed 10 people in northern India is on the loose, and forestry officials have called in some experts: the local nobility
R. Jai Krishna
March 7, 2014 7:25 p.m. ET

A tiger has killed 10 people in northern India, and forestry officials have called in locals whose royal families have been hunting big game for generations. Photo: R. Jai Krishna

A man-eating tiger that has killed 10 people in northern India is on the loose in the foothills of the Himalayas. Forestry officials have called in experts with centuries of experience tracking big cats: the local nobility.

Since mid-January, Kumar Sanjay Singh, who is from the royal family of Moradabad, and his nephew, Kumar Samar Jeet Singh, scion of the rajah of Kuchesar, have been leading a hunting party to kill the tiger, who last attacked on Feb. 6 in the small village of Thanda Sahuwala. "They know we are born hunters," says the elder Mr. Singh, 52, who says that he has shot 10 leopards and panthers that had also attacked people. "Our forefathers used to do it, and now it's us."

In the state of Uttar Pradesh and neighboring Uttarakhand, at least 10 people died last year in "man-animal conflicts." Encounters with tigers, panthers and other predators, whose populations are rebounding because of conservation efforts, can be especially terrifying. Recently, a leopard prowled through a movie theater and a hospital in a city about a 90-minute drive from the scene of the tiger hunt.

Villagers aren't venturing into the fields during late evenings. "Nobody is going out. Everyone is frightened," says Virendra Singh, who lives in Thanda Sahuwala.

Forestry officials are searching for a female tiger, which they say likely strayed from the nearby Jim Corbett Tiger Reserve. It could weigh more than 400 pounds and is probably 8 to 10 years old, they say. Indian forestry authorities have deployed drones and set up cameras in a quest to locate the tiger, whose latest victim, a herder from Thanda Sahuwala who took his cattle out to graze at dusk, was killed and partially devoured.

Mr. Singh and his nephew have focused their operations around the place the man's body was found. Big cats, Mr. Singh says, often return to the site of a kill, hoping to consume more of their prey. (Based on a paw print, they know the tiger returned the day after the kill.) A water buffalo calf has been tied to a tree as bait, and a camouflaged hunting blind, known as a machan, is assembled on a platform in a nearby tree.

Hunting was a traditional pursuit for India's noble families, mostly as a form of recreation. Maharajahs and their courts hunted dangerous animals such as wild boars and tigers to establish their valor and strength. In the dining room of the 19th-century fort where Mr. Singh's nephew lives, there is a stuffed Bengal tiger. It was shot by the nephew's grandfather in 1960, not far from Thanda Sahuwala.

Mr. Singh has been hunting since he was a child. His father taught him how to identify big cats from their paw prints; female tigers' tracks, for instance, are more elongated than males'. In 1982, Mr. Singh was part of a three-member team that killed a rogue elephant after it attacked and killed nine loggers. "I have never felt so afraid," said Mr. Singh. But, he adds, it "was the best experience I have ever had in my life."

India's tiger population was estimated at 40,000 in the early 1900s, according to government statistics, but the big-cat population had fallen to 1,827 by 1972. Tiger hunting was banned that year. In 2010, India had an estimated 1,706 tigers, an increase from 1,411 in 2006. Today, tigers are found in 17 of India's 28 states.

These days, Mr. Singh and his team are called into action only when Indian authorities declare that a repeat killer is on the loose. A single kill is considered an accident. But once a repeat killer "starts, it won't stop," says the younger Mr. Singh, and shooting it is the only option.

One day last week, the men checked the approaches to the buffalo calf. They saw no tracks. If their target didn't reappear soon, it had likely moved on to another area.

Suddenly a langur, a type of monkey, screamed in the canopy. "That's a distress call," the younger Mr. Singh whispered. There was a rustling in the underbrush about 10 yards away. The two men chambered bullets in their rifles and aimed: "It could be the tigress."

But it grew silent again. The animal had slipped away, leaving only paw prints in the wet earth. It was a leopard, not a tiger, they concluded.

Some animal-rights activists have campaigned against killing the tiger, saying it should be hit with a tranquilizer dart and caged instead. Forestry officials have since decided that killing the tiger is the only solution. But the permit issued to the hunters says that once the animal is sighted, they will have to call a forestry officer for permission to shoot.

"The tiger will not wait for you to take instructions and then say, 'I'm waiting, come and shoot me,' " the elder Mr. Singh said.

Still, he sympathizes with the big cat. "It's not right to blame the animal alone," he says. "It is we who have ventured into their territory."

Re: When Tigers attack in India from WSJ

Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2014 12:50 pm
by Kittu
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/2014 ... /302150029
sanjay singh seems like dr.prahantsingh friend s.singh.who killed a maneater leopard last year
http://indiansforguns.com/viewtopic.php ... &start=195

Re: When Tigers attack in India from WSJ

Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2014 9:18 pm
by prashantsingh
What a lovely find ngrewal.
That is indeed Sanjay with Samarjeet holding his H&H .375 mag.
They don't look dressed for the hunt in this snap though. I guess the media guys asked them to pose for the camera.

Infact he has given my name (and Corbett 99) as team membersfor this hunt as well. Though I have not been able to join in due to arrival of our little baby girl.
Thanks for posting.

PS: Interestingly Safarigent posted me another link , similar to this one . I think it was from TOI Delhi.
It had my name as well in it.
I was joking with Singh: " Maneater mare na mare. News paper me to naam chap gaya." Ha Ha Ha.

Re: When Tigers attack in India from WSJ

Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2014 10:04 pm
by Kittu
Dr.sahab
that news seems to 7th march of this year.is government have issued fresh permits to kill maneater lioness.who is second shooter samarjeet singh from where? that was main question asked by ngrewal.and by the way i founnd all those pay attention to 2nd post.ngrewal didnt knew anything about it thanks

Re: When Tigers attack in India from WSJ

Posted: Fri Mar 21, 2014 12:35 am
by shooter
I believe Mundaire may know the Kuchesar gentleman

Re: When Tigers attack in India from WSJ

Posted: Fri Mar 21, 2014 9:55 am
by brihacharan
prashantsingh wrote:What a lovely find ngrewal.
That is indeed Sanjay with Samarjeet holding his H&H .375 mag.
They don't look dressed for the hunt in this snap though. I guess the media guys asked them to pose for the camera.

Infact he has given my name (and Corbett 99) as team membersfor this hunt as well. Though I have not been able to join in due to arrival of our little baby girl.
Thanks for posting.

PS: Interestingly Safarigent posted me another link , similar to this one . I think it was from TOI Delhi.
It had my name as well in it.
I was joking with Singh: " Maneater mare na mare. News paper me to naam chap gaya." Ha Ha Ha.
Prashant - This is an achievement in itself :cheering:
Well Done - You have made all of us proud :D
Briha

Re: When Tigers attack in India from WSJ

Posted: Sat Mar 22, 2014 11:15 am
by airgun_novice
brihacharan wrote:
prashantsingh wrote:What a lovely find ngrewal.
That is indeed Sanjay with Samarjeet holding his H&H .375 mag.
They don't look dressed for the hunt in this snap though. I guess the media guys asked them to pose for the camera.

Infact he has given my name (and Corbett 99) as team membersfor this hunt as well. Though I have not been able to join in due to arrival of our little baby girl.
Thanks for posting.

PS: Interestingly Safarigent posted me another link , similar to this one . I think it was from TOI Delhi.
It had my name as well in it.
I was joking with Singh: " Maneater mare na mare. News paper me to naam chap gaya." Ha Ha Ha.
Prashant - This is an achievement in itself :cheering:

Well Done - You have made all of us proud :D
Briha
Dear Brihji,
You seemed to have missed out on Prashant's Singh's greater achievement !!!

CONGRATULATIONS PRASHANT upon arrival of the baby Laxmi mata. :cheers:
regs
A.

Re: When Tigers attack in India from WSJ

Posted: Mon Mar 24, 2014 10:06 am
by brihacharan
airgun_novice wrote: Dear Brihji,
You seemed to have missed out on Prashant's Singh's greater achievement !!!
A.
> AGN,
> If my memory serves me right (which it does most of the times ROTFL ) I had already wished Prashant on the arrival of his cute little baby girl :D
> May the Almighty in his /her benevolence & grace, guide & protect the little one and endow her with wisdom to follow the footsteps of her loving father.
Briha