Courtesy:
The Hindu
Friday, Dec 24, 2004
By Our Staff Correspondent
Earlier the carcass of a tigress and her cub, slaughtered by poachers, was found in the buffer area of
information passed by an informer after this poaching incident, a resident of Kurai village was arrested as he was found possessing few tiger nails. During
interrogation, he passed information that led to the seizure of another tiger's skeletal remains from Kurai Ghati deep inside the
The number of tigers poached or killed under mysterious circumstances in the
Totladoh dam.
The Thuepani villagers, who were among the first to spot the tiger's body on Monday morning have been firm in stating that the tiger had a bullet wound on its
head. According to informed sources, the forest staff that subsequently reached the spot from Totladoh tried to hush up this whole case by just completing the
formality of a post-mortem and hurriedly burning its remains.
In their official records, forest department sources have pointed out, the forest authorities are now showing it as a natural death caused by some wound
that could have been inflicted during a fight with another tiger over control of territory.
While the State Chief Wildlife Warden, P.C. Shukla was not available for comments as he was on tour, the State Principal Chief Conservator of
Dwivedi told The Hindu today that the Chief Conservator Wildlife, Suhas Kumar has rushed to Pench to study the ground situation and submit a report at
the earliest.
He confirmed that the number of tigers found killed inside the Pench National Park in the last one week has gone up to four. He denied on the basis of preliminary reports that the fourth tiger found killed near Thuepani village had been shot dead.
In May 1996 the Chief Wildlife Warden, Madhya Pradesh had granted permits for fishing in Totladoh reservoir inside Pench to 305 persons displaced due to the construction of the Pench Hydro-electric Project Dam.
These permits had been challenged by the Delhi-based Animal and Environment Legal Defense Fund on the plea that they were violative of the Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972. After the Supreme Court had passed its judgement on the
Ever since Thuepani, which falls in the Chhindwara district, has become an easy entry-point for those crossing the

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