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[Animals] Kashmir: A conflict between wild animals and humans


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The heavy influx of tourists this year has given new cheer to the people of India-administered Kashmir. It is a dramatic change for the tourism industry in the disputed region, which faced the double whammy of the coronavirus pandemic and harsh curbs on civil rights New Delhi imposed in the region in August 2019.

 

On June 3, 4-year-old Adda Mudasir was playing with her toys a few feet away from her brother and grandfather on the lawn of her home in Ompora village in India-administered Kashmir.

By the time her family heard the screams it was too late. A leopard had attacked the girl and dragged her away, leaving only her toys and shoes on the lawn. Her remains were found a day later hundreds of meters away near a nursery.

"I am horrified. In a few seconds, a leopard came and snatched all the happiness from my family. We were preparing to celebrate my son's sixth birthday and she had brought him a cake and some gifts," Mudasir's father told DW.

"It was a murder because the government ignored our multiple alerts about the presence of leopards in the area," he added.

At least 196 people have been killed, and 2,325 injured, by wild animals since 2011 in India-administered Kashmir. In the first six months of this year, at least 10 people have been killed and over 150 injured.
"This year we saw an abrupt increase in incidents of human-animal conflicts. We are receiving scores of panic calls from people about the presence of wild animals in their residential areas," said a senior wildlife official in Kashmir, Ifshan Dewan. "We have captured six leopards in the past four months from the Ompora area alone," he told DW.

Increased development encrusting on habitats
The shrinking buffer zone between forests and human settlements is a major factor in wild animals foraying into po[CENSORED]ted areas.

Although this problem has been raised by locals in the past, authorities have yet to intervene substantially.

Forests cover around 20% of Kashmir's geographical area, with protected areas of 15,900 square kilometers (6,100 square miles), comprising five national parks, 14 wildlife sanctuaries and 35 conservation reserves.

Experts say the change in land use patterns, deforestation, development projects coming up near and into forests has led to higher incidences of human-animal conflict in the region.

Himalayan black bears and leopards have become a common sight in new residential developments, which have been built next to forests and conservation areas.

The wild animals have even been recently spotted in busy markets of the region's main city, Srinagar, and were also found in high-security zones like the residence of former Chief Minister Omar Abdullah.

Development with disregard
Wildlife experts say in the past three decades, Kashmir has seen a drastic change in land-use patterns, with a complete disregard for habitat habitats and ecologically sensitive zones.
ll. The last three decades of armed conflict provided cover to all subversions and violations in the name of development committed by both government and private individuals,” said Sabreena Nazir, a wildlife scholar at Sher-i-Kashmir University Agriculture Sciences and Technology in Srinagar.

"These development projects have immensely disturbed the habitat habitat," she added.

"The buffer between forests and human habitation has vanished due to expanding apple orchards. Fruits, particularly apples, are one of the most attractive pursuits for a black bear," she said.

Man vs. beast
In the lush hamlet of Takiya Yousuf Shah, located in the foothills of Pir Panjal forest range in Wagoora in Kashmir's northwest, residents say they have no choice but to kill the wild animals stalking their land.

"Our cattle and sheep are not safe from them. Wild animals frequently come into our village. Last year, a leopard took our dog," said local woman Jabeena Shah.

Nazir said most incidents of human-animal conflict have been recorded in orchards and human settlements, which have come up against buffer zones.

Official figures show that at least 50 animals, mostly bears and leopards, have been killed in the past year. Several incidents of violent mobs chasing and pelting rocks at wild animals have also been reported.

"The attacks carried out by mobs on animals are lethal or cause permanent disfigurement. Every month, we see one or two cases where wild animals, mostly bears and leopards, have received fatal head injuries in mob attacks," said veterinarian Umer Zahid at Dachigam National Park.

Kashmir's militarization plays a role
Kashmir is one of the world's most militarized areas, with armed security forces present in wildlife sanctuaries and forests in border areas.

Armed forces are also rearing dogs in their camps, and food waste littered around attracts stray dogs — a favorite prey for leopards — from adjoining villages.

"We have asked the army authorities to install trash bins, as the food waste attracts dogs, which become a target for leopards," Dewan said.

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