Mourning a death of a Tigress
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PLEASE NOTE: There is currently a complete ban on Hunting/ Shikar in India. IFG DOES NOT ALLOW any posts of an illegal nature, and anyone making such posts will face immediate disciplinary measures.
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Mourning a death of a Tigress
From Rediff
Sad state of affairs
http://news.rediff.com/special/2010/may ... -tiger.htm
hurjhura was 16 months old when I saw her for the first time at the Bhandavgarh tiger sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh [ Images ]. The striking orange coat with bold, clear and unique black stripes, and a wonderful thing almost half as long as its entire body to maintain balance was her tail.
I could easily identify her with her forehead, body stripes, shape of the ears and marking on her legs. Just like human fingerprints, no two tigers have identical markings and the patterns of stripes vary immensely.
Her deep-etched lines, charcoal ridges by her nose, she poised with regal grace, her sovereign style, I saw her when she ate. Righteously proud in stripes of self-esteem, she smiled and growled, her two blank eyes like moons stared.
Herein lies the quandary of a feline tale upon one summer day when the young tigress was found dead. Murderers, I call them, those who killed her.
She is dead now. The twig broken before it became a branch. A Madhya Pradesh minister's son's SUV may have killed the tigress. He owns a resort in the Bhandavgarh sanctuary. This is called over-commercialisation and is nothing but man-animal conflict under the 'tourism' umbrella!
Jhurjhura was found dead at the Tala range of the reserve in Umaria district. The post-mortem on the tigress was done only after we (nature lovers and conservationists) sent letters to the President, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh [ Images ] and the MP chief minister.
The forest department spread various stories to confuse us and put us off the trail. We got eight vehicles confiscated for forensic examination after collecting data from the register of the national park. The vehicles include that of state PWD Minister Nagender Singh Nagod's son and those of the forest department.
The tourist operators, all big names from Gujarat and MP with political connections, have united to protect their commercial interests. The operators blame a forest vehicle for hitting the tigress.
The forest department is rubbing salt on the wounds of the tigress. It's unbelievable that since 2008 the state wildlife board never met. The state wildlife board at present is unconstitutional and a farce. The Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party [ Images ] both are playing with the forests of Madhya Pradesh.
After the efforts of animal rights activists, the forest officials finally agreed that the tigress died due to internal haemorrhage. "The autopsy report said the haemorrhage was caused perhaps by being hit by a vehicle," said Madhya Pradesh chief wildlife warden R S Negi.
"The post-mortem also revealed that the tigress was around eight years old, and not three years as presumed earlier by the forest department."
Now we have the tigress's three cubs at the mercy of the forest officers.
Image: A file image of Jhurjhura at the Bhandavgarh tiger sanctuary | Photograph: Kamaljeet Hora
Sad state of affairs
http://news.rediff.com/special/2010/may ... -tiger.htm
hurjhura was 16 months old when I saw her for the first time at the Bhandavgarh tiger sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh [ Images ]. The striking orange coat with bold, clear and unique black stripes, and a wonderful thing almost half as long as its entire body to maintain balance was her tail.
I could easily identify her with her forehead, body stripes, shape of the ears and marking on her legs. Just like human fingerprints, no two tigers have identical markings and the patterns of stripes vary immensely.
Her deep-etched lines, charcoal ridges by her nose, she poised with regal grace, her sovereign style, I saw her when she ate. Righteously proud in stripes of self-esteem, she smiled and growled, her two blank eyes like moons stared.
Herein lies the quandary of a feline tale upon one summer day when the young tigress was found dead. Murderers, I call them, those who killed her.
She is dead now. The twig broken before it became a branch. A Madhya Pradesh minister's son's SUV may have killed the tigress. He owns a resort in the Bhandavgarh sanctuary. This is called over-commercialisation and is nothing but man-animal conflict under the 'tourism' umbrella!
Jhurjhura was found dead at the Tala range of the reserve in Umaria district. The post-mortem on the tigress was done only after we (nature lovers and conservationists) sent letters to the President, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh [ Images ] and the MP chief minister.
The forest department spread various stories to confuse us and put us off the trail. We got eight vehicles confiscated for forensic examination after collecting data from the register of the national park. The vehicles include that of state PWD Minister Nagender Singh Nagod's son and those of the forest department.
The tourist operators, all big names from Gujarat and MP with political connections, have united to protect their commercial interests. The operators blame a forest vehicle for hitting the tigress.
The forest department is rubbing salt on the wounds of the tigress. It's unbelievable that since 2008 the state wildlife board never met. The state wildlife board at present is unconstitutional and a farce. The Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party [ Images ] both are playing with the forests of Madhya Pradesh.
After the efforts of animal rights activists, the forest officials finally agreed that the tigress died due to internal haemorrhage. "The autopsy report said the haemorrhage was caused perhaps by being hit by a vehicle," said Madhya Pradesh chief wildlife warden R S Negi.
"The post-mortem also revealed that the tigress was around eight years old, and not three years as presumed earlier by the forest department."
Now we have the tigress's three cubs at the mercy of the forest officers.
Image: A file image of Jhurjhura at the Bhandavgarh tiger sanctuary | Photograph: Kamaljeet Hora
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Re: Mourning a death of a Tigress
Take a JCB, excavate a huge ditch in the middle of the sanctuary, gather all those concerned, I mean ALL responsible directly and indirectly, bundle them into the ditch, cover them fully with the excavated earth. Plant seeds of as many trees as possible that can comfortable fit on the mound. The monsoons and the pieces of shit that are buried there will nourish the trees. This is the only way, these people can conserve our national wealth.
The Very Best Regards
The Very Best Regards
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Re: Mourning a death of a Tigress
sad sad sad
You want more gun control? Use both hands!
God made man and God made woman, but Samuel Colt made them equal.
One does not hunt in order to kill; on the contrary, one kills in order to have hunted. by Jose Gasset.
God made man and God made woman, but Samuel Colt made them equal.
One does not hunt in order to kill; on the contrary, one kills in order to have hunted. by Jose Gasset.
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Re: Mourning a death of a Tigress
Very unfortunate. A tiger being killed is bad enough, on top of that instead of trying to figure out how to prevent such a thing happening again in the future every one is trying to hush up the whole thing.
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Re: Mourning a death of a Tigress
The tiger is a very clever and swift animal. Unlike a STREET DOG.
I find it hard to believe that a vehicle could ever run over a healthy tiger in such a manner.
Unless she was already suffering/injured or sick.
I find it hard to believe that a vehicle could ever run over a healthy tiger in such a manner.
Unless she was already suffering/injured or sick.
Last edited by prashantsingh on Sun May 30, 2010 3:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Mourning a death of a Tigress

War does not define who is right -- only who is left
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