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Banished from their homes


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Author:  Prerna Singh Bindra

 
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Man-animal conflicts are on the rise across the country, because wild
animals are being increasingly pushed out of their habitat by human
activities. Their departure has exposed our forests and water sources to
destruction

In 1967, a wild tigress from the Chandaka forest on the outskirts of
Bhubaneswar walked into the Nandankanan Zoo nearby, lured by the calls of a
male tiger in one of the moated exhibits. It jumped in to join him, surely
unaware that there was no way out. The tigress - later named 'Kanan' - lived
on in the zoo. Predictably the Press went to town about "the wild tigress
who voluntarily chose captivity." For the State forest department it was a
bonanza, for the then fledgling zoo got a new 'free' tiger. Few thought of
the only, lonely tigress who had simply responded to the call of her own.
She was the last wild tiger in Chandaka.

The forest, however, continued to be a refuge for elephants, leopards, sloth
bears, jungle cats and a host of bird species, and was declared the
Chandaka-Dampara Wildlife Sanctuary in 1982, intended to protect elephants
and serve as Bhubaneswar's 'green lungs'. Over time, the dynamics of the
city and the forest have changed. Bhubaneswar today bears little semblance
to the quaint capital built in 1948. In its vision for the coming decades,
Odisha aims at transforming the Chaudwar-Cuttack-Bhubaneswar-Khurda urban
conglomerate into a metropolis that will replace Kolkata as the 'hub of the
east'.

Going full throttle to achieve this vision, the region has seen rapid, and
ill-planned expansion which has isolated Chandaka Bharatpur forest, a part
of the Chandka sanctuary juts into the city and has practically been severed
from the rest of the sanctuary. Gated colonies, large institutes
(Bhubaneswar has over a 100 engineering colleges, plus a number of
management and other institutes) and tech-parks have come up in between,
leaving a few elephants trapped permanently inside the 10 sq km degraded,
weed-ridden scrub that is Bharatpur today.

Until 2002, Chandaka had over 80 elephants living in its 190 sq km area.
Conflict was a perennial problem in the villages around, and became more
severe as the city grew. The relatively new suburbs of the city sometimes
had their residents jolted out of prime time TV when a herd of elephants
would show up on their driveways. Crackers, crowds, mobs and mayhem
invariably followed - sometimes with tragic results. The elephants had
nowhere to go; they got little sanctuary in Chandaka. Overgrazed by cattle
and exploited for firewood, the habitat itself was turning increasingly
unsuitable, even hostile. Villagers had encroached, and when the elephants
raided their fields, they were riddled with shotgun pellets. Wounded, over
time some elephants died a slow, painful death.

In 2002-2003, a herd of over 20 elephants migrated out of Chandaka in a
southerly direction - a route never in history known to be used by them.
They crossed the busy four-lane NH-5 just outside Bhubaneswar and made for
Barunei Hill, moving onwards, traversing villages, cultivation, the
Tangi-Ranpur 'Mal' forests and into the relatively well protected Barbara
reserve forest - traditionally not known to harbour elephants.

When Chandaka deteriorated further, especially post 2006, more herds
followed. The desperate, bewildered elephants were on the run, hounded by
mobs and harassed by terrified villagers. Some reached Chilika, a few fell
by the wayside, succumbing to sheer exhaustion. Reportedly, only about 20 of
the original 85-odd elephants now survive in Chandaka. The 'emigrants' are
now constantly on the run - from one conflict situation to another, across
southern-coastal Odisha, where neither can the forests support them, nor are
the farmers used to elephants.

Conflict has intensified to such an extent in southern coastal Odisha now,
that the State's forest department has deployed almost its entire force of
captive elephants as 'kunkis' in the region to contain the conflict. The
elephants are running out of space, and out of time. Yet, there is hope.

Two years ago, a herd of elephants from across the Mahanadi came to Chandaka
- and went back again after a short stay, proving that old corridors linking
Chandaka to the gene pool of the Mahanadi Elephant Reserve, which also
includes the Satkosia Tiger Reserve, through the Athgarh and to the Kapilas
Hills, still exist. Since then, a few more herds have begun using this
route. If Chandaka is protected, its habitat restored and the villages
inside it rehabilitated, it can once again be a safe haven for elephants.

It is equally critical to protect the fragile links of this forest to
Athgarh and Kapilas for the long-term persistence of elephants in this
landscape, and to address and minimise conflict. Interestingly, elephants
from the Athgarh-Chandaka region were considered the most 'robust and
strong', and were much coveted as war elephants.

Saving Chandka and elephant corridors requires a consistent effort,
commitment and a tremendous amount of will, but surely in a country where
the elephant is worshipped as Ganesha, and in a State where elephants are
deeply rooted in ancient culture, this should be the priority.

The decay of Chandaka and its wildlife is a reflection of the larger picture
of our 'protected areas', particularly those which have the misfortune of
neighbouring a city. Hardwar and Rishikesh are crowding Rajaji National
Park, which must also bear the brunt of the ancillary development of the
capital, Dehradun, a mere 35km away. Dachigaam National Park is a jewel on
the outskirts of Srinagar, with the expanding capital pressing in. Conflict
with black bears has reached worrying proportions -  a bear was burnt alive
when it ventured into human habitation in 2006. Ratapani, once the hunting
grounds of the nawabs of Bhopal, is fragmented by highways, railway lines
and the swell of the capital.

Reports of a tigress with cubs in outskirts of Bhopal have been doing the
rounds since last year. Gurgaon has bulldozed the forests of the ancient
Aravallis - and with it has gone the unique biodiversity that these hills
supported. Water, a gift of the Aravallis, has vanished too. The Aravalli
hills are a critical groundwater recharge system in this otherwise arid
north-west of India and contain the catchment of Damdama, the last remaining
major perennial lake here.

The Punjab and Haryana High Court had wondered on August 1, in response to a
PIL, "Where will the next generation go if we extract the complete
groundwater?" And therein lies the logic of saving Chandaka and its
elephants, Dachigaam and its hangul, Ratapani (and Rajaji) and its tigers.

Not only does wilderness provide us precious intangible values, but it is
the key to our water and ecological security, and to also our future.

(The author is a member, National Board of Wildlife.)

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