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10 ‘rogue’ elephants radio-collared to track movements – The Times of India

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10 ‘rogue’ elephants radio-collared to track movements – The Times of India



Bhubaneswar: In an effort to check man-animal conflict, the state has identified 10 elephants with behavioural issues in different landscapes and have radio-collared them to track their movements.
These elephants, also called young bull elephants, have been identified by the wildlife wing over the years with an aim to prevent possible conflicts and to take pre-emptive action in case it is found that the animal has strayed into human habitation.
“We analysed the elephants based on their past behaviour, crop and property damaged, and attack on humans. Radio-collaring them helped keep an eye on them through GPS signals. There are dedicated personnel manning the control room to watch the elephants’ movements,” chief wildlife warden Prem Kumar Jha said.
Though elephants are known to move in a herd, the aggressive bull elephants show solitary behaviour and have been seen to attack humans. “After identifying the elephants by taking prominent markers such as ear notches, tusk pattern, body scar, pigmentation and deformities, they are tranquilised and radio-collared. Thereafter, they are released,” Jha explained.
Last year, the elephant census pegged the state’s population at 2,098. Out of this, elephants with behavioural issues have been found in Dhenkanal, Angul, Sambalpur, Bargarh, Bonai, Khurda and Chandaka forest divisions. The age of these elephants ranges between 15 and 28 years.
“We mapped behaviour indicators to understand the elephants, such as their reaction to human presence and timing of movement, diurnal or nocturnal,” the top wildlife officer added.
The last census found 313 adult tuskers, 13 adult Makhna, 748 adult females, 148 sub-adult males, 282 sub-adult females, 209 juveniles, and 385 calves. Officials said elephant attacks on humans are quite frequent in Dhenkanal, Angul, Athgarh, Baripada (Mayurbhanj), Deogarh and Keonjhar divisions.
One of the major reasons for the conflict is shrinking elephant habitat, resulting in the animals straying into human habitation. In 2022, a female elephant killed a couple in the Jagatpur area of Cuttack city. The elephant was later tranquilised and radio-collared.
In a recent written reply in the assembly, forest minister Ganesh Ram Singhkhuntia said in the past 10 years, 1,209 people have died in elephant attacks in the state. In the past decade, 888 elephants also died due to different causes. In 2024-25, 97 elephants died, out of which 32 were due to electrocution, while the causes of 19 deaths couldn’t be ascertained.





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Former Karnataka DGP murder: Om Prakash’s daughter Kriti discharged from hospital, detained for questioning – The Times of India

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Former Karnataka DGP murder: Om Prakash’s daughter Kriti discharged from hospital, detained for questioning – The Times of India


BENGALURU: The HSR Layout police, investigating the murder case of former director general of police and inspector general of police (DG & IGP) Om Prakash, detained his daughter Kriti in the early hours of Wednesday.
According to sources, Kriti, who was admitted to Nimhans Hospital for evaluation on Monday, was discharged. The doctors who evaluated her informed the police that she was doing well. Consequently, the HSR Layout police rushed to the hospital and took her to the police station.
A senior officer told TOI, “After Kriti’s discharge from the hospital, we have to keep her in a safe place. As she is still an accused in the case and her role is yet to be established, we cannot let her go somewhere. So, she is brought to the police station and is subjected to questioning.” The assistant commissioner of police (Madiwala) is investigating the case.
However, the police commissioner, B Dayananda, transferred the case to the central crime branch (CCB) on Monday late evening. The investigation is assigned to an ACP rank officer at CCB. The newly assigned IO is yet to take the case file from the Madiwala ACP and begin the probe.
“We will be handing over the case file and Kriti, the suspect in the case, to the new IO today. It is for the new IO to further interrogate her, establish her role, and take further necessary action. The new IO will be filing a petition in the court seeking the police custody of Prakash’s wife, Pallavi Om Prakash, 64, on a body warrant. She was remanded to 14 days judicial custody by a magistrate on Monday night.”
Prakash was killed in his house in MCHS Layout in HSR Layout 6th sector on Sunday afternoon. He was brutally stabbed to death. According to his elder son, Karthikesh Om Prakash, 39, his mother Pallavi and sister Kriti are suspects in his father’s murder.
Pallavi maintained that she alone killed her husband and that Kriti had no role in it. She also claimed that Kriti is mentally disturbed due to domestic violence from Prakash.
Kriti has not been cooperating with the investigation from day one. When the police rushed to the house after learning about the murder, she was on the third floor and refused to open the door.
The police had to forcefully enter the floor and detain her. She also allegedly created a ruckus in the station on Monday evening as police were not able to get any leads regarding her involvement in the murder and scolded police for detaining her.





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School bus operators oppose illegal vans in Bombay high court; want matter to be heard before schools reopen | Mumbai News – The Times of India

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School bus operators oppose illegal vans in Bombay high court; want matter to be heard before schools reopen | Mumbai News – The Times of India


MUMBAI: The school bus operators’ case opposing illegal vans in Mumbai in the interest of child safety came up in Bombay high court on Tuesday and matter has been posted for hearing on June 10 along with hearing on a pending PIL on the same issue.
The petitioner’s advocate mentioned that schools will be starting from June, and should be heard at the earliest. The court subsequently announced it will hear the case on June 10.
The operators are opposing the growing menace of illegal vans ferrying school children packed in cramped conditions and operating without proper permits in several parts of the city.
Representatives of the SBOA have stated that they have repeatedly approached the transport commissioner’s office, submitting petitions along with proof of illegal van operations in Mumbai, but the problem persists.
“The ongoing legal case will also challenge certain government policies and highlight police action against school buses for illegal parking, despite there being no designated parking areas for school buses as requested in previous petitions to the government,” said SBOA president Anil Garg.
According to school bus operators, the number of illegal vans and private vehicles ferrying school children with scant regard for student safety or compliance with transport department rules has increased by 2.5 times the number of legitimate school buses currently operating in Mumbai. While the number of compliant school buses is now around 6,000—a marked decrease from 8,000 a few years ago—the tally of ‘unscrupulous’ vehicles has surged to approximately 15,000 in the metropolis.
Bus owners highlighted the proliferation of small vans, private cars, autorickshaws, and black-and-yellow taxis transporting school children. “The vans and private vehicles openly flout rules, compromise student safety by cramming several children into small, cramped vehicles without attendants. There are no road or fire safety measures in place, and the state government’s school bus safety policy is being violated,” Garg pointed out.
Association members said that in some photos already taken, they discovered several vans operating with expired PUC, fitness certificates, no permit, and lacking vehicle insurance.
According to sources in SBOA, CNG gas cylinders are found in many vans ferrying students, with young children often made to sit on a plank placed above the CNG cylinder, which is extremely dangerous.





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Of grasslands, blackbucks, and pastoral nomads

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Of grasslands, blackbucks, and pastoral nomads


“My first sighting of a male blackbuck was ethereal. This huge, big male with horns sticking out like swords, body glistening, standing against the sun in the morning,” remembers the Bengaluru-based natural history filmmaker and the co-founder of Trailing Wild Productions, Sumanth Kuduvalli. It was in 2013 at Maidanahalli at the Jayamangali Blackbuck Reserve, in Tumakuru. His film Land of the Blackbuck: A Story of Hope and Resilience, whichpremiered in Bengaluru earlier this month, chronicles his long association with the captivating animal.

He knew he wanted to film them even back then, but unfortunately, the idea fizzled out due to unforeseen circumstances. ”Then, in 2020, seven years later, an opportunity to revisit that dream cropped up. He had just returned to Bengaluru from North Karnataka, where he was filming hornbills for Jungle Lodges and Resorts (JLR), when they asked him if there was a pet project that he wanted to do, one that they could support logistically, he recalls. “So, I told them about this blackbuck project.”

Little literature

It turned out that JLR had a property in Bidar, and they offered to host him there while he filmed the blackbuck. He began researching for the film, soon realising that there was very little literature about the wildlife of Bidar, except for one paper that H.N. Kumara, a faculty member at the Salim Ali Centre for Ornithology and Natural History (SACON), had written. “But that was mostly just a reference to Bidar, so I went there, mostly shooting in the dark,” says Sumanth, whose film is based on his encounters with the grasslands of Bidar.

It was only when he visited and began talking to its inhabitants that he realised “that the land had more to offer than what could be seen on the surface,” he says, recounting the names of some of the people who helped him on this journey, such as Vinay Malge of Team Yuvaa, a volunteer-based organisation based out of Bidar, UNESCO researcher, Majid Labbaf Khaneiki and naturalist Vivek Baburao.

In 2021, he applied for and received a fellowship from Jackson Wild, a non-profit based out of Wyoming, USA, which describes itself as “an inclusive global forum, inspiring our community, celebrating excellence in storytelling that illuminates our connection to the natural world and collective responsibility to the wild.” As part of the fellowship, he attended a workshop where the fellows were mentored by a leading professional in the industry, he says. “I was partnered with a BBC producer and director, Simon Baxter, and then the story started to take shape,” relates Sumanth. “We realised that it could be a full-fledged film on grasslands.”

In love with the wild

As a child, growing up in Bengaluru, one of Sumanth’s favourite hangouts was a patch of swamp on the campus of the Indian Institute of Science. “I studied in the Kendriya Vidyalaya here and would spend a lot of time in this place, watching geckos, frogs, snakes…” he says. “I found refuge in it.”

Not surprisingly, he also thoroughly enjoyed watching nature documentaries, which his school made the students watch. “(I was) fascinated to see that something I enjoyed watching in action was happening on TV. And I remember thinking that it was such a beautiful thing to do.”

But then Sumanth went on to pursue a degree in engineering. He never, however, lost his fascination with the natural world and, while still a student, began volunteering at the Agumbe Rainforest Research Station (ARR). During one such stint at Agumbe, he met someone who would introduce him to photography – the biologist, broadcaster and photographer, Tim Cockerill.

“He told me that, without an academic background in wildlife, there was very little chance I could get into the scientific aspect of it. But if I wanted to stick to wildlife, film and photography was one way of doing it,” says Sumanth, who went on to do a diploma in documentary filmmaking at the Centre for Research in Art of Film and Television in New Delhi before joining Nikon India Pvt Limited and then branching out as an independent natural history filmmaker in 2015.

Over the last decade or so, Sumanth has been part of various documentary projects, featuring animals like the rhinoceros, mudskippers and the sangai deer before making his directorial debut with the film, The Naga Pride, in 2018, about the community-led conservation of the Amur Falcons of Nagaland. The film, which was part of several international film festivals, was nominated for 12 awards and won the best Indian documentary award at the Nagaon International Film Festival, he says. “In our films, we try to showcase the natural history of a species as well as highlight the conservation issue of a particular landscape,” says Sumanth, who co-founded Trailing Wild Productions in 2019. “That way, it becomes more engaging and pertinent.”

Open natural ecosystems

The blackbuck, also called the Indian antelope, is a hoofed ruminant found mostly in the open natural ecosystems of India, with a small population in Nepal. While often misidentified as deer, antelopes belong to the same family (Bovidae) as cattle, bison, buffalo, sheep, and goats, with all males and some females sporting simple, unbranched horns, instead of the branched antlers found in the deer family (Cervidae). “As I learnt more about these species and the landscape they live in, I found myself drawn to these animals,” says Sumanth.

Sumanth began visiting Bidar to shoot the film in 2021, finishing the filming by 2023, before taking it to the editing table. The 23-minute-long film, which not just focuses on the behaviours of and challenges faced by blackbucks, but also offers scattered glimpses of other animals found in this region, including spiny-tailed lizards, laggar falcon, feral dogs, and wolves, hopes to create more awareness and concern for these “very critical ecosystems.”

Pointing to a study published by researchers from the University of California, Davis, Sumanth argues that grasslands are better carbon sinks than forests, since they hold the carbon in the earth below, “unlike trees, which, once they die, when cut down or during a wildfire, release the carbon back into the atmosphere.”He adds that in the face of climate change, “it became evident that grasslands have a very important role to play.”

Biodiverse ecosystems

Not only are they highly biodiverse ecosystems, but these pasture-rich lands are also home to several nomadic and pastoral communities. “They move from place to place, allowing their sheep or goat to graze, enriching the land with their manure,” he says, alluding to the age-old, symbiotic relationship between pastoralists and farmers. “With the reduction of grasslands, these people are finding it hard to move from place to place.”

Grasslands also play a vital role in creating an underground water system, essential in a country that relies so much on underground water. Bidar, for instance, has something called the karez (or qanat) water system created by the Bahamani Kings in the 15th century, which the film showcases. “It was a major factor in fighting the drought that North Karnataka went through in 2016 and 17,” he says. “When this area was heaving under very bad heat waves, it survived thanks to this.”

Sumanth now hopes to travel with the film, with multiple copies in regional languages, to ensure that he can “reach places where it matters.” He says he intends to go beyond the film and create a grassland movement, trying to help set communities and individuals they work with resources that can help them scale their conservation work. For instance, he says that in Bidar, Trailing Wild supported local conservationist Vivek Baburao with financial resources and scientific support in conducting a study on the grassland ecosystem. “For us, it is about arming anyone who can make a difference. We all need to join hands and conserve grasslands.”



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