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The Man licensed to Save India’s tigers
When dangerous beasts threaten communities, the authorities summon Nawab Shafath Ali Khan
Courtesy: by Amy Kazmin.
Shortly before I arrive at his Nilgiri Hills retreat, Nawab Shafath Ali Khan receives an SOS from the Airports Authority of India. Wild boar is loose in the Vizag airport compound — a risk to aircraft taking off and landing in the Indian port city. Authorities have orders for the animals to be killed and want Khan to do the job. “We request you to please come over at the earliest and shoot the feral pigs,” reads the appeal. Khan, who first held a gun at age five, shows me the letter as I sit on the veranda of his rustic home a few kilometres from the Mudumalai National Park, a tiger reserve adjacent to what were once the royal hunting grounds of the Mysore kings.
The scion of an aristocratic family from Hyderabad, Khan, 60, was inducted into shikar, or hunting for sport, in the Nilgiri Hills as a child. His grandfather was a renowned colonial-era elephant hunter and his adventures — and the secrets of the jungle and its creatures — dominated dinner table conversation. “He would narrate his experiences hunting rogue elephants and we would listen spellbound,” says Khan, who, like his parents, was also an award-winning target shooter. Hunting for sport was banned in India in 1972, as part of a sweeping wildlife protection act. But today, with his sure shot and tracking experience, Khan is the man to whom Indian officials turn when wild animals terrorise rural communities.
In July, he tranquillised and captured a tigress that had killed two people near the Tadoba National Park, one of India’s 50 designated tiger reserves. In August, the sharpshooter killed a “rogue” elephant that had trampled 15 people to death over six months in Bihar and Jharkhand and just last weekend he shot a leopard that had killed seven people in Maharashtra. Such interventions are more frequent as a rising wildlife population spills out of designated national parks into rural communities — bringing fatal consequences for both man and beast. Besides tracking dangerous animals on the loose — like his grandfather before him — Khan also handles large-scale, state-sanctioned culls of wild boar and nilgai, both rampant destroyers of farmers’ fields.
Courtesy: by Amy Kazmin.
“India’s tigers, leopards, wild boars, blue bulls and elephants have increased far beyond the capacity of our forests, and the spill over is straight into human habitations,” he says. “People living on the fringes of the forest are frustrated, angry and paranoid. They see wildlife as their enemy number one.”
The simple home where we are talking — on a wide veranda facing mountains and a running stream — is Khan’s escape from the existential drama of man versus nature.
The basic, three-room cement structure, with an outdoor kitchen, was built as a family holiday home on 100 acres of abandoned coffee plantation land that Khan bought in 1995.
Today, the house remains unostentatious, furnished with brown sofas, chairs made of bamboo, and ordinary wooden tables and chairs. The only aesthetic hints of the family’s elite roots are Belgian crystal chandeliers, and a black-and-white photo of Khan’s elegantly moustachioed grandfather, hanging in the otherwise plain sitting area.
Courtesy: by Amy Kazmin.
Khan’s son has built a small eco-resort on the property, and now lives there with his wife and five-year-old son in a freestanding room, adjacent to the main house. Khan spends most of his free time here, drawn by family and the lure of his land where tigers, elephants, spotted deer and other animals from the adjacent reserve forest still roam wild.
His proper house in Hyderabad filled with ancestral antiquities and hunting trophies, is increasingly just “a transit point” where he meets the extended family, celebrates religious festivals — and stores his powerful hunting rifles, under tight security.
“It’s a gilded cage,” he says. “I’m tense when I’m in the city. Here my feet are on the ground. My body is trained to walk. This is total relaxation, body and mind.
” Khan was just 19 years old and working at the Mysore Race Club in 1976, when a taxidermist — a family friend — recommended him for an official assignment to shoot a rogue elephant that had killed 12 people in a nearby area. Feted in the national media after the success of his mission, he began receiving calls for help from other parts of India, where lethal encounters between man and beasts were rising after the hunting ban.
Courtesy: by Amy Kazmin.
“This was a turning point in my life,” he says. “The nobility and the sportsmen — who had so far been taking care of man-eating tigers and rogue elephants — had hung up their weapons. Across the country, there was a vacuum for someone professional.
” Khan is reluctant to say how many dangerous animals he has killed, given the passions fatalities arouse in India’s powerful animal rights lobby. But he emphasises that he merely implements government orders; it is wildlife officials — and courts — that decide a dangerous animal’s fate.
“My job is of a hangman,” he says.“I am the man who is putting the noose on the convict and pushing the button of the gallows.
” But since 2009, the veteran hunter has added a new weapon to his armoury: a tranquillising gun that can allow animals to be sedated, captured and relocated to safer places — potentially giving even man-eaters a second chance. Tranquillising animals is far tougher than killing them, Khan explains, as the plastic dart loaded with sedatives travels at just 250ft per second, compared with a rifle bullet travelling at 2,000ft per second. “Shoot to kill is easier because we use a much more powerful weapon,” he says. “With a tranquillising gun, even a blade of grass or a little weed can deflect my dart.”
Courtesy: by Amy Kazmin.
It can also take up to 15 minutes for the tranquillisers to work, so animals must be tracked and found after being sedated — which means such operations normally can’t be done at night, a challenge when dealing with nocturnal animals such as tigers. Khan was summoned once again, but before he could find her, the tigress was electrocuted by an electric fence — the kind now increasingly set up by farmers to protect their crops from wild boars.
Though Khan had felt she was “not a fit case for release” — given her history of killing humans — her death still hurt. “I was sentimentally attached to this tiger,” he said. “She was a beautiful young tigress. I had captured her. I had treated her. I had her head on my lap.”
Courtesy: by Amy Kazmin.
Considering India’s overall wildlife scenario, Khan is gloomy, seeing more trouble ahead. India’s forests are overrun by two noxious inedible weeds, parthenium, and lantana, which choke out the grass that sustains spotted deer and other herbivores — the natural prey of tigers and other big cats. This in turn pushes big cats out of the forest into rural communities, where they face irate and frightened humans.
“It’s a gilded cage,” he says. “I’m tense when I’m in the city. Here my feet are on the ground. My body is trained to walk. This is total relaxation, body and mind.
This year, eight tigers have been killed in Maharashtra — some deliberately poisoned and others unintentionally electrocuted by farmers’ fences. In November 2016, a leopard that strayed into a Haryana village was beaten to death by locals. Such incidents are just the “tip of the iceberg”, with many wild animal killings hushed up by the communities involved. “Today, wildlife management has gone out of hand,” says Khan. “People are killing them. The have suffered enough and they are not waiting for the government — they take law into their hands.”
Courtesy: by Amy Kazmin.
As the phone rings with another urgent call from Vizag, Khan is scathing about Indian bureaucrats who he says know little of the forest and lack a holistic perspective on conservation, yet frame wildlife policies. He looks back nostalgically to the era of royal hunting grounds and shikar, when courtly elites guarded forests for their own pleasure — keeping people safe in the bargain. “In those days people who knew the forest had a say in wildlife management,” he says. “Today, unfortunately, people sitting in air-conditioned chambers, totally bereft of grass-roots realities, are framing policies. That has resulted in the entire forest management and the land animal ratio going haywire.”