Indian villagers beat tiger to death after attacks

A still taken from footage showing Indian villagers beating a tiger with sticks - Mediadrumimages / News Fiesta
A still taken from footage showing Indian villagers beating a tiger with sticks - Mediadrumimages / News Fiesta

An investigation has been launched in India after a tigress blamed for injuring a number of villagers was clubbed to death in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

The killing was compared to a “lynching” by Indian media and online commentators after news channels aired footage of over 40 villagers beating the tiger to death with sticks and clubs.

Forestry Department officials said they tried to intervene and remove the animal from the game reserve that bordered the village in Uttar Pradesh but rangers were also set upon by the mob and had to flee for their lives.

Villagers said the tiger had attacked people working in the fields - a claim disputed by forestry officials.

The incident took place last week after a child “suddenly went near the tigress without any reason,” said Naveen Khandelwal, Divisional Forest Officer at the Pilibhit Tiger Reserve.

When the youth raised a cry, villagers rushed to save him. Around 40 people entered the jungle and assaulted the tigress, leaving it seriously injured, said Mr  Khandelwal.

A post-mortem conducted by wildlife experts concluded that the tigress died “due to shock” as a result of blood hemorrhage, broken bones and numerous injuries with sharp and blunt objects, according to local media.

Mr Khandelwal said locals also attacked the forest officials monitoring the tigress and created obstacles in their work. Four people have been arrested and an investigation has been ordered into the incident.

Around 30 people were killed by tigers in India in 2018, and more than 60 tigers have died or been killed so far this year across the country.

Tigers were close to extinction in India a few years ago due to poaching. But the country is now home to more than half the world's tiger population with more than 2,220 found in special reserves in a 2014 census.

The Indian government is expected to announce a further increase in tiger numbers in the 2018 census.