Leopard kills 8-year-old boy in Pune’s Junnar, third child fatality in region within 2 months

Previous incidents involved the deaths of two other children and an elderly man, leading to public outrage and protests against increasing leopard attacks in the Junnar area.

A third child death in just over two months was reported in the Junnar forest division after an eight-year-old boy was mauled by a leopard in Mangrul Pargaon (Representational). (File)A third child death in just over two months was reported in the Junnar forest division after an eight-year-old boy was mauled by a leopard in Mangrul Pargaon (Representational). (File)

In the third death of a child amidst escalating human leopard conflict in Junnar forest division in Pune district, an eight-year-old boy from a farm labourer family was killed in a leopard attack in Mangrul Pargaon village in Junnar taluka on Monday morning. The Forest Department said that a permission has been sought to eliminate the leopard involved in the attack.

The Junnar Forest Division has seen a sharp rise in human–leopard conflict in recent weeks, with three people — including two children — getting killed between October 12 and November 1 and several more injured in leopard attacks. “An eight year old boy Rohit Babu Kapare was killed by a leopard in Mangrul Pargaon village of Junnar taluka on Monday morning around 11.30 am. Multiple teams from the Forest Department were deployed at the location and in the surrounding areas. Camera traps and trap cages were deployed in the area .” said a Forest Department officer from Junnar Division.

Deputy Conservator of Forest Prashant Khade said, “We have sought the permission of the concerned authorities to eliminate the leopard involved in the attack. Attempts will be made to tranquilise and capture the leopard. If these attempts fail, the leopard will be eliminated as a last resort. Over the last few weeks we have captured over two dozen leopards from this area and these efforts will continue.” Police teams were also deployed in the area.

In the two villages Pimparkhed and Jambut of Shirur taluka three tragic deaths occurred due to leopard attacks between October 12 and November 1. Shivanya Bombe (5) on October 12, Bhagubai Jadhav (70) on October 22 and Rohan Bombe (13) on November 1 lost their lives. These incidents triggered massive public outrage.

In protest against the increasing leopard attacks in Junnar, Shirur, Ambegaon, and Khed talukas, villagers staged agitations blocking the Belhe–Jejuri Road on October 12 and 22 and the Pune Nashik Highway at Manchar on November 3. On November 2, following the death of 13-year-old Rohan, an angry mob set fire to a Forest Department patrol vehicle and the local base camp building, resulting in significant damages. The Mangrul Pargaon village in Junnar where the Monday morning attack took place is around six kilometers away from Pimparkhed village in Shirur which witnessed deaths of two children in October-November.

To capture or eliminate the man-eating leopard from the Pimparkhed area, Pune Forest Conservator Ashish Thakre obtained immediate permission from the Principal Chief Conservator of Forests to capture or shoot dead the maneater leopard after the November 1 incident. On November 5, the suspected maneater leopard was shot dead.

In a separate incident in Ahilyanagar district’s Sangamner taluka, a four-year-old boy was killed in a leopard attack on Saturday evening.

Story continues below this ad

Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, after reviewing the state’s escalating human–leopard conflict in a meeting with top officials on November 18 directed that a proposal to declare the crisis a state disaster be placed before the Cabinet. He has also sought a proposal to shift the leopard from Schedule I to Schedule II of the Wildlife Protection Act. The CM has also directed setting up two more rescue centres for leopards in Pune district.

Last year, as many as eight human deaths were reported and this year five more have been reported in incidents of human leopard conflict. After the back to back incidents last year, the forest department had issued a Red Alert for 13 villages in a five square kilometer area in Junnar taluka. People in these villages were asked not to step out before 9 am and after 5 pm. In June this year, Pune District Collector had notified over 230 villages from four talukas of Pune district — Junnar, Ambegaon, Shirur and Khed — as prone to disaster due to repeated incidents of human leopard conflicts in which multiple deaths and several serious injuries were reported.


Click here to join Express Pune WhatsApp channel and get a curated list of our stories

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Loading Taboola...
Advertisement