
Man-animal conflict takes centrestage in Nilambur ahead of bypoll
As Nilambur gears up for a high-stakes by-election tomorrow, the issue dominating the minds of residents isn't political slogans or campaign rhetoric, but a crisis that has loomed large for years — the intensifying conflict between humans and wild animals.Located at the edge of Kerala's forested heartland, the Nilambur assembly seat — part of the Wayanad parliamentary constituency — is surrounded by forest. With seven panchayats and one municipality sharing boundaries with dense woodland, residents say human-wildlife encounters have become an almost daily affair, particularly with elephants and wild boars.advertisementAbout 15 kilometres from Nilambur town, in Edakkara panchayat, a farmer, Hussain, points to his devastated plantain field. On June 13, a wild elephant trampled the crops and tore down a newly-installed fence in the dead of night.
'The crisis is severe. Nobody is going near the forest area now,' Hussain says. 'Apart from elephants, wild boars are also a concern. It recently hit my son who was travelling on a motorcycle. There is no use telling this to forest department officials. They will ask us to go to Akshaya Centre and give a request. We have to spend money on it. If someone dies, then the government will announce some amount as compensation and then there is no issue. That's what they are doing now.'He continues, 'On the other side, if we do something to scare away these animals, that becomes an issue. You can see this area — at around 3 am, when people have slept, an elephant came and destroyed this field. We saw the destruction only when someone returning from work spotted it. The elephant came to our house, destroyed the plantain, and walked through the road and went back to the forest. Even the ripe ones have been damaged.'advertisementFor Sameera, Hussain's neighbour and mother of two young children, the fear is more personal. Her family had only recently moved into the area and didn't expect the danger to be so close.'We didn't know anything at night. We got to know when we woke up that the elephant just passed by our house,' she says. 'Those who stayed here before had informed us that elephants have come here, but we didn't think it would come this close. We are really scared as we hear news every day about people getting killed in wild animal attacks. My children are also scared.'Just a kilometre away from Hussain's home, a tribal family lives barely 100 metres from the forest, with only an electric fence for protection. As dusk falls, every rustle from the woods sends a wave of anxiety through the household.Suresh, the head of the family, says wild boars are as much a problem as elephants. 'Once it gets dark, we stay alert. The electric fence is there, but we don't know when the animals might break through.'The state has witnessed repeated protests over the issue, with many accusing the CPI(M)-led government of inaction. The government, however, blames legal limitations. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has defended the administration, claiming the state has repeatedly urged the Centre to declare wild boars as vermin — a move that would allow culling — but the Union Environment Ministry has rejected the request.advertisement'Those blaming the state government are not ready to examine the facts — that it is the Central laws which are a major hurdle in dealing with the matter,' Vijayan said earlier this month.But for residents, neither state nor Centre offers much reassurance. With no long-term solution in sight, the man-animal conflict is becoming more than a policy problem — it is turning into a decisive political issue.The constituency will witness a triangular contest among Congress's Aryadan Shoukath, CPI(M)'s M Swaraj, and former MLA and Trinamool Congress-backed PV Anvar, but for the people on the forest's edge, the real battle is not between political rivals — it's between survival and the wild.

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Indian Express
17 minutes ago
- Indian Express
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India Today
2 hours ago
- India Today
Why all Kerala roads lead to Nilambur today
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The Hindu
3 hours ago
- The Hindu
Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan rebuts UDF's election-eve campaign that the CPI(M) tacitly sought RSS votes in Nilambur
Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has sought to give the lie to the Opposition United Democratic Front's (UDF) poll-eve campaign that the Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI(M)] was tacitly seeking Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) votes in the Nilambur Assembly byelection by 'wistfully' harping about its Emergency-era alliance with the Jan Sangh, the precursor to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Mr. Vijayan told a press conference that the CPI(M) worked with socialist Janata parties headed by Jayaprakash Narayanan to oppose Congress' authoritarian rule during the Emergency. Some Hindu majoritarian nationalist elements were embedded in the Janata movement. They broke away later, leading to the formation of the BJP in 1977. The CPI(M) was not part of the Janata Party-led electoral coalition that opposed the Indira Gandhi government in 1977. The CPI(M) fought the Congress on its own, he said. Quoting books authored by former Intelligence Bureau chiefs, journalists, and influential leaders in Indira Gandhi's close political circle, Mr. Vijayan claimed that Ms. Gandhi had despatched her son Rajiv Gandhi to pay obeisance to the RSS leadership for the Hindu majoritarian organisations' support for the Congress in the crucial 1980 Lok Sabha election prompted by the fall of the Morarji Desai government. 'By several accounts, Rajiv Gandhi touched the RSS supremo's feet. Later, the RSS lauded Rajiv Gandhi as a leader of the Hindus when he removed the locks on the Babri Masjid gates for Hindu devotees to worship as Prime Minister in 1989,' he added. Closer home, Mr. Vijayan said the UDF supported BJP leaders, including K.G. Marar and O. Rajagopal, to fight the Assembly elections. 'More recently, photographs showing UDF leadership paying obeisance in front of the picture of RSS ideologue M.S. Golwalkar surfaced on conventional and social media. A former Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee (KPCC) president said he had sent his supporters to guard RSS offices. The line between Congress leadership and RSS appeared blurred,' he added. Mr. Vijayan said the CPI(M) had never sought any alliance with divisive communal forces irrespective of their religious hues, including the radical Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami, which has thrown its lot with the UDF in Nilambur bypoll. He said opposing Jamaat-e-Islami's theocratic ideology was not tantamount to stoking Islamophobia, as alleged by the UDF.