From Reuters:
Kashmir wildlife population risingRather: black francolinDACHIGAM, INDIA — The wildlife population of Indian Kashmir has registered a “manifold” increase as a two-decade-old separatist rebellion has scared away poachers and hunters from the region, a wildlife official said on Tuesday.
Rare birds like the black partridge
and pheasant have increased in thousands while more Asiatic black bear, leopards, musk deer and hangul, a rare red deer, now roam the disputed Himalayan region’s pine forests.See also here.“For fear of being caught in exchanges of fire between militants and the security forces, no one dared to venture deep into the forests in the past 20 years,” Kashmir’s wildlife warden, Rashid Naqash, told Reuters in Dachigam Sanctuary.
“Also, local hunters were ordered to hand in their guns. The impact is visible, there has been a manifold increase in wildlife.”
In 1990, Indian authorities asked residents to deposit their hunting rifles with police as part of efforts to quell the revolt.
Authorities estimate the number of threatened black bear, which also inhabit hilly and mountainous forests across Asia from Afghanistan to Taiwan, has jumped in Kashmir to 2,500-3,000 from 700-800 since 1990.
Officials say the increase in wildlife population is good news for Kashmir’s ailing tourism industry.
SRINAGAR: A human rights group in Indian-administered Kashmir urged authorities on Wednesday to launch a probe into 2,700 unmarked graves of people believed to have died as a result of the region’s revolt against Indian rule: here.
