Shoot-to-kill: India hunts for serial killer elephant

An Indian volunteer for animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animal (PETA) poses for a photograph wearing a costume depicting an elephant during a protest in New Delhi on August 9, 2017. PETA is calling for an end to the use of elephants in shows and performances. (AFP)
Updated 11 August 2017
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Shoot-to-kill: India hunts for serial killer elephant

INDIA: India’s top hunter on Friday led a shoot-to-kill pursuit of an elephant whose murderous rampage through villages has left 15 people dead.
The government has turned to sharpshooter Nawab Shafat Ali Khan ahead of World Elephant Day on Saturday to hunt the animal who crushed four victims in the eastern state of Bihar in March before crossing into neighboring Jharkhand and killing 11 more.
Jharkhand’s chief forest and wildlife conservator L.R. Singh said the decision to kill the animal was made after a team failed to tranquilize and capture the elephant during a week-long mission.
Singh blamed the rocky terrain and thick vegetation in Sahibganj district. “The visibility is only 15 feet and it’s become next to impossible to tranquilize the animal,” Singh told AFP.
“It has already killed so many people. There have been two deaths just in the last four days.
“Despite all the efforts by the forest department and our teams working 24-7, we had no option but to order the shooting of the animal,” he added.
The marauding elephant, believed to have lost its way after becoming separated from its herd, has strayed into villages in hillier parts of Sahibganj.
The area is inhabited by the Paharia tribe, one of the poorest indigenous tribal communities in India.
Of the 11 deaths in the state, nine of the victims were Paharias, Singh said.
Khan has been flown in from the southern city of Hyderabad to kill the prey.
“He is one of the best out there. He has vast experience in shooting such rogue animals and that’s why he has been given the responsibility to shoot the elephant,” he said.
“We expect him to get the animal anytime now — today, tonight, tomorrow — anytime.”
In 2014, Khan was licensed by the northern state of Uttar Pradesh to capture or kill a man-eating tiger that was believed to have killed eight people.
Elephants kill roughly 60 people every year in forested Jharkhand, Singh said. An estimated 1,100 people died across India from elephant or tiger attacks in the three years to May.
The environment ministry estimates a human dies every day in India in clashes with endangered animals — the vast majority crushed by elephants.
Violent encounters between elephants and humans were an “increasing trend,” said Singh, as vast swathes of forest are cleared for human settlements and industry.


Small dog sole survivor of Peru helicopter crash that killed 15

Updated 24 February 2026
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Small dog sole survivor of Peru helicopter crash that killed 15

  • Rescue workers found the caramel-colored dog among the twisted wreckage of the Mi-17 helicopter
  • Local media reported that the dog appeared OK, but as a precaution was taken to a veterinary clinic

LIMA: The only survivor of a military helicopter crash in southern Peru that killed 15 people was a small dog belonging to a colonel who was among the passengers, an air force source told AFP Tuesday.
Rescue workers found the caramel-colored dog among the twisted wreckage of the Mi-17 helicopter that crashed Sunday. It was lying next to the body of its owner, Col. Javier Nole, 50, who was on board with his wife and two daughters.
“It’s Col. Nole’s pet; it’s the only survivor,” the source, who requested anonymity, told AFP.
Local media reported that the dog appeared OK, but as a precaution was taken to a veterinary clinic.
Seven children were among the 15 fatalities when the Russian-made aircraft crashed in the Arequipa region. The helicopter had been recently deployed in rescue operations for victims of floods there.
It had taken off from the city of Pisco, in the Ica region. Rescuers located the wreckage on Monday just over 300 kilometers (186 miles) away near Chala Viejo, a town close to the Pacific coast in Arequipa.
The air force has launched an investigation to determine the cause of the accident.