It was 9 o’clock in the morning in Sakkanpur village, on the edge of Corbett Tiger Reserve in Nainital district. Vinod Kumar, 35, had gone to the nearby forest with a group of villagers to collect wood for a family wedding. He had done it dozens of times before. He knew the forest. He knew the path.
He did not know there was a tiger watching him.
The animal struck without warning — grabbing Vinod and dragging him nearly 100 metres into the jungle before the screams of the other villagers forced it to retreat. They rushed him to the hospital. He died on the way.
Three months later, in Dini Talli Gram Panchayat in the same Nainital district, 35-year-old Hema Devi left her home in the morning to collect fodder for her cattle. She spotted a leopard nearby and did what her village had always taught her — she shouted, threw stones, made herself loud. Her brother-in-law came running. He threw stones too. The leopard grabbed her and dragged her into the forest. Her body was recovered hours later.
Two attacks. Two deaths. One district. One year.
This is Nainital in 2025. A district famous across the world for its blue lake, its colonial hill station architecture, and its position as the gateway to Jim Corbett National Park. It is also, according to data compiled by the Uttarakhand Forest Department, one of the most dangerous places in India to live near a forest — where leopards, tigers, bears, and elephants have killed and injured hundreds of people over the past two decades, and where the government’s response has consistently lagged behind the scale of the crisis.
This article tells the full story: how the attacks happen, why they are increasing, what the government does after each one, and what compensation — if any — the families of victims actually receive.
The Numbers Behind the Fear
- 534 people — killed by leopards alone in Uttarakhand since the state was formed in 2000 — as of February 2025 (Uttarakhand Forest Department)
- 2,052 people — injured in leopard attacks in Uttarakhand since 2000 — the highest of any animal species in the state
- 19 deaths, 102 injuries — caused by leopards in Uttarakhand in 2025 alone (News9Live, January 2026)
- 12 deaths, 5 injuries — caused by tigers in Uttarakhand in 2025 alone — with 4 more tiger deaths in January 2026
- 1,935 people — injured in bear attacks since 2000 — second only to leopard attacks
- 900+ lives — lost to leopard, bear, and other wild animal attacks in Uttarakhand over 25 years (India Narrative, 2026)
- 2,026 elephants — recorded in Uttarakhand in the 2020 census — mostly in Corbett and Rajaji, directly adjacent to Nainital’s Terai region
- 2,276 leopards — counted in Uttarakhand in the 2021-22 census — one of the highest leopard densities in any Indian state
Part 1: Where Attacks Happen — and How They Unfold
Understanding why Nainital district has become so dangerous requires understanding the specific geography that makes human-wildlife contact almost inevitable here.
The Geography of Danger
Nainital district sits at the meeting point of three distinct ecological zones: the Shivalik foothills in the south, the mid-Himalayan forests in the centre, and the Terai grasslands in the north. Jim Corbett National Park and the Corbett Tiger Reserve sit within and adjacent to the district. The Kalagarh Tiger Reserve lies to its north-west. The Terai East and West Forest Divisions run along the district’s southern edge.
This means that Nainital is not simply near a wildlife area — it is surrounded by them on three sides. Hundreds of villages sit at the boundaries of these protected areas. Farmers graze cattle in forest-edge meadows. Women collect fodder and firewood from the fringes of reserve forests. Children walk to school along paths that run between fields and forest. For the people of these villages, the forest is not a distant backdrop. It is their immediate physical environment.
Leopards, which are highly adaptable and comfortable in human-modified landscapes, move through agricultural land, gardens, and even the outskirts of town regularly. Tigers in the Corbett-adjacent Terai occasionally leave the reserve following prey. Elephants move through crop fields in the Kashipur and Haldwani areas of the Terai. Sloth bears, which become aggressive when surprised, encounter humans on forest paths year-round.
Who the Victims Are: A Pattern Science Has Confirmed
A 2019-2020 forensic study of leopard attack deaths published in PubMed — conducted at a mortuary in Uttarakhand — revealed a consistent pattern in who dies and how. Of the eight leopard attack deaths studied, the majority of victims were women carrying out routine household work near forest borders. One victim was a tourist who had wandered into a forest area.
This pattern holds across the broader data. The typical victim of a leopard attack in Nainital and surrounding districts is:
- A woman between 25 and 60 years old collecting fodder, firewood, or water from forest-edge land — often alone or in a small group.
- A child between 2 and 10 years old playing in a courtyard, yard, or open ground near the forest edge — often snatched in seconds.
- A male agricultural worker entering forest land for wood, grazing, or crop-related work — usually in the early morning.
The PubMed study found that leopard attack injuries to the head and neck are ante-mortem — inflicted while the victim is alive. Injuries to the abdomen, buttocks, and limbs are post-mortem, inflicted after death, when the leopard attempts to feed or carry the body. This detail is clinically important: it tells forensic investigators whether a death was caused by the initial attack or by subsequent injuries, and it informs how quickly medical intervention — had it been available — might have saved a life.

The forensic pattern also reveals the nature of leopard predatory behavior. Unlike tigers, which are primarily ambush predators targeting large prey, leopards in human-modified landscapes sometimes exhibit opportunistic predation on humans — particularly children, who resemble the small prey animals leopards naturally hunt. Once a leopard has successfully attacked a human, it may repeat the behavior, making it what the Forest Department officially classifies as a ‘problem animal’ — a designation that triggers a specific government response.
Real Cases: What These Attacks Look Like
The statistics are devastating in aggregate. The individual cases are devastating in a different way — in the specific, human detail of what was happening when each person died.
| Victim | Age | Location | What They Were Doing | Animal | Outcome |
| Vinod Kumar | 35 | Sakkanpur, Nainital-Corbett border | Collecting wood for family wedding with group | Tiger | Dragged 100m, died on way to hospital |
| Hema Devi | 35 | Dini Talli, Nainital district | Collecting fodder for cattle | Leopard | Killed despite throwing stones and shouting |
| Ganga Devi | 60 | Bhimtal area, Nainital district | Collecting fodder in forest | Leopard | Body found deep in forest next morning |
| Daksh Bisht | 5 | Sindravani village, Rudraprayag | Playing in home courtyard | Leopard | Dragged into forest, body found at 11pm |
| Unnamed woman | 55 | Nainital forest area | Going to forest to gather firewood | Tiger (prowling) | Killed in attack |
| Rakhi Rawat | 10 (at time) | Devkundai village, Pauri district | Saving younger brother from leopard | Leopard | 40 stitches on head, survived — trauma continues at 15 |
Sources: The Tribune, ETV Bharat, Garhwal Post, Mongabay India, India Narrative, 2025-2026
Why Children Are Most Vulnerable
The abduction of Daksh Bisht, 5, from his own courtyard in Sindravani village is the attack that most vividly illustrates why communities near Uttarakhand’s forests live in constant fear. The child was playing in his home — not near a forest, not in a field. The leopard entered the village, entered the courtyard, and took him in front of his family. Seven search teams combed the forest for hours before his body was found at 11 o’clock at night.
For parents in villages adjacent to Nainital’s forest reserves, this case confirmed what many already feared: that proximity to the forest had made even their own homes unsafe. Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami’s response — directing forest department teams to provide escort facilities for schoolchildren in wildlife-affected areas — was both necessary and revealing. When a government must escort children to school to prevent them being taken by leopards, the scale of the failure is plain.
Part 2: Why Attacks Are Increasing — The Science and the Reality
Wildlife attacks in Uttarakhand have not always been at current levels. The data shows a complex pattern: a decline in the mid-2000s as large numbers of female leopards were killed, followed by a sharp increase from 2020 onward. Understanding why the current phase is so dangerous requires looking at several converging factors.
Factor 1: Leopards Have Lost Their Fear of Humans
Chief Wildlife Warden and Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (Wildlife) R.K. Mishra stated publicly in 2025 that leopards in parts of Uttarakhand have undergone a fundamental behavioral change. They no longer fear humans. This is not speculation — it is documented in camera trap footage, in the boldness of attacks in open daylight, and in the fact that leopards are entering villages, markets, and even school compounds with increasing frequency.
The mechanism behind this change is well understood in wildlife science. When leopards are rewarded for approaching human areas — by finding accessible livestock, garbage containing food waste, or small animals — and are not deterred by human presence, they progressively reduce the distance they maintain from humans. Over generations, a population of leopards can shift from largely avoiding human contact to actively using human settlements as hunting grounds. In some parts of Nainital district, this shift appears to be well advanced.
Factor 2: Village Abandonment Creates a Predator Magnet
Uttarakhand has one of the highest rates of rural depopulation in India. Hundreds of villages in the mid-hills have been partially or fully abandoned as younger generations migrate to cities for work and education. These abandoned villages, surrounded by recovering forests, create what wildlife scientists call an ecological trap for both predators and the remaining human residents.
Forest Department officials observe that as villages are abandoned, forest areas encroach on human settlements. Leopards are drawn closer in search of food and shelter. The residents who remain — typically elderly people and women — are precisely those most vulnerable to attack. They continue to use forest-edge land for fodder and firewood because they have no alternative, and they do so with reduced community support because their neighbours have left.
Factor 3: Food Waste and Livestock Attract Animals
Principal Chief Conservator of Forests Ranjan Kumar Mishra told media that CCTV camera trap footage showed bears feeding on garbage dumps in Joshimath. When bears or leopards encounter humans or stray dogs at these garbage dumps, they become unusually aggressive. The pattern is consistent: accessible food waste in or near villages reduces wild animals’ avoidance of human settlements, increases the frequency of encounters, and eventually produces attacks.
Livestock kept in poorly secured pens near forest edges create a similar dynamic. A leopard that successfully takes a goat or calf from a village pen will return. Each successful raid reinforces the behavior and brings the animal into closer proximity with humans.
Factor 4: Climate Change Disrupts Animal Behavior
Wildlife experts in Uttarakhand noted that bears show a distinct seasonal pattern of attacks, peaking between October and December and in January. This pattern is linked to the animals’ pre-hibernation and post-hibernation hunger cycles. But experts link changing patterns to climate change: delayed snowfall and scarce food disrupt normal hibernation timing, keeping bears active and hungry in periods when villagers expect them to be dormant. A bear that should be hibernating in November but is still active and food-stressed in November and December will take risks — including approaching human settlements — that it would not take in a normal year.
Similarly, tiger breeding season — which prompts more territorial and aggressive behavior — is noted by Forest Department officials as a driver of increased tiger attack frequency. Climate-related changes in prey availability force both tigers and leopards to expand their range and take greater risks.
Part 3: What the Government Does After an Attack — Step by Step
When a wildlife attack occurs in Nainital district or anywhere in Uttarakhand, a specific sequence of government actions is supposed to follow. Understanding this sequence — and where it consistently falls short — is essential to understanding why attacks continue to rise despite official responses.
Step 1: First Response — Forest Department and Police
Upon receiving information about a wildlife attack, forest department teams and police are supposed to reach the spot within 30 minutes. This response time was specifically mandated by Chief Minister Dhami following multiple incidents in which delayed response allowed further danger to villagers. In practice, the 30-minute target is rarely met in remote hill villages where road conditions are poor and forest range offices are understaffed.
The first response team’s immediate responsibilities include securing the scene, searching for the victim if the body has been dragged away, treating the injured if they are still alive, and beginning the process of identifying the attacking animal.
Step 2: Identifying the ‘Problem Animal’
Once an attack is confirmed, the Chief Wildlife Warden’s office must determine whether the attacking animal qualifies for classification as a ‘problem animal’ under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. The criteria include: whether the animal has attacked humans on multiple occasions, whether it appears to be deliberately targeting humans rather than reacting in self-defence, and whether translocation or non-lethal deterrence is feasible.
This determination is critically important because it governs what action can be taken against the animal. Under the Wildlife Protection Act, leopards and tigers are Schedule I species — the highest category of protection. They cannot be killed without formal authorisation from the Chief Wildlife Warden. Only when an animal is officially declared a problem animal — or a ‘man-eater’ in extreme cases — can a shoot-on-sight order be issued.
The process of making this determination takes days to weeks. During this time, the animal remains in the area, and the risk of further attacks continues. In the Pauri incident involving Rajender Nautiyal’s death, the district administration issued shoot-on-sight orders relatively quickly. In other cases, the bureaucratic process delays decisive action while villagers live in fear.
Step 3: Trapping and Translocation
The first-choice response to a problem leopard is typically live trapping — setting baited cage traps at locations where the animal has been sighted or where it is likely to return. In Nainital’s Bhimtal area after Ganga Devi’s death, range officer Vijay Bhatt stated that cages would be set up and teams deployed for continuous patrolling. In Sindravani after Daksh Bisht’s death, cages were ordered at multiple locations.
The success rate of trapping varies enormously. A bold, food-habituated leopard that is actively seeking human prey may be relatively easy to trap. A more cautious animal, or one that has learned to avoid cage traps from previous encounters, may evade trapping for weeks or months. During this period, which can extend for many months in difficult cases, the forest department maintains camera traps and patrols — but the human communities in affected villages essentially live under an unofficial curfew, afraid to venture out after dark or to approach forest edges.
Once trapped, a problem leopard is typically translocated to a remote forest area far from human habitation. Translocation has limitations: leopards have strong home range instincts and sometimes return to their original territory. Translocation also risks creating conflict at the release site if the area is already occupied by resident leopards.
Step 4: Shoot-on-Sight and Declaration as Man-Eater
When trapping fails and attacks continue, or when an animal is confirmed to have killed multiple humans, the Chief Wildlife Warden can issue a shoot-on-sight order. In extreme cases, the Forest Department engages professional hunters or deploys its own sharp-shooters.
The most famous example from Uttarakhand’s recent history is the Pauri man-eater of 2018, a leopard that killed multiple children before being shot. More recently, in January 2026, after a series of leopard attacks in Nainital Forest Division, district officials issued escalating orders including patrol intensification and cage deployment, with shoot-on-sight as a final option if the animal continued to evade trapping.
The entire process — from first attack to final resolution — often takes months. Villagers are aware of this timeline and deeply frustrated by it. The demand consistently heard from affected communities is for faster action: fewer committee meetings, more immediate deployment of traps, and quicker escalation to lethal control when trapping fails.
Step 5: Community Measures Ordered by CM Dhami
In response to the surge in attacks in 2025 and early 2026, Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami issued several directives that represented an acknowledgment of the crisis’s severity:
- Forest department teams must reach attack sites within 30 minutes of receiving information.
- Schoolchildren in wildlife-affected areas must be provided with escort facilities by forest personnel.
- The Pauri district forest officer was ordered removed from his position following inadequate response to attacks in that district.
- Forest officials were directed not to dump green waste, rotten fruits, or food waste in open areas that attract wildlife into settlements.
- Increased patrolling of forest-edge villages, particularly during peak attack hours of dawn and dusk.
These measures represent genuine administrative urgency. But wildlife experts note that they address the immediate management of individual incidents rather than the structural conditions — habitat encroachment, village abandonment, food waste attraction, and the long-term human-wildlife interface — that continue to produce new attacks.
Part 4: Compensation — What Victims and Families Actually Receive
For the family of a person killed or injured in a wildlife attack, the government’s response is measured not just in traps and patrols but in rupees. The ex-gratia compensation system — the government’s primary financial mechanism for wildlife conflict — has been reformed multiple times in Uttarakhand, but continues to be criticised as inadequate, slow, and inaccessible to the most vulnerable communities.
The Legal Framework: Human-Wildlife Conflict Relief Distribution Fund
Uttarakhand’s compensation system is governed by the Human-Wildlife Conflict Relief Distribution Fund Rules, first enacted in 2012 and amended multiple times since. The fund is administered by the Forest Department and distributed through District Forest Officers. Compensation is provided for four categories of loss: human death, human injury, livestock predation, and crop and property damage.
At the national level, the Supreme Court of India issued a landmark directive in November 2025, ruling that all states should consider classifying human-wildlife conflict as a ‘natural disaster.’ The court also mandated a minimum uniform ex-gratia of Rs 10 lakh for each human life lost in such incidents, under the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change’s Integrated Development of Wildlife Habitats scheme. The court issued these directions while specifically considering the ecological situation at Jim Corbett Tiger Reserve in Nainital district — making Nainital directly relevant to this judicial precedent.
Current Compensation Amounts in Uttarakhand (2025-2026)
| Type of Loss | Previous Amount | Revised Amount (Nov 2025) | Source |
| Human death | Rs 6 lakh | Rs 10 lakh per person | Uttarakhand Cabinet, November 26, 2025 |
| Human injury (severe) | Varies by severity | Full medical treatment cost reimbursed | CM Dhami announcement, 2025 |
| Human injury (minor) | Rs 6,892 average nationally | Treatment + ex-gratia support | Centre for Wildlife Studies data |
| Livestock killed (cow/buffalo) | Rs 30,000-50,000 approx. | Revised upward under 2024 rules | Human-Wildlife Conflict Fund Rules 2024 |
| Livestock killed (goat/sheep) | Rs 3,000-5,000 approx. | Revised upward under 2024 rules | Human-Wildlife Conflict Fund Rules 2024 |
| Crop damage | Rs 37,379 average (Narendranagar) | Assessed per incident | ResearchGate study, Uttarakhand |
| Property damage | Assessed per incident | Assessed per incident | HWC Fund Rules |
Note: Karnataka (a separate state) raised its human death compensation to Rs 20 lakh in April 2025, with a monthly pension of Rs 4,000 for five years to the family. Uttarakhand’s Rs 10 lakh is below this benchmark but represents a significant increase from the previous Rs 6 lakh (and the Rs 4 lakh that preceded it).
The compensation payment is supposed to be made within 15 days of the incident occurring — a target established in the 2024 amendment to the Fund Rules.
How to Apply for Compensation: The Process
For a family in a remote Nainital village, applying for compensation after a wildlife attack death involves the following steps:
- Step 1 — FIR and Forest Department Report: The incident must be documented by both the police (FIR) and the local Forest Range Officer, who prepares an official report confirming the cause of death or injury as a wildlife attack.
- Step 2 — Post-Mortem Report: In death cases, the post-mortem report from a government hospital must confirm injuries consistent with a wildlife attack. The PubMed study of Uttarakhand forensic cases documents how these reports are compiled and what injury patterns confirm leopard or tiger causation.
- Step 3 — Application to District Forest Officer: The family must submit an application to the District Forest Officer (DFO), along with the FIR copy, the forest department report, the post-mortem report, and proof of relationship to the deceased.
- Step 4 — Verification by Range Officer: The Range Officer verifies the claim through a site visit and witness statements from villagers.
- Step 5 — Payment through District Forest Fund: The compensation is released through the District Human-Wildlife Conflict Relief Distribution Fund to the next of kin’s bank account, ideally within 15 days.
In practice, this process faces several documented obstacles. Research by the Centre for Wildlife Studies found that communities living in very remote areas often cannot justify the time, travel, and administrative effort required to complete the application — and so they do not receive compensation they are legally entitled to. Forest officers in understaffed remote divisions sometimes delay reports. Bank accounts may not exist or may not match government records. Documents may be lost or incorrectly filed.
The result, as the ResearchGate study of Narendranagar Forest Division documented, is that compensation is better in accessible areas with functioning administrative infrastructure — and weakest precisely where communities are most isolated and most vulnerable.
Is Rs 10 Lakh Enough? The Human Reality
For a family in Nainital’s forest-edge villages, Rs 10 lakh is a significant sum — often representing more than ten years of agricultural income. But it is a one-time payment for the permanent loss of a working adult. For a family that loses its primary earner to a leopard attack, Rs 10 lakh provides temporary relief but does not replace the long-term economic contribution of the person who died.
The mental health dimension compounds the inadequacy of purely financial responses. Mongabay India’s reporting on Rakhi Rawat — the girl who saved her brother from a leopard attack at age 10 and still experiences nightmares, memory lapses, and anxiety at 15 — highlights a gap that the compensation system does not address at all. There is no standard protocol for psychological support after wildlife attacks. The Secretary of Uttarakhand Mental Health Authority, Sumit Deb Burman, acknowledged that while post-disaster needs assessments exist for floods and earthquakes, there is no equivalent guideline for human-wildlife conflict. The mental health infrastructure is being slowly built — primary health doctors are being trained — but it does not yet reach most affected villages.
What Compensation Does NOT Cover
- Long-term trauma and psychological support for survivors and families.
- Loss of future income beyond the one-time payment.
- Educational costs for children who lose a parent.
- Injuries sustained while attempting to protect livestock — not always classified as direct wildlife attacks.
- Attacks in areas where the animal is not confirmed — if proof of wildlife causation is contested by the Forest Department, payment can be denied.
- Crop damage in areas not officially notified as conflict zones.
Part 5: What Needs to Change — Evidence-Based Solutions
The human-wildlife conflict in Nainital and across Uttarakhand is not unsolvable. It is under-resourced, under-prioritised, and managed with tools that were designed for a different scale of conflict than currently exists. Researchers and conservationists who work in these landscapes have identified specific interventions with documented effectiveness.
1. Livestock Insurance and Predator-Proof Enclosures
Research consistently shows that livestock predation is the primary driver of community hostility toward leopards and tigers — and that hostility drives retaliatory killing that reduces the effectiveness of conservation. Wildfire-proof livestock enclosures — sturdy pens with roofs, reinforced walls, and leopard-proof latches — cost between Rs 15,000 and Rs 50,000 to build, depending on size. A government-subsidised programme to provide these enclosures to forest-edge villages would directly reduce both livestock losses and the animal-human conflict that follows.
2. Early Warning Systems and Community Networks
In areas of Nainital district where camera traps have been deployed, villages have received advance warning of predator proximity. Expanding camera trap networks and linking them to WhatsApp-based community alert systems — as has been piloted for elephant conflict in Assam — could give villagers in high-risk areas 30 to 60 minutes of warning before a known leopard enters their zone. This is enough time for women collecting fodder to return home, for children to be called inside, and for community members to move in groups rather than alone.
3. Faster Problem Animal Declaration and Response
The current bureaucratic process for declaring an animal a problem animal and authorising lethal control takes too long. A simplified fast-track procedure — in which two documented attacks on humans within a defined time period automatically trigger trap deployment and, if trapping fails within 30 days, shoot-on-sight authorisation — would reduce the period of ongoing danger for affected communities. This is not a call for routine killing of wildlife. It is a recognition that the current system’s delays impose unacceptable risk on rural communities.
4. Streamlined Compensation with Direct Bank Transfer
The 15-day payment target established in the 2024 Fund Rules is the right goal. Achieving it requires: pre-verified beneficiary bank accounts for all forest-edge village households, digital filing of forest officer reports directly to the District Fund, and removal of requirements for documents that are routinely unavailable in remote areas (such as specific types of land ownership proof). Karnataka’s e-Parihara system — which allows forest officials to document geo-tagged conflict cases with photos and geo-stamped damage details, with real-time SMS notification to applicants — is a model Uttarakhand could adapt.
5. Mandatory Mental Health Protocol
Every wildlife attack death or serious injury should trigger a mandatory mental health follow-up — not just a financial payment. Training primary health doctors to provide initial trauma support, as Uttarakhand Mental Health Authority is beginning to do, is a necessary first step. A formal SOP for post-attack psychosocial support, analogous to what exists for natural disaster survivors, should be developed and funded.
Conclusion: The Forest and the Village Cannot Stay This Close Without Help
Rakhi Rawat is 15 years old. She saved her brother’s life when she was 10, taking 40 stitches to her head in a leopard attack that could have killed her. Five years later, she still has nightmares. She still feels watched. She still cannot walk to school alone without fear.
No amount of ex-gratia compensation addresses what Rakhi is living with. No cage trap deployed after the fact can give her back the sense of safety she lost at ten years old.
Nainital is a district of extraordinary natural wealth. Jim Corbett’s forests hold some of the world’s most important tiger populations. The leopards that move through its village edges are part of an ecosystem that took millions of years to develop and that no amount of money can rebuild once it is gone.
But the people of Dini Talli, Sakkanpur, and Bhimtal are also part of something that cannot be rebuilt if it is lost: communities that have lived alongside these forests for generations, that know their paths and their seasons, and that — if given the tools, the protection, and the genuine institutional support they need — can be the best defenders of the wildlife that shares their land.
The government’s response after each attack — the traps, the patrols, the compensation forms, the 30-minute response mandate — is necessary. It is also insufficient. What Nainital’s forest-edge villages need is not crisis management. It is a long-term, adequately funded, genuinely accountable commitment to making coexistence possible.