- today
Join us for an exclusive podcast interview with Abhishek Ray, the acclaimed author of The Baagh, as he reveals the shocking realities behind tiger poaching in India and the urgent efforts underway to save these majestic creatures. From the steep decline in tiger populations to the challenges of conservation in some of India’s most famous reserves, Abhishek shares eye-opening insights and personal stories that few have heard. Discover how The Baagh sheds light on the delicate balance between nature and human impact—and why saving tigers is more critical than ever. Whether you’re a wildlife enthusiast or concerned about India’s environment, this conversation is a must-watch!
#TheBaagh #AbhishekRay #SaveTigers #TigerConservation #WildlifeProtection #IndiaWildlife #TigerPoaching #ForestConservation #JimCorbett #PenchTigerReserve #Sariska #SundarVan #WildlifeAwareness #SaveTheTigers #WildlifeDocumentary #ConservationEfforts #IndianTigers #PodcastInterview #Oneindia
~HT.318~ED.108~GR.125~
#TheBaagh #AbhishekRay #SaveTigers #TigerConservation #WildlifeProtection #IndiaWildlife #TigerPoaching #ForestConservation #JimCorbett #PenchTigerReserve #Sariska #SundarVan #WildlifeAwareness #SaveTheTigers #WildlifeDocumentary #ConservationEfforts #IndianTigers #PodcastInterview #Oneindia
~HT.318~ED.108~GR.125~
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00:00अगर आप दिल्ली में रहते हैं और घुमने फирने के शोकीने खासकर प्रकृती के बीच में तो आप जिम कॉर्वेट जरूर गये होंगे
00:07ism e dwe bat na aap ke saas rahi hoongi o to aap bhaagish ali rahi hoongi
00:11ki tiger apko daik jayayya fir aap bhaat haagish ali rahi hoongi
00:14ki ain sanho ne aasa kuch kiya hai ki tiger ap bhoat rarely hi dhe
00:19hi lepin kahi ki si ki chitna mein kisi ki man mein
00:23ya khayal aya ki ki kyo na firsa iski riwilding ki jayay
00:26ur firsa eek badeya sa jaanil tayyar kiyaya jayay
00:29eek badeya sa mahal tayyar kiyaya jay jisme bhaat saar e
00:32wildlife animal na sirf tiger
00:35I am so proud to be a part of this
00:38I have to eat
00:40but there is a lot of people who are not
00:43personally
00:44have had to try this
00:45to be a person
00:47and have to give this time
00:48and we will be able to do this
00:51I am so proud to be a part of this
00:55and also
00:56your job with amazing India
00:59or Forbes
01:00these guys
01:02you can do it
01:03Abhishek, first of all, let me tell you a little bit about it in brief that you have so long journey that you can't be able to meet in the minutes.
01:12Let me give you a little bit about it.
01:14I am a professional Bollywood music composer and singer.
01:21Paan Singh Tomar, I am Kalam, Welcome Back, Shagird, Hasil, this year's life.
01:27I have music for many films, which is my past. I have also sung a lot of films.
01:34I also encouraged my past.
01:38I did my work in buying a completely barren agricultural hill in the Corbett Landscape.
01:44It was a banjar forest that was a lot of timber, because people were doing cut-and-burn agriculture.
01:51In the cotton-burn agriculture, the soil's fertility and its moisture gradient is a lot less.
01:58I thought that because of this land, it was a banjar.
02:02I am a government bonafide tiger and leopard tracker.
02:09I have been posting a banjar for a banjar.
02:13I have seen the banjar for some time.
02:20I have seen the banjar as well as a man-animal conflict.
02:22It is important to understand the banjar, because of the banjar you can only eat a bearer.
02:25You can only eat one or eat a goat.
02:27In the same way, the banjar can only eat one or not.
02:30I don't eat food in the jungle.
02:31So, in the jungle, there is a man-animal conflict zone.
02:36So, I thought that this land was cheek-cheek,
02:39that I would just love the jungle.
02:41So, I thought that in this life,
02:43I always wanted to make my own habitat.
02:46And I acquired that land,
02:50and started building the jungle.
02:52There were 4,000 trees,
02:54made water bodies.
02:55Because today's date,
02:57we have monopolized all fresh water on the planet Earth.
03:00So, some times,
03:02we have to take 30, 40, 50 kilometers
03:04to go for a good water.
03:06In the Colbert, I can see that
03:08the children of their hands,
03:10some of them,
03:11some of them,
03:13some of them,
03:15some of them,
03:17some of them,
03:18some of them,
03:20some of them,
03:22some of them,
03:24some of them,
03:26some of them.
03:27And,
03:28the government's saying,
03:29you know,
03:30they're mad for that.
03:31Now,
03:32you can speak to Tendwy,
03:34tigers,
03:35next week,
03:36they're going to dig a grove.
03:37The media reports,
03:38that the leopard is in the grove.
03:40To make it a lot of people
03:41take a lot of the sheep?
03:42Yes,
03:43we don't have to understand
03:44how this level is.
03:45But,
03:46we don't have to get a grove from the grove.
03:47If you see a doctor in the night, he doesn't have a bad-proof animal in the cave.
03:52He is so important to get rid of one piece of water,
03:55that he will kill for one piece of water in the cave.
03:59After that, he doesn't get rid of the water.
04:02So this is what happens.
04:03In the Seetiavani, I have made water bodies.
04:05Because water is a magnet for wildlife.
04:07So you do 1% for nature, nature does 99% on your own.
04:11When I have made it,
04:13I have made it,
04:14I have made it,
04:15I have made it,
04:16I have made it,
04:17I have made it,
04:18I have made it,
04:19I have made it.
04:20Everything used to come and drink water from there.
04:22How big is it?
04:23It is a sea.
04:24It is a sea.
04:25It is a sea.
04:26It is a sea.
04:27It is a sea.
04:29It is a contiguous habitat.
04:30I have put a boundary in it.
04:32So it is a contiguous habitat for tigers and leopards.
04:34Eventually tigers started coming there.
04:36In 2015,
04:38a completely wild tigress
04:40reposed her trust in me
04:42and came and gave birth in that area.
04:44So she grew up there.
04:46She grew up there.
04:47After that,
04:48Seetiavani Vaila Rizal became famous.
04:50She didn't know it before.
04:51She said,
04:52I had tried to do it.
04:54I had tried to do it.
04:56But if you do something,
04:57the universe conspires.
04:59So that's how the tigress took over
05:01and she made Seetiavani Vaila Rizal what it is today.
05:04Yeah.
05:05This is the first time I've met with such a human,
05:08which has got 4,500 trees in my life.
05:11I've met with such a human,
05:14which has got 100 trees,
05:16who are running, who are living.
05:18This is also a jungle jungle.
05:20This is a very good thing.
05:22This is another story that a tiger has trusted you.
05:25What's the story of this story?
05:27What's the story of this story?
05:29The story of this story is that,
05:31when I become Sita,
05:33I ended up in the morning,
05:35I got a flight in Delhi,
05:36my mother-in-law stayed in Delhi.
05:38I had lunch.
05:39After lunch,
05:40I'm going to take a car for the other day.
05:42By the time I reach Corbett,
05:44it becomes late at night.
05:46In the days of the day,
05:47a river comes from my property.
05:49The river comes from my property.
05:51The river comes from the road,
05:52so you can't take a car.
05:53I have a backpack on the feet,
05:55and I cross the river and I reach the river.
05:57What year is this?
05:59This happened in 2012,
06:012014,
06:02you get the rode a ride in the dark.
06:05Yes,
06:06I'm a victim,
06:08I beat a tiger hands by throwing the legs.
06:10I saw the sun in this world.
06:12In the U.S. of the day,
06:13there is a town in the U.S. of the day.
06:15In America,
06:16there is nothing to do with a vehicle and a vehicle,
06:18nothing to do with a corpo,
06:19and a nineteen,
06:20a dellew,
06:21a vehicle and you go to the tiger.
06:23That's the habit of child's family.
06:25But when I crossed the river, I saw two eyes on the torch.
06:31So you can understand from the separation of eyes that this person is coming down.
06:36So he would have seen me and I would have seen him.
06:39Then he would have seen him.
06:41But after that, he would have seen him come down.
06:45The path of the path of the path.
06:47The path of the path of the path of the path.
06:49The path of the path of the path.
06:51So if I was going up on the path, it would have been down to my side.
06:55And when there were dry trees, the sound of the path of the path would have come down.
07:00So I crossed the path of the path, and then I would have seen him in the path.
07:03When I was in the path, I would have seen him in the path.
07:05Then I would have reached the path.
07:06She would not attack that path.
07:08No, no.
07:09She used to respect that I would have been there.
07:12That is coexistence.
07:13It was also been encountered.
07:15Yes, it was also been encountered.
07:16But then she would have been there two years later.
07:18The purpose of the path behind the path,
07:23You can to see the path of theéré开始 itself.
07:26And from the perspective of our nation,
07:28We would have seen us as horses
07:36So, in our country, like Ganesh Ji's
07:38dog, the dog's dog is a tiger.
07:40We want to say that from the dog's dog,
07:43all life forms are worthy of respect.
07:45And that is the beauty of India.
07:47The magic in this world, the magic,
07:49the jadu, is this.
07:51That in this country, you name it, we have it.
07:54Tiger, leopard, lion, snow leopard,
07:57now the cheetah, elephant, rhino,
08:00we have 1350 prajati panchi.
08:03So, you name it, we have it.
08:04Kudrat has given us everything.
08:06I recorded on my land 300 prajati panchi.
08:09Now, in the wild reserve.
08:11That's why I received Forbes International Award for Wildlife Conservation.
08:15So, you have to understand the jadu of this land.
08:18It's the jadu that made me with this tiger.
08:21An unspoken jadu.
08:22It doesn't have any love.
08:24But she chose me to give birth.
08:26So, she knew that she lives here.
08:29So, it's so close proximity.
08:30There's a house, a house, a house.
08:33There's a house in Banglo.
08:34But in the 100-100 meters, she gave birth.
08:37It means that she chose her.
08:39Now, when the tiger gives birth,
08:40he gives birth in the most dangerous woods.
08:42Where the child is safe.
08:44It doesn't give birth to humans.
08:46So, wildlife is very understandable.
08:48First of all, he sees his will.
08:50He sees his will.
08:51He sees his will.
08:52He sees his will.
08:53He sees his will.
08:54He sees his will.
08:55He sees his will.
08:55He sees his will.
08:56He sees his will.
08:57He sees his will.
08:58He sees his will.
08:59He sees his will.
09:00He sees his will.
09:01He sees his will.
09:02He sees his will.
09:03He sees his will.
09:03He sees his will.
09:04He sees his will.
09:05He sees his will.
09:06He sees his will.
09:07He sees his will.
09:35I was invited to interview me from Sita Bani Wildlife Reserve with Swabivan Bhairat, PM Modi Ji.
09:42I was a long-term, but I didn't give up.
09:45I was just a gardener.
09:48I had made a jungle jungle, but it doesn't come to anyone.
09:54You don't share the credit where you are today.
09:58The universe is conspired.
10:00If your need is good, you will do 1% and 99% of the power.
10:04One question in my mind,
10:06I have reported a lot about the environment and wildlife in a very short time.
10:11I had to go to COVID-19 and other places.
10:16One thing I noticed,
10:18that in 1950-1960,
10:23there were about 1,000,000 tigers in the world.
10:27They were at least in India.
10:2975%.
10:31Today, it was 75%.
10:32But the number was very secure.
10:34Yes, it was very secure.
10:35So, what was the difference between this?
10:37Because the country was also safe.
10:39Or it didn't get attention to anyone.
10:40Or it was wrong.
10:41Or it was wrong.
10:42Or it was wrong.
10:43Or it was wrong.
10:44Or it was small.
10:46Or it was small.
10:47Because it was a place.
10:48So, what is the problem?
10:49This is the problem of the land.
10:51India has almost 17% of the global human population.
10:55And India has only 2.1% of the planet's land area.
11:00And India has only 4% of the planet's fresh water.
11:03So, the water and the land are very difficult.
11:06And people have lost.
11:08Human density is very much.
11:10Going by that,
11:12we have actually done a great job of conserving tigers.
11:14Because if you look at Europe,
11:16you can see Europe.
11:17It's probably not the problem.
11:18It's not the problem.
11:19The biggest one in Europe,
11:20is the red fox.
11:21The red fox.
11:22And the red fox,
11:23they killed everything.
11:24The same applies to America.
11:25When it fell there,
11:26they killed all the bison and the wolves.
11:29So, if we look at that,
11:31with the ratio of the land,
11:33the human population is increasing.
11:351 million people,
11:36we are adding every 4 days,
11:37net,
11:38to a limited planet.
11:39As we look at it,
11:41the amount of our children
11:42is also a miracle.
11:43But if we have
11:45land and water resources,
11:46we don't protect the land.
11:47In the immediate future,
11:48people will kill people.
11:50For us,
11:51we need to get
11:52water,
11:53fertility,
11:54and crops
11:55are very difficult.
11:56So, the tiger stands for
11:58all that is untamed
11:59and untamable.
12:00All that is pure.
12:01The tiger stands for our fresh water.
12:0370% of India's mighty rivers
12:06come out of tiger forests.
12:07So, if there is no doubt
12:09in the jungle,
12:10people will take the bulldozer
12:12and go to the builder mafia.
12:14Builder mafia,
12:15mining mafia,
12:16slums,
12:17rehabilitations,
12:18all will go through.
12:19They will go through
12:20and make them
12:21and make them
12:22and make them
12:23and make them
12:24.
12:25So, the tiger stands for
12:26your own future.
12:27On the next date,
12:28our survival is
12:30the biggest impact
12:32of the tiger's
12:34growth.
12:35Why do we do this?
12:36not because it's our national
12:37animal only.
12:38Not because it's our pride.
12:39Because tiger numbers
12:40are the greatest indicator
12:41of our fresh water,
12:42our clean air,
12:43our monsoon cycle.
12:44It's a problem.
12:45is the problem.
12:46In a situation,
12:47it's the problem.
12:48It's also the problem.
12:49It's the problem.
12:50People are going to roam
12:51in the jungle.
12:52Some times,
12:53they are going to see the tiger
12:54and then they are going to get
12:55a bit.
12:56What happened?
12:57It's the problem.
12:58People are going to come
12:59in the village,
13:00they are coming to the village,
13:01they have been attacked,
13:02they are very rare.
13:03The fan is going to fall
13:05on my head.
13:06It's also the probability.
13:07It's the problem.
13:08It's the problem.
13:09It's the problem.
13:10It's the problem that
13:11the tiger is going to attack
13:12in the jungle.
13:13I also saw a safari
13:15in which there is a gypsy.
13:17There are people
13:18who are very easy to kill
13:19and they are going to attack.
13:20Six people
13:21are packed in a gypsy
13:23and in the jungle.
13:24In the whole India,
13:25there is a tiger tourism
13:27there is a gypsy.
13:29There is a tiger tourism
13:30in the open gypsy.
13:31There is no smoke.
13:32There is a tiger
13:33that is going to run
13:34here.
13:35If he is going to kill
13:36his desire for the
13:37time,
13:38he is going to do
13:39so much effort
13:40and so much effort
13:41and why will he do
13:42a gypsy?
13:43He will go to the gypsy
13:44and he will take
13:45a man.
13:46It's not happening.
13:47In a day,
13:48there are more than
13:4910,000 or 20,000 people
13:50are seeing the tigers.
13:51There is no one person
13:52who can't do it.
13:53So,
13:54it doesn't do this
13:55in a million cases.
13:56If there is one case
13:57that the tiger
13:58has been attacked.
13:59I have not given a question.
14:00There are two kinds of videos.
14:01There are a lot of videos
14:02that the tiger
14:03has gone through.
14:04The bike was standing
14:05and he had seen
14:06and he had seen
14:07and he had seen
14:08and he had seen.
14:09This is a very rare.
14:10It is a very rare.
14:11But it is a huge rare.
14:12What kind of attack?
14:13What kind of attack?
14:14It is a sensational video
14:15that it is.
14:16Yes.
14:17It will go more.
14:18If someone has died,
14:19they will see more.
14:20Yes.
14:21So,
14:22what does the tiger have attacked?
14:24Is there a mistake?
14:25Yes,
14:26it is wrong.
14:27There are some extremes of
14:28cases.
14:29There are some mistakes
14:30of handled.
14:31Normally,
14:32the tiger is
14:33a very reclusive animal.
14:34It is like a yogic.
14:35He eats the
14:3510 to 15 days.
14:38He eats at 10-15 days
14:39and at 20% time
14:40he has success
14:41he has success.
14:42At 80%
14:43he has success.
14:44He has success.
14:45So people say that they don't want to eat because they don't want to eat.
14:49The tiger is always hungry.
14:51He doesn't get the most hungry.
14:5380% of the time he is hungry.
14:56So the tiger has a lot of power.
14:59This is very important to understand.
15:01There are 3 inches of nackoon.
15:04There are 3 inches of canines.
15:07There are 4 surgical blades.
15:09There are 4-4-8.
15:11There are 50 kg of muscle.
15:13If he swiped it,
15:15then the big oxes,
15:18the big buffalo,
15:20the garden will break.
15:22So to take a human to a matter of 2 seconds.
15:24That kind of power here.
15:263.5-inch canines, 3.5-inch nails,
15:29backed with 50-50 kg of muscle.
15:32He is a lethal creature built for the kill.
15:36There is nothing more dangerous than a tiger.
15:38It is a living tornado.
15:40It is a living storm.
15:42According to that,
15:43the control of the people,
15:45there is no power.
15:47But when the conditions are lost,
15:49the people have destroyed their jungle.
15:51The jungle has degraded it.
15:53People have destroyed it.
15:55The people have destroyed it.
15:56In such situations,
15:57he will also drop 50.
15:58Then he will use his power.
16:00But it is very rare.
16:01The government has made so many
16:03and so many people.
16:04You are also very good people.
16:05You are also very good people.
16:06You are also quite enjoying their efforts.
16:07Thank you very much.
16:37Thank you very much.
19:28IBCA, National Tiger Conservation Authority, Global Tiger Forum.
19:34So these are all bodies.
19:35Madhya Prajee Shasana.
19:36Yes, they are.
19:37And this is Sita Bani Vailar Reserve.
19:39So what I am trying to say is that India has a great track record.
19:42Which the world should come to know.
19:44What is the real jungle book?
19:46So, my guide in this book, his name is Jaggu Bavariya.
19:51See, the Bavariyas are a notorious poaching tribe from central India.
19:55Mundilkand.
19:56So these are the tiger leopard poachers.
19:58So my guide in this book is Jaggu.
20:00He is born in a poaching family.
20:03And he is a tribal man.
20:04So in the first part, this book is a horrible man.
20:08A human being is a human being.
20:10His name is Janvwi.
20:14Which is the name of Janvwi.
20:16And Janvwi says that Jaggu, I love very much, but I can never marry you.
20:20Because I cannot marry you with any character.
20:23So Jaggu is a man who is torn apart.
20:25On one hand, he is in a profession which he doesn't like from deep within.
20:28In childhood, he is like Mughli's childhood.
20:34So, he loved him and loved him with the animals and loved him.
20:41He grew up with a lot of animals and took place of animals.
20:46So, there was one point in his life when he said,
20:49He said, that's it.
20:51Garebi has made me very good and made me happy.
20:54That's it.
20:56That's it.
20:58Where he becomes a truly larger than life hero.
21:01He goes against his own tribe, his own clan.
21:04He avenges his past.
21:06And he goes after the entire syndicate of poochers.
21:10From Central India to SM, Kaziranga, across the border to Kathmandu.
21:15Where he sells a tiger skin in a pet shop.
21:20And from there, it travels across the Langpala Passes of the Himalaya.
21:24The snowy passes.
21:25On ancient trade routes.
21:27And it goes to Lhasa.
21:28Which is Chinese-occupied Tibet.
21:31So, in Lhasa, there are tiger, leopards, and snow leopards skins in the international market.
21:36People are sitting in different countries.
21:38This is a whole syndicate.
21:40He brings all of them to book.
21:43And eventually, he joins Indian Forest Service.
21:46And becomes a true champion of the wild.
21:48So, this is the soul of the jungle.
21:50And if he can take that U-turn,
21:52Then why not?
21:54We have just raped the tiger habitat pure forest.
21:58But today, we are also in Kagar.
22:02Because you know, 96% of the planet's biomass is human and livestock.
22:07Only 4% of the free-ranging wildlife of the planet.
22:10In my life time, we have lost more than 50% of the planet's free-ranging wildlife.
22:16So, we are in Kagar.
22:18If we have not taken the U-turn,
22:21Then in the next 20-25 years, we will not save anything.
22:23So, Jaggu is a spiritual message for humanity.
22:27Baag is a new jungle book.
22:29Which I would request the entire world to read.
22:31And it's on Amazon.
22:32It's on Google Books.
22:33And I'm getting a very, very good response from all over.
22:35A very, very good response from all over.
22:37If the story of this book will reach the distance,
22:40I hope that I will make a great film of this book.
22:44If you want to know the wild life,
22:48If you want to know the wild life,
22:50Then you can buy this book.
22:52It's not very expensive.
22:54But it's very interesting.
22:56I can guarantee this book.
22:58Because the pages of my mind
23:01We've seen the pages of the book.
23:04So, you said that
23:06the market is raised to the Lhasa market.
23:09The skin of the animal, the tiger's skin, its teeth.
23:13The teeth, the teeth, the penis, the skin, the blood, all goes.
23:15This is from India, so?
23:17Here it comes from India.
23:19To do it, there's more than wildlife,
23:20Now it's not to be left for anything.
23:21How far have the relationship?
23:23How far have you been to know?
23:24That's the book.
23:25I think this book is the whole of the book.
23:27What's the book used in the book?
23:28Which is the mouta-mati only?
23:30The big thing is that if you get a hungry man, you'll get a tiger with 8,000,000 rupees,
23:35then he'll kill you.
23:36He'll kill you.
23:37Swabhavik.
23:38Swabhavik, he's a big one, a big one.
23:40So one of the things that the tiger's in the buffer areas,
23:45the protected areas, the national parks,
23:49which we call the hungry tigers.
23:51So they can't get protection in the national park.
23:55So they become very easy poaching games.
23:58Any villager can say that a tiger comes here at night with water.
24:02If this information goes on to a professional coach,
24:05then he'll be quiet and he'll sit down and the next day he'll never stay.
24:08So it's not so difficult to coach the tiger in India.
24:10Because the tiger population of India today,
24:13it's a big part of the protected areas and national parks.
24:18The government gives a reward if you get caught a tiger in the last 10 days.
24:24I think there is a little amendment.
24:27Because a lot of people have a lot of poachers,
24:29they'll kill, they'll kill, they'll kill,
24:30they'll kill, they'll kill, they'll kill, they'll kill,
24:32they'll kill, they'll kill, they'll kill.
24:34So we need to definitely reform our...
24:35Because there is a national animal,
24:37there is a lot of punishment.
24:38There is a lot of punishment.
24:39But it should increase in the punishment.
24:40It should increase in the punishment.
24:42But our law, the Wildlife Protection Act,
24:44is very clear.
24:45It's very good.
24:46According to the law,
24:47you can't keep an Indian bird in the cage.
24:50You can be jailed for it.
24:51But its execution is a lot of deal.
24:52Its implementation is a lot of deal.
24:54It's better.
24:55But the original set of laws are very good.
24:57Very powerful.
24:58When this is talking tiger reserve
25:00whether we write some.
25:01It is a sauceco nogое,
25:02one of it,
25:02one of it,
25:03two of them
25:04mêmes
25:05or another
25:07Ghost Привет
25:07or other
25:08people
25:09Chinese
25:11are in there
25:11or
25:11other people
25:12Who does such
25:14war
25:15have the
25:17greed
25:19?
25:28the whole of Bengal was tiger country.
25:3150 years back,
25:3220% of Bengal, 30% of Bengal was tiger country.
25:35Today,
25:37all across Bengal, the tiger has been erased
25:40by blasting, exploding human population.
25:44So, we have literally fallen into the bay of Bengal.
25:48You can see this kind of thing.
25:50No, from here.
25:51You have taken it from every place.
25:53You have taken it from every place.
25:55You have taken it from every place.
25:57Because of the global warming,
25:58the water is rising.
26:00The low-lying islands are claiming it every year.
26:05And the human population is pushing it.
26:08The lower sea, the humans are on the top.
26:10In a small strip,
26:12the royal Bengal tiger is alive.
26:15What do you eat?
26:17Sundarban has been a blessing for him.
26:19In Sundarban,
26:21the hiran is also very useful.
26:23In Sundarban,
26:24the hiran is also very useful.
26:25So, the 80% of the tiger's diet in Sundarban is fish and crabs.
26:33You won't be afraid of this.
26:35Tiger fishing is alive.
26:36Tiger, fish and crab are alive.
26:38Because it's a great success.
26:40In Sundarban,
26:42there is also a human in Sundarban.
26:45There is so much difference.
26:47Because the animal is a desperate animal.
26:48There is no one.
26:49There is no one.
26:50There is no one.
26:51There is no one.
26:52It's a lack of a desirable animal.
26:53There is no one.
26:54There is no one.
26:55So, a tiger is desperate.
26:56Whatever you get,
26:57you will eat and eat.
26:58There is no one.
26:59There is no difference.
27:00And there is no other thing.
27:01The tiger reserve has been talking about.
27:02We have started 9 tiger reserves.
27:04And today,
27:05we have 58 tiger reserves.
27:07It's a very big thing for you.
27:10We have achieved 58 tiger reserves.
27:12And you don't have to save the tiger reserve.
27:15In the umbrella of the tiger,
27:17the animal,
27:18the animal,
27:19the animal,
27:20the animal,
27:21the animal,
27:22the animal,
27:23the animal,
27:24the animal,
27:25the animal,
27:26the animal.
27:27the rivers of India,
27:28they all come out of tiger reserves.
27:31By making more and more tiger reserve,
27:33we try to bring more area under conservation and protection
27:37which is linked to our own survival.
27:39You have consumed tiger counting on a 14 years,
27:42Uzma Klimia and I increased the amount of tiger counting to you.
27:46What is the greatest and cruel name you your time?
27:51I would say that all of you have employed tiger counting on you.
27:56They are all wonderful and they give you goosebumps.
28:02When you think about it, they give you goosebumps.
28:05They are wonderful.
28:07Although they are wonderful because they are scared too.
28:10I am a 70 kg and it is a 200 kg.
28:14I don't have any comparison.
28:16When it comes to my eyes and leaves my teeth,
28:20he has given me another lifetime.
28:23So, all the tigers and leopards that I have met on my foot in this life,
28:27this book is dedicated to them.
28:29Because for me,
28:31How many tigers have they got?
28:33No doubt.
28:34In my reserve, there are tigers and leopards.
28:37This year, there are two children of the leopard.
28:39They are staying on the property.
28:41So, there are benefits.
28:43But when they see me, they will increase and change their mind.
28:46I believe that they want to say their story to me.
28:52I have dedicated this book to all the wild tigers and leopards,
28:56whom I have seen on foot,
28:58who have decided to spare my life,
29:00so that I could write their inside story.
29:03There is another question.
29:05In this country, the Supreme Court has said that
29:09there are many dogs,
29:11they need to be sterilization,
29:13they need to be vaccinated.
29:14Their population is rapidly increasing.
29:16Why is it not like tigers?
29:18You need to understand that
29:20some species of human population benefit
29:22such as cowes,
29:24such as cockroaches,
29:25such as cockroaches,
29:26such as street dogs,
29:27who benefit from our garbage,
29:29their population is increasing.
29:31and the wild animals,
29:33the wild animals,
29:34and the wild animals,
29:35our population is increasing.
29:38It's natural.
29:40Some species benefit from us,
29:42and most species don't benefit from us.
29:46So, we erase what is wild and untamable.
29:49And we have a tendency of propagating what is tame.
29:53So, that's why I told you,
29:54that I started with biomass.
29:56Biomass means that
29:58how much of an animal's body weight
29:59is.
30:00So, 96% of the planet's biomass today
30:03is humans and livestock,
30:04meaning the animals that we rear to eat,
30:06poultry and cows.
30:0810,000 years ago,
30:09it was 1% human and livestock,
30:11and 99% the remaining animals.
30:13Today is 96 and 4.
30:15So, the answer is all your questions.
30:17Thank you very much,
30:18Abhishek,
30:19for all these things
30:20that we have done with the jungle,
30:22about the wilderness,
30:23which are now just films,
30:24videos,
30:25or even another
30:26or some other
30:27of the wilderness.
30:28There's a lot of that
30:30that have been a trap.
30:31There are many myths that have been
30:32and the mistakes,
30:33that have been taken.
30:34There are many mistakes,
30:35and the mistakes you have
30:36that shouldn't be done
30:37while the jungle is inside.
30:39I thank you very much for your new book,
30:42and I thank you very much for your new life.
30:44Thank you very much for your new wildlife reserve.
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