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In north Bangladesh, human-elephant conflicts signal need for greater protection - Conservation news
Bangladesh’s northern elephant corridor is often neglected, and conflict between humans and elephants frequently arises here, resulting in many losses of humans and big mammals.
The dramatic journey of a four-ton elephant swept by floodwaters from India to Bangladesh has ended in tragedy. Last week, the animal briefly set its feet back on dry land on World Elephant Day ...
Indian wildlife experts had visited the scene and agreed with Bangladesh’s proposal to transfer the elephant to the Bangabandhu Safari Park, 50 kilometers (32 miles) north of Dhaka.
A four-ton female elephant is thought to have traveled around 620 miles from northeast India to Bangladesh, after massive flooding.
Wildlife officials are trying to bring an elephant to a safari park outside Bangladesh's capital after it was carried from India to Bangladesh by raging floodwaters and became stuck in a swampy area.
"We hope it is the end of hadani in Bangladesh." The plight of the captive elephants was highlighted in May last year when a young elephant, used for begging on the streets, was killed by a train.
NEW DELHI – An adult Indian elephant that became trapped in a swamp in Bangladesh after being caught up in raging floodwaters has died after weeks of struggling for survival. Tapan Kumar Dey, a ...
Bangladesh is planning to declare a major elephant habitat in its northeast, which has recently seen a rise in human-elephant conflicts, a protected area.
The dramatic journey of a four-ton elephant swept by floodwaters from India to Bangladesh has ended in tragedy. Last week, the animal briefly set its feet back on dry land on World Elephant Day ...
NEW DELHI (AP) — A fully grown Indian elephant that washed up in a swamp in Bangladesh after being caught up in raging floodwaters has become a jumbo problem for ...
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