Hyderabad: What began as a routine tiger estimation exercise in Amrabad Tiger Reserve has led forest officials to crack down on suspected poachers after camera traps captured four men allegedly moving through the protected forest with a country-made gun, ammunition and other hunting equipment.
The images were recorded on May 18 in Allangattu forest area in Achampet range during the All-India Tiger Estimation-2026 exercise. Officials said they scrutinised nearly 30 camera trap images and launched a special inquiry using technical evidence and local intelligence. The probe led to the identification of four suspects — two from Chathurbhavi tanda, one from Chandapur village and another from Lingotam village.
Forest officials said they have been identified as Mudavath Balu, Dharangula Narasimha, Sariya and Pastor John Paul. The men were allegedly seen carrying a gun, ammunition, an axe and other material suspected to have been intended for hunting.
Cases have been registered against the four under relevant provisions of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972, and legal proceedings have been initiated. Describing ATR as one of the state’s most important wildlife habitats, officials said armed entry into such a sensitive ecosystem poses a serious threat to wildlife. The reserve is home to tigers, leopards, sloth bears, wild dogs, sambar, chital, wild boar and several other rare species.
Preliminary inquiries suggest the group may have entered the forest to hunt, though officials said more details would emerge after the investigation is completed. The forest department warned that unauthorised entry into the reserve, carrying weapons, hunting, aiding hunting or harming wildlife are serious offences punishable with imprisonment and heavy fines.
Officials said surveillance across the reserve has been strengthened in recent months, with expanded deployment of camera traps and drone monitoring. Key forest routes, water sources, wildlife corridors and vulnerable hunting zones are now under constant watch. Nagarkurnool district forest officer Revanth Chandra has appealed to villagers, cattle grazers and visitors to strictly adhere to forest laws and report any suspicious movement to the nearest forest authorities.
Sudhakar Reddy Udumula is the Editor (Investigation) at the Times...
Read MoreSudhakar Reddy Udumula is the Editor (Investigation) at the Times of India, Hyderabad. Following the trail of migration and drought across the rustic landscape of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, Sudhakar reported extensively on government apathy, divisive politics, systemic gender discrimination, agrarian crisis and the will to survive great odds. His curiosity for peeking behind the curtain triumphed over the criminal agenda of many scamsters in the highest political and corporate circles, making way for breaking stories such as Panama Papers Scam, Telgi Stamp Paper Scam, and many others. His versatility in reporting extended to red corridors of left-wing extremism where the lives of security forces and the locals in Maoist-affected areas were key points of investigation. His knack for detail provided crucial evidence of involvement from overseas in terrorist bombings in Hyderabad.
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