Hi,
@towserthemouser
I'm Bangladeshi, not Indian. And I generally try to avoid making comments publicly about India, because whenever fellow forum members in the past have spoken critically about India, trolls have always joined the forum in an attempt to discredit them and this has always resulted in some very ugly public exchanges on these forums. I try to stay away from all that, because I last visited India many years ago and I have no intention of ever returning there except out of compulsion. Especially now that we (in Bangladesh) kicked out the previous pro-Indian bootlicking government and have a lot of ongoing tensions with India.
I don't know if you're aware of this or not. But last year, an Indian wannabe film maker made a documentary on You Tube about me and my tiger hunting stories without my consent by using information and photographs taken from my autobiography. I had to exert a great deal of effort in order to get that documentary removed.
But anyway, I'll answer your question in as diplomatic a way as possible.
Hunting was banned in India by the Indira Gandhi regime via the passing of the so-called Wildlife Protection Act-1972. A portion of the Hindu population in India consider the consumption of any animal products to be taboo. So hunting and even meat eating are big offenses to them. When Indira Gandhi came to power, a lot of her supporters had these religious beliefs. Her cabinet was full of these people and they also had agendas to remove Western culture from India. As well as to disarm India's Royalty (Maharajas, Zamindars, Nawabs, etc) and strip them of their wealth. And to tighten up laws on the import & ownership of firearms.
Although she herself was very anti hunting, Indira Gandhi initially had no plans to ban hunting in India. This was actually the brainchild of a British jerk (one of those so-called “Conservationists”) named Guy Mountford. He was a founder member of the W.W.F and he wrote a book called “Vanishing Jungles” where he wrote a lot of anti hunting garbage about East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) in 1969. He also eventually convinced Indira Gandi to implement the hunting ban in India.
Emboldened by Guy Mount Ford and his strong position in the WWF, Indira Gandhi enacted the ban in 1972. Import of firearms got formally banned in 1980. Laws on firearms ownership were tightened and starting from 1972... an Indian citizen could not keep more than three firearms (this was further reduced down to two in 2023). Furthermore, the 1972 act prohibits any Indian from owning any firearms at all if they live near any forested areas. Not that this did anything in order to combat poaching... since poachers employ folidol, snares, pit fall traps & locally made muzzle loaders.
Over the years since 1972, India's youth started becoming indoctrinated against hunting, firearms ownership & meat eating. For this reason, any Indian film or work of art which depicts hunters or gun owners or meat eaters... mostly portrays us in a very negative light. And Indian media loves to rip our kind to shreds.
In 2015, the Indian government finally realized that exploding populations of game is indeed becoming too much of a problem in rural areas to ignore. So they began to authorize the culling of blue bulls and wild boars. But none of the meat from the culled animals is (legally) permitted to be consumed by anybody. All of it is buried under the ground, because the Indian government would rather allow hundreds of thousands of pounds of fresh free protein to rot than to permit their citizens (including malnourished starving ones with absolutely zero aversion to meat eating) to commit the “Reprehensible act of consuming wildlife”. These are screenshots sent to me by one of the cullers. The wild boars are being thrown into the pit for burial. The blue bulls will also be given the same treatment.
View attachment 685261View attachment 685262
If I had my way, all of the fresh venison (from the blue bulls) and pork (from the wild boars that come to feed at the crop fields) would be freely donated to impoverished local communities. Or at the very least, sold for a subsidized price at a government auction (if the government is feeling like earning a little revenue to pay the cullers for their efforts & ammunition expenditure). The only game animals which I would sanction for 100 % carcass disposal... would be the wild boars that feed on the garbage dumps at the city outskirts. Since those are extremely likely to contain trichinosis in the meat. And they should be kept away from human consumption.
In my humble opinion, hunting will never be relegalized in India again. Newer generations have completely been indoctrinated against it. And the political party currently running the show in India... as as staunch vegetarians as is humanly possible. India also tried very hard to get hunting & firearms ownership banned in our country as well, through our previous government. Fortunately, they didn't succeed and that government has been ousted.
Hunting will survive in Pakistan and even thrive for future generations to come. Because newer generations are being introduced to it. In Bangladesh... at the very least, bird & deer hunting will survive because newer generations (especially those living in rural areas) see this as perfectly normal. But not in India.
Interestingly enough, it's only the politicians (especially the party currently in power in India), urban dwellers & people living comfortably far away from rural areas (i.e the hotspots of human-wildlife conflict) in India that champion the concept of a plant based lifestyle. The thousands of impoverished & starving rural Indians who have their crop fields and livestock routinely ravaged by fauna (of both the herbivorous or carnivorous varieties) on a daily basis feel very differently about wildlife & meat eating. To them, all those crop raiding & livestock killing fauna (whose populations used to formerly get controlled pre 1972 by licensed hunters) are either:
A) A delicious source of protein
B) A menace to their livelihoods
C) A source of hides & antlers to sell on the black market