New Delhi - AFP
Oscar-winning director Ang Lee\'s new epic \"Life of Pi\" showcases the relationship between a teenage Indian boy and a Bengal tiger. But in reality, the predators are under increasing threat from humans. Poaching remains a tremendous danger for the remaining feline population, with rising demand for tiger parts from East Asia, especially China where tiger bone is used in traditional medicines, experts say. Rising man-animal conflict is also one of the leading causes of decline in tiger numbers. Animal rights group PETA is hoping to use the popularity of the film to focus people\'s attention on the real-life plight of Bengal tigers. \"Life of Pi is a work of fiction, but in real life, there are threats to animals in their natural habitat that must be addressed,\" said Manilal Valliyate, director of veterinary affairs at PETA-India. India is home to 1,706 tigers according to the latest census, almost half of the worldwide population. But that figure is a fraction of the 40,000 that roamed the country in 1947 at the time of the country\'s independence. In one of numerous reported attacks on the endangered big cats, villagers near the Bangladesh-India border bludgeoned a tiger to death earlier this month after it strayed from the Sundarbans, the world\'s largest mangrove forest. Armed with sticks and boat oars, the angry crowd set upon the animal which was suspected to have attacked a local fisherman. Despite tiger numbers still falling and campaigns in India and Bangladesh to protect the animal, conflicts with humans often prove fatal for one of nature\'s most fabled beasts. \"The first instinct when a tiger is spotted is to just kill it,\" laments Gurmeet Sapal, a wildlife filmmaker based in New Delhi. \"The feeling of fear and retribution is so strong that it shuts out any other emotion. What we don\'t realise is that the tiger never attacks humans until it is forced to,\" Sapal told AFP. In Lee\'s movie, the protagonist Pi is forced to share a lifeboat with the tiger after a shipwreck kills his family after they set out for Canada from India, accompanied by animals from the zoo they ran. Pi is initially nervous, but tries to train the cat in the hope it will not kill him as long as he keeps its hunger at bay. The relationship that gradually develops between them over the 227 days they spend together on the lifeboat endears both the characters to the audience. © AFP