Mom fights off tiger with bare hands to save 15-month-old son in India, official says

The hunt for a "man-eating" tiger in India

An Indian mother fought off a tiger with her bare hands to save her toddler from its jaws, an official said Wednesday. Archana Choudhary stepped out of her house in the central state of Madhya Pradesh on Sunday night as the 15-month-old boy wanted to relieve himself.

A tiger believed to have strayed from the nearby Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve pounced on them, local official Sanjeev Shrivastava told AFP.

It attacked and tried to sink its teeth into the child's head but the mother leapt to the rescue, he said.

The tiger kept trying to snatch the boy until villagers heard her screams and rushed to her rescue.

The tiger then slunk away into the forest.

"She has been admitted to the hospital. She is out of danger and recovering. The baby is also doing fine," Shrivastava said.

The mother suffered punctured lungs and wounds to her abdomen while the toddler had deep gashes on his head.

The Times of India newspaper said a search operation was underway to push the tiger back to its territory and that villagers had been told to stay indoors at night.

A tiger is seen in India's Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve in the 1980s. Tom Nebbia/Corbis via Getty Images

Just last month, the newspaper reported that a tiger killed a man in front of his wife and neighbor in Sunderbans Tiger Reserve.

A rise in human-animal conflicts has been seen across South Asia as ever more forestland is lost to urban expansion.

Nearly 225 people were killed in tiger attacks between 2014 and 2019 in India, according to government figures.

More than 200 tigers were killed by poachers or electrocution between 2012 and 2018, the data showed.

In 2018, a controversial hunter killed a female tiger that was blamed for more than a dozen fatal attacks in India.

India is home to around 70% of the world's tigers and the tiger population was estimated at 2,967 in 2018.

In 2019, India announced the number of wild tigers had increased 33% in four years despite the rise in human conflict.

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