×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Monday
12
Jan 2026
weather symbol
Athens 6°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> World

WWF funds guards who have tortured & killed people?

The World Wide Fund for Nature funds vicious paramilitary forces to fight poaching. A BuzzFeed News investigation reveals the hidden human cost

Newsroom March 5 05:48

Down the road from the crocodile ponds inside Nepal’s renowned Chitwan National Park, in a small clearing shaded by sala trees, sits a jail. Hira Chaudhary went there one summer night with boiled green maize and chicken for her husband, Shikharam, a farmer who had been locked up for two days.

Shikharam was in too much pain to swallow. He crawled toward Hira, his thin body covered in bruises, and told her through sobs that forest rangers were torturing him. “They beat him mercilessly and put saltwater in his nose and mouth,” Hira later told police.

The rangers believed that Shikharam helped his son bury a rhinoceros horn in his backyard. They couldn’t find the horn, but they threw Shikharam in their jail anyway, court documents filed by the prosecution show.

Nine days later, he was dead.

An autopsy showed seven broken ribs and “blue marks and bruises” all over his body. Seven eyewitnesses corroborated his wife’s account of nonstop beatings. Three park officials, including the chief warden, were arrested and charged with murder.

This was a sensitive moment for one of the globe’s most prominent charities. The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) had long helped fund and equip Chitwan’s forest rangers, who patrol the area in jeeps, boats, and on elephant backs alongside soldiers from the park’s in-house army battalion. Now WWF’s partners in the war against poaching stood accused of torturing a man to death.

WWF’s staff on the ground in Nepal leaped into action — not to demand justice, but to lobby for the charges to disappear. When the Nepalese government dropped the case months later, the charity declared it a victory in the fight against poaching. Then WWF Nepal continued to work closely with the rangers and fund the park as if nothing had happened.

As for the rangers who were charged in connection with Shikharam’s death, WWF Nepal later hired one of them to work for the charity. It handed a second a special anti-poaching award. By then he had written a tell-all memoir that described one of his favorite interrogation techniques: waterboarding.

>Related articles

Hits on Russian Lukoil oil platforms from Ukraine

Cartel de los Soles at the Presidential Palace of Caracas: The drug-trafficking network that Chávez set up with Sinaloa and that kept Maduro in power

Trump “weighs” a strike on Iran: Military not ready, fears of retaliation – “Foreign terrorists” kill civilians & burn mosques, Pezeshkian says

Shikharam’s alleged murder in 2006 was no isolated incident: It was part of a pattern that persists to this day. In national parks across Asia and Africa, the beloved nonprofit with the cuddly panda logo funds, equips, and works directly with paramilitary forces that have been accused of beating, torturing, sexually assaulting, and murdering scores of people. As recently as 2017, forest rangers at a WWF-funded park in Cameroon tortured an 11-year-old boy in front of his parents, the family told BuzzFeed News. Their village submitted a complaint to WWF, but months later, the family said they still hadn’t heard back.

WWF said that it does not tolerate any brutality by its partners. “Human rights abuses are totally unacceptable and can never be justified in the name of conservation,” the charity said in a statement.

Read more HERE

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#accusations#animals#armed#funding#killing#national park#NGOs#Park#poachers#rape#world#WWF
> More World

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Iran responds to Trump: “You incite terrorists to protest for intervention” — Chaos continues with over 500 dead

January 12, 2026

Ecumenical Patriarch comments on ‘bad omen’ after knife mishap at pie-cutting ceremony

January 12, 2026

Maria Karystianou’s political move divides opinion — Criticisms after early acclaim

January 12, 2026

Golden Globes: Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ and Netflix’s ‘Adolescence’ dominate the awards

January 12, 2026

Rubina Aminian: The 23-year-old student who was shot at point-blank range by Iran’s security forces

January 12, 2026

Why Mitsotakis agreed to two meetings with farmers and livestock breeders

January 12, 2026

Bloodshed in Iran: Over 500 dead in protests as Trump weighs “Very strong options” for intervention

January 12, 2026

Severe cold wave hits Greece: Snow expected – Weather in Attica

January 12, 2026
All News

> Sports

Sports broadcasts of the day: Aris – AEK and the Real Madrid – Barcelona final stand out

The schedule includes the remaining matches of the 16th round of the Super League, games from the Greek Basketball League, the derby Kalamata – Panionios in Super League 2, and the final of the Spanish Super Cup

January 11, 2026

Panathinaikos – Olympiacos 82–87: A European season opener with an away win for the Reds

January 2, 2026

AIPS Awards: Duplantis named world’s best athlete for 2025, Bonmatí tops women’s poll

December 31, 2025

“40–50 people attacked me. I was trying to protect my head, telling myself ‘be patient, it will be over,’” recounts kickboxer Giannis Tsoukalas

December 30, 2025

Kyriakos Mitsotakis with Giannis Alafouzos in Votanikos: “The stadium will be ready by may 2027” (photos)

December 30, 2025
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα