Thiruvananthapuram to host NALSA’s regional meet on human-wildlife conflict on August 30

Under the auspices of Kerala State Legal Services Authority (KELSA), the National Legal Services Authority (NALSA) will host a two-day regional conference aiming to address the increasing difficulties of the human-Wildlife conflict in the country.
The Supreme Court, which is the Chief of the Executive Officer of Nalsa, is also the chairman of the Kant, the judge, the judge of Nalsa, on Saturday, in the Kerala Legislative Assembly Hall, ‘Conflict of Human-Way and Being Together: Legal and Political Perspectives’ will be opened.
Nitin Jamdar, Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Kerala, also President of KELSA; MM Sundaresh, Judge, Supreme Court of India; BV Nagarathna, Judge, Supreme Court of India; Vikram Nath, Judge, Supreme Court of India and President, Supreme Court Legal Services Committee; A. Muhammad Mustak, Judge, Kerala Supreme Court and Kelsa Chairman of the Executive Board; CS Dias, Judge, Supreme Court of Kerala; Indian Chief Public Prosecutor R. Venkataramani; and Kerala Law Minister P. Rajeev will be ready.
Delegates and legal luminaires from six states and two union regions will participate in the conference. Supreme Court Judges; Madras, Kerala, TaLangana, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka Supreme Courts; Member Secretaries of various State Legal Services Authorities and Union territory; et al.
The data obtained from the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Climate Change shows that more than 500 elephants have been killed between 2014-15 and 2018-19 due to human-philosophy conflict. In the same period, 2,361 people died as a result of the conflict with elephants. From 2020 to 2021, 31 people were killed by the tigers and 461 were killed by elephants. At the same time, 104 Tiger death was under investigation, and a statement from the Legal Services Authority of the Thiruvananthapuram Region was 93 elephant deaths due to accidents, electric shock and combustion training.
Working sessions at the conference, loss and disintegration of habitats, rapid urbanization, limitation of forest laws, the use of technology in meaningful disaster management, internalization in legislative frameworks, the need for the development of judiciary, the management of realities, realities, realities, realities, realities, realities, realities, realities.
The Valedictory function will be handled by Justice Nitin Jamdar, the Chief of the Supreme Court of Kerala.
Published – 28 August 2025 22:11



