Mumbai: the Infernal Megalopolis | Full Documentary

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With its 22 million inhabitants, Mumbai is the economic and financial capital of India. Each morning, the city is brought to a halt by huge traffic jams. To get to work, eight million people take the train each day. However, the railway network only has four lines. At rush hour, the stations are swarming with people. In the midst of this crowd of commuters made up almost exclusively of men, There's the train. Vinit, a 26-year-old accountant, has an hour-and-a-half commute each morning. It will be here in a minute. Easy, gentlemen! To get on the train, Vinit has to elbow his way through. A pleasant surprise, a seat opens up right in front of him. It's exhausting, every day, we fight more. You couldn't get closer to the door. Everyone pushes inside and outside. I have to wait for two or three trains every day. Inside the carriages, the worn-out fans are not enough to lower the near 45-degree temperatures. Despite overcrowding, insurance agents, lawyers, and bank employees are still smiling. We are enjoying! Every day. It's not very difficult, we are enjoying our journey. The temperatures are quite hot. However, it has become a routine for us, so it doesn't matter. This daily routine is not so fun for every passenger. Some never even reached their destination. Between those who hang on to the carriages and those who lean out of the train, casualties have become commonplace. This woman narrowly escaped death, only just caught by another passenger. This man in the pink shirt, let go under the pressure of the other passengers, fell to his death. This commuter also lost his life. Vinit is nearing his destination. When you get to work, you're exhausted, no? Yes, very exhausted, I take half an hour rest before my journey. Although he has arrived safe and sound, in 2019, 2,691 people died on the railway in Mumbai. A shocking average of seven deaths a day. Samir Zaveri, miraculously survived falling onto the rails. Thirty years ago, he lost both his legs in a tragic accident. I was crossing the railway track and fell. However, I was lucky that my body was out of the way of the people on the train. The train came and suddenly ran over my legs. The people who were there in the nighttime took me to the nearest hospital. Therefore, within five or ten minutes, the bleeding stopped and my life was saved. Since then, Zamir has persistently lobbied the authorities to increase safety on trains. It carries three to four times more passengers compared to its capacity. I'm demanding that the suburban train in Mumbai has all the doors and required to close. If any passenger get injured, then there must be an emergency medical services and full service should be free of cost from the government. To relieve the overcrowded trains and congested stations, four subway lines are currently under construction, but the overcrowded megalopolis is facing many other challenges. Located on the west coast of India, the city of Mumbai, formerly known as Bombay, is the country's economic center. The population of this former British colonial city has skyrocketed. Bombay had a population of 3,000,000 in 1951. Today it is home to 22 million people, and this figure is expected to grow to 30 million by 2035. To overcome the lack of space, hundreds of high-rise luxury apartments are being built, designed for the wealthy upper class who dream of adopting a more European lifestyle. It's the house of our dreams, exactly what we are looking for. To build these huge housing complexes, the authorities are demolishing hundreds of acres of slums. Bharat Dhupar works for a property developer. With such a beautiful view, you still have a lot of slums left to be cleared. These poor neighborhoods are home to 50 percent of Mumbai's population, but their resourcefulness and ingenuity has helped them to survive. These shanty towns are expanding to the north. The city is growing at such a rate that it is having to encroach upon the Sanjay Gandhi National Park, home to many wild animals, including leopards. They are venturing into the new neighborhoods built on the edge of the forest. The number of attacks has shot up in recent months. Remains of her body were found, part of her arm. Far from the slums, Mumbai is also a city of dreams, especially thanks to Bollywood, its glamorous film industry, which produces nearly 2,000 films a year. Downtown trendy neighborhoods are booming, such as Bandra. This is where Janita set herself up as a model and businesswoman. To be honest, Bombay is a city of dreams. Amid the people of Mumbai's thirst for success and the battle for survival, the sprawling megalopolis is the symbol of the Indian dream. The biggest slum in Asia can be found in the heart of Mumbai, the Dharavi slums. One million people crammed into just under one square mile. A population density 20 times higher than that of Paris. The electricity grid is precarious. Water is only available for two hours per day. The sewage system is non-existent. Behind its obvious poverty, the slum is packed with enterprise. It is home to thousands of businesses, small auto-repair shops where workers cut car parts, or even make clothes. Turn around, turn the other way, and reverse. Mahesh is 27 years old. He grew up in Dharavi. This morning he received some goods that are very valuable to him, some plastic containers. All right, who is helping me offload? We're going to get in and then get everything ready. Who is emptying the truck? Mahesh has found a way to become rich by clearing Mumbai of its garbage. Before, Mumbai was very dirty, there was mud and plastic everywhere. Through recycling, we have cleaned up the city. We take the bottles that have been dumped all over the city, bring them here, and recycle them. His recycling business supports 25 employees. For 200 rupees a day, which is around $3, the workers sort the plastic waste according to color and various other qualities. With white plastic for example, you can make 15 to 20 rupees per kilo. This enables us to pay our employees, electricity bills and building fees. We can even save up some of it. Once separated, the plastic is crushed. For $6 a day, these men stick their hands into this machine without any protection. Then the bags of pellets are sent off to wholesalers to be processed. Have you finished or is there still some left? Is it all done? In Dharavi, 12,000 people work in the plastics industry. Sixty percent of the city's plastic waste is sorted here. The Dharavi neighborhood is a very large district where people work. Nearly everyone here has a job and earns a living. Despite the taxes that put many businesses at a disadvantage, we manage to survive. People eat well. Thanks to his work, Mahesh earns $600 a month. This is the average wage for those in Mumbai, but ten times higher than in the rest of India. He lives near his factory with his parents in this 54 square feet room. Yet Mahesh is content with these difficult living conditions. Over time, Dharavi has changed a lot, and our living conditions have changed. Before, we lived in wooden houses, now we have solid walls. We took out lots of loans to build this house. You see, we have water, electricity, everything we need. In fact, Mahesh and his family own this entire house. To climb to the first floor, you have to climb a ladder with the help of a rope. This floor is also part of my house, we rent it out. All these here are tenants, they pay us rent. They've been working here a long time. The second floor is also rented to workers. Finally, a sewing workshop is situated on the top floor. These three rentals bring Mahesh $240 a month. Dharavi's informal economy generates over $800 million each year. This resourceful spirit fascinates people across the world. This is where the movie Slumdog Millionaire was filmed. Since this success, tourists come from all over the world to visit its maze of garbage-strewn alleys. Some take the opportunity to do some shopping and experience the local color. Like in this leather shop at the end of this alleyway, it sells leather goods branded with the name of the slum. -How much is this? -3200. This visitor from China is taken aback by the city. Here it feels like in a normal commercial area. They are smiling. I'm surprised by the ability of human beings to survive in a really harsh environment. It's suede leather, it's 3,500. Imran, the 29-year-old boss, sells the bags himself. $50 and we accept card, dollar, and euro. Every type of money here. -Don't worry about cash. -$50. Proud of his brand of leather that bears the name of his neighborhood, Imran is full of ambition. Are you okay? How's it going? It's a slum, but it's a different type of slum. It's like a small-scale industry. People are not doing crime here, people are doing struggling here. It is looking for the success. We also try the same like that, and it's our goal. If we see our brand also Dharavi brand in future it's top of like Michael Kors, Jimmy Choo, top of them. In total, Imran employs around 40 members of staff to tan and color the leather. Is everything okay? Imran's father, Wahas, is the man behind this incredible success. Forty years ago, Wahas fled Uttar Pradesh, a poverty-stricken region in northern India with dreams of a better life in Mumbai. I worked hard, I didn't have a choice. My arms hurt so much that I couldn't sleep at night. I was extremely poor. I arrived from my village with just 100 rupees to my name. However, by working hard, putting in lots of effort, we got where we are today. Wahaj's life is like a fairy tale. Five years ago, he and his family bought an apartment on the top floor of this modern high-rise building located in the middle of a shanty town. They paid $360,000 for this 750-square-foot space with breathtaking views of the city. This is a master bedroom for my father and my mother, and we have one small bedroom for me here. Come, I show you. and you see the decoration, I keep very honestly and very hard working on it to make this house. Today, Imran, his wife, their three children, and their parents make up 20 percent of Mumbai residents with access to running water. We have 24-hour water here. Is it a dream come true? Yes, my dream come true. The young entrepreneur from the slum is proud to have entered the exclusive circle of privileged Mumbai residents. Most of the celebrities and politicians are living on the top floor, mostly because they have lots of money. It is a sign of success. It is a dream of many people to live in an upscale on the top floor. In Mumbai, the richer you are, the higher you live. Down below, the city is suffocated by pollution and the noise is constant. Life is much calmer at the top. The most affluent residents can gain access to this tranquility from their upper-floor apartments in high-rise buildings. One of the richest people in the city lives on the top floor of this skyscraper. How are things in London? Babulal Varma is a successful real estate broker. He lives in this lavish 2,700-square-foot apartment with his wife and two children. Dinner's ready! Every morning the servants prepare breakfast. Sit down here. Babulal is originally from Rajasthan. He moved to Mumbai around 20 years ago, captivated by the city's dynamism. My construction is my family business. My father, my forefather, I think we have been in this business for the last 100 years. If you go in Rajasthan, you can see the big palaces, that were built by my great-great grandfathers. How and why did you decide to come to Mumbai? Mumbai is a growing city and we all want to grow, and I think the opportunity in Mumbai is huge. In 2003, Babulal built his first residential high-rise. These days, the property developer works on multiple projects across the city. Okay, it's great that you're starting early. We are doing a lot of high-rise buildings. I think as a group with my partners, we are doing 35 buildings, more than 50 stories. According to you, is it a necessity to build higher? Yes, it is a necessity because we have no space in Mumbai. I told you that there're three sides of water, if you want to grow the city, the population is increasing every day, then you have no other way other than to go up only. To compensate for this lack of space, Babulal has a drastic solution, demolish the hundreds of acres of slums. We have started demolishing this. It is touching the bridge. If you come one or two years later, a beautiful building will be here. His ultimate goal is to tear down the Dharavi neighborhood. I think we all know about the Dharavi Slumdog Millionaire. It is hot in the city. If your heart is a little bit not proper and it looks dirty, as a city, it doesn't look nice. Babulal is the head of Omkar, one of India's leading companies, on what is known as slum rehabilitation. It employs more than 800 members of staff. Mister Palival is here, would you like a hotel? This morning, the realtor summoned his management team to provide an update on one of their biggest projects. This has started? That too? The only thing left to do is that bit at the top, the rest is fine. Yes, but we have to move the school, our problem is the school. Before beginning this colossal construction work, Babulal and his team must convince the residents to leave. We are clearing the slums that is a 65-acre big slum pocket and mixed-use project Candor Mall commercial office, residents, and retail. Babulal has already wiped out hundreds of acres of slums. The discussion we just had was interesting, but we need to rework, okay? One of his biggest projects is in Malad in North Mumbai. He is building four 820 feet high skyscrapers on the foundations of what was once a slum. It will be a residential complex intended for the emerging middle class. At the bottom of the buildings, this showroom plays host to a constant stream of potential buyers. It will only take five minutes. Raj owns a printing business. He has come here with his wife and daughter. The visit starts with a promotional video. They are sold an idyllic way of life, a green oasis, a breath of fresh air that seems far from the hustle and bustle of the city. What you see in this video are the exact views you will have. The panorama will be exactly the same. Raj and his family are visiting a model apartment. This is a three-bed apartment. The living room is the most important place in a house. It's where we spend most of our time, which is why we have designed it as luxurious as possible. Raj appears to have been won over. At the moment, he is living in a two-room apartment. His daughter has to sleep in the living room. This is not a balcony, obviously, this is a connecting deck. The apartment is 560 square feet. Three bedrooms, three bathrooms, and a fully fitted kitchen. Something of a novelty for this emerging middle-class family. Five toilets in your house. I've always dreamed of a house like this. It's all about the budget, and I think he will compromise on that. We are ready to move, it alll depends on him. The family has fallen in love with it, but there's just one small hiccup, the price, $780,000. Although it is still possible to negotiate, Raj is going to wait a bit before deciding. In the showroom, Barrett, the CEO of the project, has just struck a deal with another client on a $1 million apartment. I can give you a 36 percent discount, and the next one's yours, how's that? Okay, yes, that's fine. These housing complexes that offer a life of privacy are all the rage in India. Surveying the slums at the foot of the buildings, Barrett is already thinking about the next step. What I'm looking at is how much of the area we have been able to clean up and how much is still left, there's a lot left. With such a beautiful view, you still have a lot of slums left to be cleared. In order to demolish the slums and build new housing, the property developers have to relocate the residents. They are required by law to do so. Basically, it's a scheme whereby you basically want the slum people to get proper houses, we build proper houses for them and rehabilitate them in those houses. What happens in the entire land, you have some houses which you build for them and some houses you build and sell. That is how poor people get houses for free, while as the remaining part of the land, you are able to make houses and sell. What are the buildings that house the former slum dwellers look like? In Worli, a central district of the city, there is another one of Omkara's rehabilitation projects. Three 885-foot luxury high-rise buildings and below apartment blocks built for former residents of the slums. Dilapidated, they are only a few meters apart. A relocated resident talks to us, furious. We had supported the two builders, Babalal Varma and his colleague. However, these property developers have not been straight with us, look! How long have they been developing this district for? They've been doing it for 12 years and there is no road or garden. -Do you think that's okay? -It's not right. Contrary to the property developer's promises, there is no school and the shops are still under construction. Three years have gone by and politicians have said nothing, where can the poor people go? Our interview is cut short by Omkara's public relations officer. He strictly forbids us from seeking the opinions of dissatisfied residents. Our filming continues inside the building under the close supervision of Suresh, their public relations officer. He has selected a family of six that live in this two-room space of 312 square feet, which they were given for free. We are now going to witness a true exercise in public relations. Thinking that we do not understand the language, the public relations officer dictates his message to the father of the family. No thanks, not for me, I'm diabetic. You have to say: "When I was my son's age, I grew up in the slums." My parents brought me up as best as they could. However, I want my son to have a better life than mine, and that will be possible, thanks to Omkar. The man perfectly recites his speech. When I was young, like him, I lived in the slums. Today, thanks to Omkar and their beautiful housing, we are in the right environment for our child to receive a proper education. Says that he wants to be an engineer. However, he doesn't want to be an engineer, he want to become a police officer. This family can consider themselves lucky because not everyone is entitled to new housing. To be given a standard 95-square-foot apartment, you have to prove that you have lived in the slum for 20 years. What happens to the residents who do not meet these criteria? They are moved to the outskirts of the city. In commuter towns such as Lallubhai compound, 50,000 people are crammed into around 60 blocks of decrepit apartments. They were built just ten years ago. Wastewater is discharged in the canal at the entrance of the neighborhood. These two buildings housed 200 families originally from Dharavi who were forced to relocate to Lalubhai eight years ago. Abdul and his family of six live in this two-room apartment. The plot of land he occupied in Dharavi was bulldozed by the authorities. After destroying everything, they told us to come here. We had to fend for ourselves, they did not help us. When they warned us, we weren't ready. They just destroyed everything and forced us to move. In Dharavi, Abdul owned a business. These days he works as a delivery man and earns half as much. We no longer feel the happiness that we once felt in Dharavi. This family of scrap ironworkers also miss their old neighborhood. Three separate generations lived together in this 312-square-foot dwelling. This is my family and our home, these are my things. Sardar is not happy with the authorities. I have nine children, there are my parents, my brother, and his family. Altogether, there are about 16 or 17 people in my family. How can we live in a place like this? How do you all sleep here? Some of us sleep under the bed, others on the bed, some sleep in the kitchen. It's certainly not easy. This slum rehabilitation policy has displaced and verticalized poverty. This shortage of space is only going to get worse as the population of Mumbai is expected to grow by 8 million residents in the next 15 years. Every day, 1500 migrants from all over India settle in this sprawling megalopolis. Most of them carry out odd jobs. The labyrinth of small streets and alleyways are brimming with barbers, dressmakers, and street vendors selling spicy food. The most incredible workers are those who deliver food on their bicycles. Dating back 130 years, it is the most reliable delivery system in the world. Shankar, aged 23, is what is known as a dabbawala, a packed lunch delivery man. There are 5,000 of them in Mumbai. Some of our delivery people have had accidents, it's happened two or three times. So we are a little scared of riding a bike. You also see people driving around, cyclists, and bikers driving recklessly along the road. Yes, it's pretty scarry. Once the packed lunches have been collected at the customer's home, Shankar meets up with his fellow dabbawalas. Give me the empty lunch boxes and take the other three. Each delivery man has a delivery zone. They exchange lunch boxes depending on their destination, and to do this, there's no need for a modern system with advanced algorithms. -Where's this meal going? -That one is CW. -Sorry? -CW, it's for BKC. Each basket is marked with a complex code of letters and numbers. The dabbawalas are illiterate, but amazingly, they are able to decipher it. They are numbers that we have learned to memorize visually. There, seven, two, one, these numbers are written and that's how we recognize the packed lunch boxes. This archaic system is foolproof, the dabbawalas are almost never wrong. Harvard University even conducted a study to try and understand how they pull this off. With £66 on the carrier and the stifling 113-degree heat, each turn of the pedal is like torture, so to keep himself going, Shankar sings himself a tune. We are the Mombay dabbawalas, we are the dabbawalas! At exactly midday, he reaches the first delivery point. This young accountant pays $12 a month for Shankar's services. Why is it so important for you to have a home cooked meal? The woman prepare them with lots of enthusiasm and energy. It's fresh, it's hot and it's really healthy, that's why we prefer home cooked meals. Shankar earns 12,000 rupees a month, equal to $163. Let's go, hurry up, quickly, we're going to miss the train. That's four times less than the average wage in Mumbai. However, he didn't exactly choose this demanding job as a dabbawala. It is passed on from father to son. My grandfather used to do this, then my father joined him. Then I joined them and my father spent around two weeks showing me how to do it. I learned little by little. Each year, Shankar and his fellow dabbawalas deliver 73 million meals. While some age-old traditions persist in Mumbai, other parts of the megalopolis are firmly focused on the future, like the neighborhood, Bandra, situated on the Arabian Sea. With its tree-lined avenues and green spaces, luxury stores, old colonial houses, and elegant buildings, this haven of peace is the neighborhood of choice for Bollywood actors and trendy artists. Perched on the roof of this contemporary art gallery, 32-year-old Janita is in the middle of a workout. I'm not perfect, I know that, but I'm still learning. It took me years to at least come to this. Janita is part of Mumbai's high society. She has a career as a model and influencer. She has nearly 90,000 followers on Instagram. To be honest, Bombay is a city of dreams. Some people are actually lucky. If you find a way through in whatever you want to do in your life, and that's where the city really helps. If you have the right contacts and the right direction and the right experience. Before she starts work for the day, Janita likes to come for a walk by the sea. One of the few places in the city free from pollution. We are on a contour route, it's in Bandra, obviously, it's called sea-facing. It's just so beautiful in the mornings and evenings to be here, especially during sunset. It just feels like a different place in Bombay. A year ago, Janita became a businesswoman. She launched a women's fashion brand. We have products like these, the harness belts, the ankle-length boots, we've got bags and all of it is vegan leather. Her modern creations are appealing to more and more Indian women. In this still very conservative country, Janita is proud to be bringing about change. There are now a lot of corporate women. They're more Westernized women. A woman in India can actually carry an Indian look and turn and switch into this other woman who is actually wearing a dress and a backless gown. That's the beauty of an Indian woman, and Indian fashion. This morning, she has a meeting with one of her business friends, Suren. -I'm good. -I'm fine, thank you. Oh, my God, I've been waiting to come and check this place. He has just opened this hip cafe, and Janita wants to show him her latest collection. These are some of our products, we do work… What do you have for men? Very soon there's going to be a surprise. Bombay is everything you want it to be. It's got a bit of everything, so whatever you plan, it all works. It's about just presenting it rightly and putting it out there, and she is Bombay. I don't know where I'm going to see you next. In this city of endless possibilities, some French people are capitalizing on this economic miracle. Just 330ft away, Antonia, Jeremy, and Pierre are attending a strange ceremony. Pandits, Hindu priests are blessing the new bakery of these three French people. This is called a puja. A Puja is a Hindu prayer. The aim is to bless the space, so they've come to bless the site and bring good business. These three French people moved to Mumbai ten years ago, attracted by the city's magnetism. They were met with incredible success. In addition to their bakery, these entrepreneurs own a chain of restaurants offering organic and local products. It's a popular concept in Europe, but in India, it is still a novelty. They created something which is very unique and in terms of the quality of the food is amazing, so we keep going and also because they are amazing as well. They do it so effortlessly. You don't see any stress or tension on them. You feel like they're running like a whole empire. Good food, good people. Each day, these French entrepreneurs check in on their businesses. To get from one establishment to the other requires a lot of patience. It can take an hour, an hour and a half to travel 12 miles. There's a lot of traffic, you have to time your journeys well. Here, people are more flexible on meeting times than in Paris. We've all got into the habit of arriving a little late. We use it as an opportunity to send emails, make phone calls. Personally, I use this time to get some sleep. Holding our meetings when the three of us together. The last restaurant they opened is in Bandra Kurla Complex, a brand new neighbourhood built on marshland. It is home to the headquarters of large corporations such as Google, Amazon, and even IBM. This isn't the image people have of the city. When they think of Bombay, they think of small crowded streets. They don't see a picture of a city like this, well organized with huge skyscrapers Yet this is exactly what has been developed over the last few years. We have three restaurants here, in this neighbourhood, and we will definitely set up more of them, because it's a city within a city. I think there's something like one million people working here. It's a very strategic location. Here, businesspeople, executives, and financiers have greater purchasing power. They spend an average of $12 per meal. In comparison to where we were this morning our clientele here are not necessarily from the local neighborhood. They are office workers, these people are on a very schedule, they're white collar workers. It's all quite corporate and serious. The 200 members of staff in the kitchen and dining areas of the French entrepreneur's restaurants are Indian. They are part of the emerging middle class. Darshan holds a clerical position. I started my kitchen two years back, but I learned many things like different kind of bread and a lot of things like sourdough. It was a new concept here because I learned about organic food. What we serve here, it was really amazing, it's a new opportunity for me also. Thanks to Mumbai's economic dynamism. There'll be one axis here and one axis here. Jeremy, Pierre, and Antonia plan to open around ten more restaurants in new neighborhoods. With the ever-increasing population, the city is pressing further into protected natural areas. In the north of Mumbai, urbanization is causing serious conflict between residents and wildlife. With an area of over 25,000 acres, the size of Paris, the Sanjay Gandhi National Park is surrounded by houses. The slums are inexorably moving further into the wilderness. At night, leopards living in the park venture into residential areas. They head into building lobbies, and parking lots. They mainly go after dogs, but occasionally attack humans. In the heart of the park, Ranjit Jadhav has been keeping an eye on the leopard's movements for seven years I think it's over there, this place. Ranjit is a wildlife photographer. His photographs are famous worldwide. Together with his colleagues, he retrieves the images captured the night before by camera traps. Is it a baby or an adult female? It's a female adult. Further, further… By observing these images, Ranjit has concluded that the felines are no longer afraid to move closer to resident's homes. We have got certain footage or pictures very close to human settlements and pictures of people also walking a few minutes after the leopard had gone from that. These predators lurking just outside of Mumbai are a concern for the public. In Aray colony, a neighborhood straddling the borders of the park, some 60 families live in constant fear of being attacked. Krupa Tucker works for the Department of Forestry. Come here to the front, I'm going to talk to you children. I've told you to stop going out after sundown, especially children. I hope you don't play outside at night. The locals are reluctant to enforce these rules. We can tell children four or five times not to go out and play. However, some of them ignore us. I tell my children time and time again, but they do not listen to me. They want the local council to install street lighting to help spot leopards at night. We need working streetlights in the neighborhood. There are a lot of people who come home from work after 10 pm at night. We have been complaining about seeing leopards here for a month now. Nothing has been done, not one street lamp has been installed. Sonu, Krupa's colleague attempts to calm the anger of the locals. We will review your complaints about street lighting, but you need to make changes on your end too. The first thing is to make sure that children are at home once it gets dark. However, the residents are calling for a much more radical solution. We want the animals to be kept in cages. You see all these kids here? Why aren't you capturing the leopard? Are you waiting for them to attack our kids, is that it? Even if we put out traps, the leopards will not go away, others will come. To calm the anger of the locals, the city has created a squad that is specifically tasked with preventing these feline incursions. We are in the middle of the slums. Santosh Bania, the squadron leader, has just been called upon by frightened villagers. Wild cats often come here to attack dogs. Carry on, it's a bit further. Santosh and his team approach the area cautiously. Do you see their eyes? When you move the torch, their eyes flash right away. Lift your torch a little higher. Those aren't dogs. Over there? Yes, they are dogs, but the eyes behind, those are leopards. Despite the presence of predators in the area, a man has come to meet the rangers. You shouldn't be walking around by yourself at night. Don't go out like that, always carry a stick with you. I come home from work at 10 pm sometimes, sometimes even at midnight, and I walk. I'm afraid, but I have no other choice. Next time you're crossing the road, play some music on your phone, it will keep them away. After a few minutes, peace is restored around the buildings. Leopards are skittish animals, the only attack humans as a last resort. They might attack young children because they are prey of their size. However, otherwise, they prey on dogs, they do not bother humans. The presence of the rangers seems to have scared off the leopard. No, those are dogs, come on, let's go. Despite these words of reassurance, the number of attacks has escalated in recent months. In Maharashtra, the state in which Bombay sits, there have been 24 fatal attacks in 2020. Muthuvel and his wife lost their daughter four years ago when she was eaten by a leopard. You see there, that is where it happened. That's where they found my daughter's body. A leopard grabbed our child here and took her over to the hill. Darshani, four years old at the time, was playing in front of the family home at dusk. Her parents found the remains of her body two days later. We found all the remains of our child's body. There were pieces of her hands, pieces of her legs. We also found her head, she was wearing nail varnish. That's how we identified our daughter. I miss my daughter so much. Since this tragic event, Muthuvel has been constantly on guard. As soon as I hear a dog barking, I'm on high alert. I close the doors of the house, I don't let anyone leave. The family is now very angry with these cats that prowl the streets. We are angry, it's only natural, we lost a child. I understand that it's an animal, but she was our child. In the heart of the Sanjay Gandhi National Park at the Leopard Rescue Centre, the rangers' lives are accompanied by a soundtrack of constant roaring. Can we open this cage? It looks clean. Mukesh More looks after around 15 leopards that have been captured by his team. Here, each cage houses a killer. The leopards here come from the city of Nashik. They attacked people, so we caught them using a trap. Did they kill children? Yes, they killed children. The adult leopard weighs no more than around 130 pounds. However, it is an excellent hunter capable of carrying a prey of 330 pounds. In areas close to cities, more than a quarter of their diet comes from livestock or pets. According to Mukesh More, leopards are direct victims of the region's rampant urbanization. In this conflict, I believe that it is humans who are at fault. Humans should stay away from forests and not take over animal habitats. This conflict between man and leopard is likely to get worse in Mumbai. Well-fed, the leopards have perfectly adapted to their cohabitation with humans. Their number has increased by 30 percent over the last five years. Mumbai looks like it will continue to push the forest back in the years ahead. By 2050, the Indian megalopolis could become the most populated city in the world with 42 million inhabitants. Since we finished working on this film, Babulal Varma, the real estate broker, has been incarcerated under suspicion of fraud and embezzlement.
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Views: 613,897
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Keywords: documentary, full documentary, yt:cc=on, mumbai, bombay, india, life in india, big city, free documentary, travel in india
Id: 69zjn_5NR94
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 54min 33sec (3273 seconds)
Published: Sun Jun 18 2023
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