Pakistani Kashmir girl pulling a sheep in the snow-covered Neelum Valley. ─ AFP "They have to travel towards human settlements in search of food, where they are killed by people when they attack their livestock," says Yousuf Qureshi, the former director of the wildlife department in Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK).
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Since 2007 around 35 common leopards, five bears, and several brown bears have met their fate this way, says AJK assistant wildlife and fisheries department director Naeem Dar.
The detour, exacerbated by deforestation and coupled with a lack of resources available to wildlife officials, has contributed to the eradication of many such species on the Pakistani side of the Line of Control (LoC), officials say.
'Tragedy'
The electric fence stands up to 12 feet tall in places, and is attached to an elaborate network of motion sensors, thermal imaging devices, lighting systems and alarms. The area immediately around it is peppered with land mines ─ all in a bid to protect the frontier from infiltration.
Kashmir's thick forests and soaring slopes are divided between Pakistan and India along the de facto border agreed on in a 2003 ceasefire, but claimed by both in full. Two of their three wars since independence have been fought over the region.
The Srinagar-based commander of the Indian army's XV Corps, Lieutenant General SK Dua, tells AFP the flow of militants crossing over from AJK is "down to a trickle" now, crediting the formidable fence and other counter-insurgency initiatives.
But, while they claim blocking militants ─ and subsequently wildlife ─ from Pakistan, the barrier has also prevented animals moving from the Indian side.
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Creatures such as the markhor, a type of wild goat with majestic horns, simply no longer appear on the Pakistani side ─ blocked by hundreds of kilometres of barbed wire and explosives, says Qureshi.
"[The markhor] would travel from Pir Panjal [in the Himalayan mountains in Indian-held Kashmir] to Neelum Valley, but the fence created a barrier and their migration has ended," he says. "This is a tragedy."