Reports varied as to how the man had entered the supposedly secure enclosure. Zoo officials claimed that Mr Khan must have intentionally climbed into the enclosure and that a guard had twice previously tried to stop him entering.
"All the enclosures of the National Zoological Park are absolutely safe," the zoo's director, Amitabh Agnihotri, said in a statement. "No visitor can reach the moat wall of the enclosure without crossing the the stand-off barrier. This visitor...ultimately jumped into the enclosure which led to his death."
But several witnesses said the young man appeared to have lost his balance while standing on the edge of the barrier, possibly while throwing stones at the seven-year-old tiger, said to weigh around 470lbs. He then fell 18ft into the moat.
"After he fell down, the white tiger came towards Maqsood," one witness, Himanshu, told the Indian Express newspaper. "As the tiger came closer he clasped his hands and seemed to be praying. The tiger watched him closely for 15 minutes."
Zoo officials said that during that time, the guard at the tiger enclosure sounded the alarm and sent an emergency message by radio. Yet witnesses said it took between 15 and 20 minutes for additional zoo staff to arrive at the scene. By this point Mr Khan had been fatally injured.
Footage broadcast by the NDTV news channel showed images of the man cowering before the tiger and then, later, the tiger dragging the man around its enclosure.
Authorities eventually frightened the tiger into a small cage inside the enclosure. Mr Khan's body remained inside the enclosure for up to two hours.
- Independent