Bagarius bagarius (the Goonch) is one of Asia's most formidable large catfish, inhabiting swift boulder-strewn rivers draining the Himalayan foothills from Pakistan east through India, Nepal, and into Southeast Asia including the Mekong drainage. It has featured in large-fish angling circles as a potential attacker of bathers in the Kali River — while this is almost certainly overstated, its large size (documented to 2 metres) and powerful build make it an apex predator of its river environment.
In aquaria, B. bagarius is strictly an advanced-specialist, public-aquarium-scale commitment. It requires very fast, highly oxygenated current, cool temperatures compared to most tropical catfish, and a huge tank or pond. Unlike B. yarrelli (Devil Catfish) it is somewhat better documented in captivity, with a small number of dedicated keepers in Europe and North America housing juveniles with success. Diet is exclusively live or dead whole fish and large meaty prey.
The Goonch grows rapidly and will outgrow all but the most enormous setups within five years. Any keeper seriously considering it must have long-term infrastructure plans in place. It is, however, an extraordinary fish — powerful, intelligent, and utterly unlike anything else in the hobby.