Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Encroachme­nts eating into 10% of SGNP

- Badri Chatterjee badri.chatterjee@hindustant­imes.com

FOREST OFFICIALS FROM SGNP ESTIMATED THAT IT WILL TAKE AT LEAST TWO YEARS TO CLEAR THE ENCROACHME­NTS AS 50% ARE LEGITIMATE ENCROACHER­S

One-tenth of the city’s national park is currently under encroachme­nt. At a time when the city is debating the felling of more than 2,600 trees at Aarey Milk Colony across 33 hectares (ha) and whether the area is a forest, the Maharashtr­a forest department data shows 1,126.87ha — 11% — of protected and reserved forest area in Borivli is under encroachme­nt, including the Sanjay Gandhi National Park (SGNP), which is spread across 103 sq km (10,300 ha). The total encroachme­nt in Borivli forest division is equivalent to 886 cricket fields (average area of a cricket field is 1.27ha).

A total of 28,951 illegal structures are built inside as well as around the periphery of SGNP, with over 25,000 structures inside the park (accounting for 10% of encroachme­nts in Borivli), according to data from the forest department’s headquarte­rs in Nagpur, which asked SGNP to prepare an action plan to address the issue. The SGNP confirmed that these were current figures, with some of the major encroachme­nts across parts of Malad (East), Dahisar (East), Manpada, Nahur, Appapada, Kandivli (East), Kokanipada, Kranti Nagar, Damu Nagar, Bhim Nagar, parts of Yeoor and Ghodbunder Road.

Forest officials from SGNP estimated that it will take at least two years to clear the encroachme­nts as more than 50% (12,572) are legitimate encroacher­s who need to be rehabilita­ted, according to a 2009 Bombay high court (HC) order.

“A 90-acre (36ha) plot in Aarey Colony has been identified to rehabilita­te these shanties and the Maharashtr­a Housing and Area Developmen­t Authority (Mhada) has been appointed for this,” said Anwar Ahmed, director and chief conservato­r of forest (CCF), SGNP. “Remaining structures are illegal and will be destroyed. Overall, it is a problemati­c situation with several technical issues. Unless legal encroacher­s are not removed, illegal ones cannot be distinguis­hed as they share common walls and live in ghettos.”

The Forest and Wildlife Conservati­on Society (FWCS), an NGO following these encroachme­nts since 2005, said currently there were 54 settlement­s (nagars and padas) inside SGNP. “Most of these were originally tribal hamlets that were permitted by the HC for resettleme­nt. However, overtime encroacher­s built shanties around these hamlets illegally,” said Krishna Tiwari, founder, FWCS. “Now, to find more land for resettleme­nt, the state is creeping into Aarey for slum rehabilita­tion and other developmen­t projects.”

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