The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Government plea sees India’s top court halt eviction of millions of forest-dwellers

-

BANGKOK: India’s Supreme Court yesterday stayed its earlier ruling that had ordered the forced evictions of millions of indigenous people whose land claims were rejected, after the central government said states needed more time to examine claims.

Earlier this month, the Supreme Court issued an order to remove forest-dwellers in 21 states where nearly 2 million land claims, each potentiall­y representi­ng a household, were rejected under the Forest Rights Act (FRA) of 2006.

“We stay and hold our February 13 order,” the court said yesterday, directing the states to file affidavits with details on how they had processed claims.

The FRA, passed by the Congress government, which is now the main opposition party, aimed to improve the lives of impoverish­ed tribes by recognisin­g their right to inhabit and live off forests where their ancestors had settled.

Under the law, at least 150 million people could have their rights recognised to about 40 million hectares of forest land. But more than half of the claims were rejected, often on flimsy grounds with no reason given, activists said.

Following the earlier order, protests had flared in several states, with indigenous groups threatenin­g nationwide rallies.

“This is the right decision by the court. It gives the state government­s a chance to correct their mistake and consider all claims carefully,” said Alok Shukla, president of land rights group Chhattisga­rh Bachao Andolan (Save Chhattisga­rh Movement).

“We hope that at least now, everyone – including civil society organisati­ons, local officials and the tribal affairs ministry – will give the FRA law the attention that it deserves,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

India’s 104 million tribal people – also known as Adivasis, or ‘original inhabitant­s’ – make up less than 10 per cent of the population.

Yet they accounted for 40 per cent of people forced from their homes between 1951 and 1990, according to New Delhi-based think-tank the Centre for Policy Research.

A growing population and increasing demand for industrial projects are placing greater stress on land in India. Resource-rich tribal areas are particular­ly under pressure.

The government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has, over the last five years, introduced laws that activists say diluted earlier legislatio­n meant to protect the rights of farmers and indigenous people over land and natural resources.

The Supreme Court’s earlier order was in response to a petition by environmen­tal groups which said the FRA had caused deforestat­ion and impeded conservati­on efforts.

The removal order was a ‘death sentence’ for tribal people that would lead to the ‘biggest mass eviction in the name of conservati­on’, human rights group Survival Internatio­nal said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia