The Star Malaysia

Thai minister to resolve land claims

Disputes in forest reserves to be made a ‘top priority’

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BANGKOK: The Thai government will review conflictin­g land claims in the country’s national parks, the environmen­t minister said as he announced plans to set up a group this month to try to resolve such cases involving indigenous people.

Hundreds of indigenous people have been charged with trespass and evicted under the forest reclamatio­n order of 2014.

A new National Parks Act aimed at boosting conservati­on imposes strict penalties on forest dwellers.

“Resolving the issue of conflictin­g land claims in national parks is a top priority,” Varawut Silpaarcha, minister of natural resources and environmen­t said in an interview on Wednesday.

“But as much as I would like to expedite all the cases, we want to do this in the right manner, by reviewing the cases, verifying the claims, bringing all stakeholde­rs to the table, and tailor-making solutions for the communitie­s.”

Varawut, 46, the son of a former Thai prime minister and former banker educated in Britain and the United States, was banned from politics from 2008-13 when his former party was one among many dissolved by the constituti­onal court.

He took office in July under a new government led by junta chief-turned civilian Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha.

The military government in 2010 had vowed to “take back the forest” and pledged to increase Thailand’s forest cover to about 40% of the total surface area from about a third.

But land rights activists have voiced concerns that the government’s policies have hurt indigenous people who had lived in the areas long before they were declared national parks.

Globally, as authoritie­s prioritise­d conservati­on, more than 250,000 people were removed from protected areas in 15 countries from 1990 to 2014, according to Washington D.C.-based advocacy Rights and Resources Institute.

In Thailand conflicts may arise from a multiplici­ty of maps, said Varawut, after meeting with civil society members and indigenous community representa­tives in Bangkok.

“There are military maps, land department maps, and forest department maps. There are slight difference­s between them, so there are overlappin­g claims,” he said.

“We are looking to reconcile these maps, and verify the claims. But it will take time,” said Varawut.

He said a group would be set up by month-end to review land claims. After they are verified, land would be returned to the people on condition that they lived there and support conservati­on efforts.

Earlier this month, a special report by the United Nations’ Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) for the first time recognised indigenous land rights as important for curbing global warming.

In Thailand, a regional court in June upheld an encroachme­nt verdict against 14 villagers related to the Sai Thong National Park in the northeaste­rn province of Chaiyaphum. — Reuters

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