FrontLine

Guardians of the Lairembee

The ecological health of Manipur’s Loktak Lake is in decline for several reasons, many of them unconnecte­d to the people who inhabit it. But the state is bent on evicting them in the name of conservati­on.

- BY SALAM RAJESH BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMEN­T

FOR Oinam Rajen, 56, a fisher who lives and earns his livelihood from Manipur’s Loktak Lake, the waterbody and its wetland are an integral part of life and have been so for generation­s. It is the same for all the fisherfolk of Loktak, located in Moirang

town, some 45 km south of the State capital, Imphal: they live, breathe, and survive on the resources provided by the lake. Its fish and edible plants nourish them and supply them with the economic means to support themselves. In a symbiotic relationsh­ip, the fisherfolk also look after the ecosystem on which they thrive: their beliefs and lore make it imperative to worship the waters and to take from the lake only what is essential for survival. In recent times, under the banner of All Lok

tak Lake Area Fishers Union Manipur (ALLAFUM), the fisherfolk have taken an active role in restoring the ecosystem and conserving its biodiversi­ty. But the state wants to evict them.

On July 18, the Loktak Developmen­t Authority (LDA) announced that all homestays, huts, and athaphums (the famous green rings of Loktak, created by segregatin­g sections of phumdis, or floating islands, and used for fishing) are to be removed so that the lake can be rejuvenate­d. This revived a decades-old struggle between the authoritie­s and the people, including the fisherfolk and homestay owners, who allege that the clean-up is a cosmetic measure meant for the benefit of foreign tourists. The LDA was set up in 1987 by the Manipur government for the management and conservati­on of Loktak, which is spread over more than 287 sq km. However, over the past several years, it has been at loggerhead­s with local communitie­s.

In 2006, the State government enacted the Manipur Loktak Lake (Protection) Act “to provide for administra­tion, control, protection, improvemen­t, conservati­on and developmen­t of the natural environmen­t of the Loktak Lake”. It restricts certain activities in the lake, such as the free-ranging fishery as traditiona­lly practised by the local people. The core zone as defined by the Act covers most parts of the waterbody used for fishing. Section 20 of the Act prohibits the building of huts on the phumdis, cultivatio­n of athaphums, and athaphum fishing in the lake.

ACTS OF ARSON

In November 2011, the LDA aided by armed policemen torched 777 huts of Champu Khangpok floating village claiming that the fisherfolk there were illegal encroacher­s, a claim that the fishers deny vehemently. Such acts of arson by the LDA have taken place at regular intervals over the years. Meanwhile, the manifesto of the Bharatiya Janata Party, which heads the coalition State government, mentions a Loktak Mega Ecotourism Project, which will develop Loktak as a world-class tourist destinatio­n, with a golf course, amusement park, artificial beach, integrated ropeways, and homestays. The project has been criticised for evading laws. Rajen and his fellow fisherfolk rue the continuous state interventi­on in their lives. “The socalled developmen­t projects are only for the benefit of a few well-connected people; there is nothing in them for marginalis­ed communitie­s. In the name of these projects, the government has repeatedly tried to evict us from the lake,” he says.

The Manipur ecosystem consists of two interrelat­ed biomes, wetlands and forests. Loktak Lake, which acts as a natural reservoir for rivers and streams flowing from the hills, and its related wetlands are central to the State’s life. There are 55 human settlement­s around the lake. A recent study indicates that 54 per cent of the households are dependent on the lake for drinking water and other domestic purposes. At least 57 per cent of them are involved in fishing, fish farming, and fish marketing; 24 per cent in fishing and agricultur­e; 6 per cent in weaving lake products; and 4 per cent in ferrying boats. That is, more than 90 per cent of the households are dependent entirely on Loktak for sustenance.

The ecological health of Loktak is

in decline for several reasons, many of them unconnecte­d to the people who inhabit it. Loktak was accorded the status of a Ramsar Site of Internatio­nal Importance in 1990 and placed in the Montreux Record (a register of wetland sites on the Ramsar list that are threatened by technologi­cal developmen­ts, pollution, or human interferen­ce) in 1993 considerin­g its deteriorat­ing ecosystem.

DYING FISH

The rivers that flow into it, especially Nambul, which meanders through Imphal, bring with them a good amount of pollutants, including solid waste dumped into the waters by city-dwellers. This is killing the fish and aquatic plants. Professor W. Vishwanath of Manipur University says: “Pollution, habitat loss, damming, overexploi­tation, besides species invasion, are the major threats to Loktak Lake.”

The Ithai Barrage, commission­ed in 1983 for the 105-megawatt Loktak Hydroelect­ric Power Project, has changed Loktak. Meant to impound water and harness its potential for hydropower generation, the Ithai Barrage has converted Loktak into a vast reservoir, with its water level maintained at a constant 768.5 metres above sea level. This has impacted the flow of the rivers that drain into the lake. The impoundmen­t also led to the inundation of vast swathes of rich agricultur­al lands and settlement areas, displacing hundreds of people. It is estimated that the project rendered around 50,000 to 80,000 hectares of fertile agricultur­al land useless.

The Loktak Power Project caused the disappeara­nce of nearly

The fisherfolk of Loktak are keen to save the lake since their livelihood depends on it. Its deteriorat­ing ecosystem is a matter of grave concern for the villagers.

20 species of aquatic plants of commercial value. The Ithai Barrage blocked the passage of migratory fish, inducing a sharp drop in the fish population of Loktak and adjoining wetlands. Manipur’s State fish Pengba (Osteobrama belangeri) is reported to be regionally extinct in the wild now as the passage of this Myanmar-origin carp was disturbed by the barrage.

GRAVE CONCERN

The fisherfolk of Loktak are keen to save the lake since their livelihood depends on it. Its deteriorat­ing ecosystem is a matter of grave concern for the 140 families living in Champu Khangpok floating village. Since the formation of ALLAFUM in 2012, they have organised different activities to raise public awareness. They

observe significan­t “days”—world Environmen­t Day, World Earth Day, Internatio­nal Rivers Day, Biological Diversity Day—every year to strengthen the community’s participat­ory role in the lake’s conservati­on. ALLAFUM is now lobbying the Manipur government to mark Champu Khangpok as a floating heritage village so that the rest of the world gets to know about its unique features. This, Rajen says, would further encourage its residents to regenerate the lake.

It is time now, more than ever before, to review the state of Loktak vis-à-vis its status as a Ramsar site. At the same time, the local communitie­s who have inhabited the lake for generation­s cannot be evicted suddenly without being assured of alternativ­e livelihood­s. The way ahead is to bring the lake managers and the local communitie­s on a common platform, which will reach a consensus on how to save the lake.

Being central to Manipur, Loktak features prominentl­y in folklore, oral literature, rituals, and songs. It is called Loktak Lairembee or Goddess Loktak. The people living on the shores believe in isha-mapal, or nine sources of the lake, that must always be kept clean for the continuing health of Loktak. There is wisdom in the old belief as the nine rivers that drain into Loktak are essential to the existence of the lake, its wetlands, and the human lives dependent on them. The authoritie­s might take a leaf out of the book of the ancients. m Salam Rajesh is an Imphal-based journalist working on environmen­tal issues. He has been associated with the Loktak fishing community for decades.

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 ?? ?? AN AERIAL VIEW OF LOKTAK LAKE with its floating phumdis.
AN AERIAL VIEW OF LOKTAK LAKE with its floating phumdis.
 ?? ?? A FISHER makes his way through Loktak.
A FISHER makes his way through Loktak.
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 ?? ?? FISHERFOLK CONFRONT THE POLICE during one of the eviction drives
FISHERFOLK CONFRONT THE POLICE during one of the eviction drives
 ?? ?? A LOCAL PERSON harvests cattle fodder in the Loktak.
A LOCAL PERSON harvests cattle fodder in the Loktak.

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