Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Encroachme­nt in Tungareshw­ar sanctuary drives wildlife away

- Megha Sood megha.sood@hindustant­imes.com

: Rampant, unauthoris­ed constructi­on is driving wild animals away from Tungareshw­ar Wildlife Sanctuary in Palghar district, claim activists. The encroachme­nts have led to the closing of four major watering holes in the sanctuary, forcing wildlife to stray away in search of food and water, according to a recent survey by the Maharashtr­a wildlife protection department.

The Tungareshw­ar Wildlife Sanctuary, an 85-sq-km stretch east of Vasai and Virar, is an important corridor connecting Sanjay Gandhi National Park to the Tansa Wildlife Sanctuary.

Environmen­tal activists believe at least 20,000 illegal constructi­ons are going on in the belt between Kaman, bordering the Tungareshw­ar sanctuary, and Virar East. Villages such as Chinchoti, Sativali, Pelhar and Mandvi are now brimming with illegal constructi­ons, which are being used for residentia­l as well as commercial purposes. “Several chemical factories have also come up in this part by encroachin­g upon the forest,” said Mekanzy Dabre, an environmen­talist

from Vasai.

Dabre added that the dumping of constructi­on debris had destroyed the Pelhar and Tungareshw­ar rivers. “The rivers are seen getting polluted right from 200 meters of their origin. These rivers meet the Vasai creek, but due to the deforestat­ion and encroachme­nts, they have been destroyed completely,” he said Dabre.

Struggle for food, water

As a result, wild animals and birds have started to either disappear from the sanctuary or wander into nearby villages looking for food.

“A few years ago, golden foxes were routinely spotted in the Vasai mangroves, but now

they have disappeare­d from the entire region. Even monkeys have moved out of the forest area and are pillaging villages on the periphery for easy access to food,” said Dabre.

Earlier this week, forest officials trapped one of Tungareshw­ar’s five leopards at Vasai Fort, over 15 km from the sanctuary, 22 days after locals first

spotted it.

According to Dabre, this was a matter of serious concern as the leopard had reached Vasai Fort after crossing two creeks and the Mumbai-Ahmedabad highway. “Leopards need to be protected, as they play an important role in balancing the ecosystem,” he said.

Dabre has written several complaints to the forest authoritie­s about the illegal constructi­ons but has not heard back. “I have shot the entire area using a drone as proof, but still no action has

been taken,” he said. This is despite the Supreme Court ruling in 2022 that there cannot be any commercial constructi­ons in a one-kilometre periphery of a protected forest. In Tungareshw­ar, illegal constructi­ons are encroachin­g upon and destroying the forest cover itself, added Dabre.

Government action

Following several complaints from activists and environmen­talists, ST Chaure, an officer with the state wildlife department in Vasai, last month issued a notice to some landowners to stop an ongoing illegal constructi­on in Vasai East, where the debris was being dumped in a watering hole in the sanctuary. Activists, however, claimed that the notice named five tribals whose whereabout­s aren’t known and who aren’t connected with the constructi­on. Chaure maintained that his office will take action if the constructi­on work is not stopped.

According to activists, after a landslide in Vasai in the Tungareshw­ar sanctuary area killed two people, an investigat­ion had revealed that the constructi­on had encroached on a mountain. The activists had written to the authoritie­s about the illegal constructi­ons and requested them to conduct a survey and panchnama, but said that nothing has been done yet.

“The mafias have been carrying out illegal constructi­ons in the forest land by forcefully evicting tribals from their traditiona­l landholdin­gs by hookor-crook, and by taking advantage of the disputes over the land,” said Swapnil D’Cuna, an activist from the area.

Chaure did not comment on D’Cuna’s claims.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Environmen­tal activists said there are at least 20,000 illegal structures in the area.
HT PHOTO Environmen­tal activists said there are at least 20,000 illegal structures in the area.
 ?? ?? Villages in the area are brimming with illegal constructi­ons.
Villages in the area are brimming with illegal constructi­ons.

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