The Hindu (Erode)

Will global forest expansion hit tribals?

What are the concerns about the Global Biodiversi­ty Framework which aims to increase areas under forest cover, inland water, coastal and marine areas to at least 30% of the world’s terrestria­l area? What is the situation in India?

- Rahul Karmakar

The story so far:

symposium on the rights of indigenous people organised by the University of Arizona on March 2122 put the spotlight on the KunmingMon­treal Global Biodiversi­ty Framework (GBF) and how, in conjunctio­n with the Forest (Conservati­on) Amendment Act of 2023, it will hit India’s tribes the hardest. Many at the symposium foresaw doom for the country’s indigenous communitie­s already affected by the establishm­ent of national parks.

AWhat is the KunmingMon­treal GBF?

This framework was adopted during the

15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity in December 2022 following a fouryear consultati­on and negotiatio­n process. It claims to support the achievemen­t of sustainabl­e developmen­t goals and build on previous strategic plans, paving “an ambitious pathway to reach the global vision of a world living in harmony with nature by 2050.” Accordingl­y, four goals were set for 2050 and 23 targets for 2030 toward planning, monitoring, reporting and reviewing implementa­tion, organising finance, and drawing up strategies for capacity developmen­t, technical and scientific cooperatio­n, and an agreement on digital sequence informatio­n on genetic resources. In adopting the GBF, all parties have committees to set national targets to implement it.

Participat­ing at the event, New Delhibased rights activist Suhas Chakma drew the attention of environmen­talists and leaders of indigenous communitie­s to Target 3 of the KunmingMon­treal GBF, which aims to “increase terrestria­l, inland water, and of coastal and marine areas, especially areas of particular importance for biodiversi­ty and ecosystem functions and services” to at least 30% of the world’s terrestria­l area. At present, protected areas (PAs) cover about 16%.

What are its implicatio­ns?

Participan­ts at the ‘Symposium on Conservati­on, Racism, and Indigenous Peoples Human Rights’ felt that the seemingly benign goals of the GBF tilt the scale in favour of corporate houses eyeing forest resources at the expense of the indigenous communitie­s living with nature. Indigenous peoples have been denied the right to housing, health, education, electricit­y, and security in Indonesia’s Ujungkulon National Park while Heng Saphen, an indigenous leader living inside the Beng Per Wildlife Sanctuary of Cambodia was convicted by a kangaroo court for cultivatin­g on her own land. About 18% of Cambodia’s Botum Sakor National Park stands protected after much of its land was sold off to private firms, the participan­ts said. Involving the private sector in forest conservati­on is a bad idea and India has taken a step in that direction with the Forest (Conservati­on) Amendment Act to 2023 to include zoos, safaris, ecotourism facilities, etc., as forest activities, Mr. Chakma pointed out. The UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Peoples, José Francisco Calí Tzay, said the PAs were initially created “as recreation­al opportunit­ies, hunting grounds for western colonial elites”. The concept, the participan­ts pointed out, has not changed much with ecotourism or sustainabl­e ecotourism projects reducing the indigenous peoples to animals in a zoo, made to sit in “model replicas” of traditiona­l houses wearing traditiona­l dresses and ornaments, and playing traditiona­l musical instrument­s.

What would GBF mean for India?

About 84% of India’s national parks (89 out of a total of 106) were establishe­d in areas inhabited by the indigenous peoples and meeting the GBF targets will threaten their existence, the activists said. For instance, the initiative to upgrade the Kumbhalgar­h Wildlife Sanctuary in Rajasthan to a tiger reserve will affect 162 tribal villages located inside and outside the sanctuary while the expansion of the Nauradehi Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh is set to affect 62 villages of mostly tribal people. In Assam, the June 19, 2022, notificati­on for the Barak Bhuban Wildlife Sanctuary will affect the indigenous groups. The gazette notificati­on states that the sanctuary “is free from encroachme­nt as per record, there are no rights and concession­s of any person in the area” but the Khasis possess documents showing they have been living in the area since 1914.

Activists say meeting the GBF targets will threaten the existence of indigenous population­s

What can be done to protect the tribal lands?

Mr. Chakma said a multilater­al agreement like the KunmingMon­treal GBF cannot be amended but the government of India needs to change its policy.

First, it has to recognise the right to free, prior, and informed consent as guaranteed under the Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act and make further amendments to the laws to make the tribals custodians of the PAs as nature has largely been protected because of their special relations with the forests and their denizens. Secondly, the government of India should not only target the tribal areas simply because they do not matter electorall­y.

“That Uttar Pradesh and Bihar only have one national park each – Dudhwa inhabited by the indigenous Tharu people and Valmiki inhabited by the Tharus, Oraons, Mundas, etc. — speaks for itself. If tiger reserves can be created in areas where there are no tigers such as Sahyadri (Maharashtr­a), Satkosia (Odisha), Kamlang (Arunachal Pradesh), Kawal (Telangana), and Dampa (Mizoram), there is no reason why PAs cannot be created in nontribal areas,” he said. Finally, India ought to address human rights violations in the PAs seriously.

Human rights issues of these people such as access to education, healthcare, and housing cannot be left to the Wildlife or Forest Department. Thousands of indigenous people living within the PAs must be respected and recognised for preserving the biodiversi­ty and the ecosystem and not punished, he said.

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