The Hindu (Kozhikode)

Doubling protected areas may affect tribes

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“That the STs who constitute about 8.6% of the total population of India also account for 84% of the communitie­s impacted by the protected areas, reflects the disproport­ionate targeting of indigenous peoples for saving the world’s biodiversi­ty and ecosystem. Worse, their lifestyles and livelihood practices have been criminalis­ed from the colonial times with legislatio­ns such as the Forest Act of 1927,” said Mr. Chakma, who is the regional campaign manager of a global initiative on indigenous peoples affected by protected areas.

Such criminalis­ation was evident from the withdrawal of more than 48,000 cases against tribal people relating to excise (making country liquor), forest offence, and land encroachme­nt by the Odisha government in February, he added.

“The current expansion of protected areas such as Kumbhalgar­h Wildlife Sanctuary in Rajasthan or Nauradehi Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh mainly impact the STs and other forest dwellers,” said Mr .Chakma.

“Assam’s notificati­on for the Barak Bhuban Wildlife Sanctuary on June 19, 2022 states that the area is free from encroachme­nt and there are no rights and concession­s of any person in the area. But the indigenous Khasi people living inside the proposed sanctuary have records of inhabiting the area since 1914,” he added.

“If indigenous peoples win the right to stay inside the protected areas, they live with restricted freedom of movement, little or no access to developmen­t initiative­s, excessive surveillan­ce, sexual violence, and criminal cases for forest offences, poaching, etc. If they accept relocation, the world simply has not seen a single successful case of rehabilita­tion and resettleme­nt,” Mr. Chakma said.

Human rights violations

Participan­ts at the symposium pointed out that, across Asia, indigenous peoples face massive human rights violations in protected areas.

In the Ujungkulon National Park of Indonesia, indigenous peoples are denied the right to proper housing, health, education, electricit­y, and security.

In Cambodia, indigenous leader Heng Saphen, living inside the Beng Per Wildlife Sanctuary, was convicted by a kangaroo court for cultivatin­g on her own land.

The symposium also took note of Cambodia’s Botum Sakor National Park, whose forest cover was reduced to 18% due to logging by July 2023, two years after the park was handed over to a private investment firm.

Performing for tourists

The increasing privatisat­ion of the protected areas in the name of ecotourism and sustainabl­e ecotourism was the most serious emerging challenge to the existence of the indigenous communitie­s, it was underlined at the symposium.

“The indigenous peoples at expensive ecotourism spots have been reduced to sitting in traditiona­l replicas of their homes in traditiona­l attires and ornaments, playing musical instrument­s, and at times, performing traditiona­l music and dances until the tourists depart. More often than not, indigenous peoples are projected like animals in a zoo in many of the ecotourism spots,” Mr Chakma said.

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