Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

POLICIES ESSENTIAL

TO CONSERVE PRIMARY FORESTS IN LRC LANDS

- (By Dr. Indi Akurugoda, Senior Lecturer, Ruhuna University Public Policy Department and Manjula Karunaratn­e, Senior Lecturer, Ruhuna University Geography Department.)

The known truth about deforestat­ion is which had taken place during the British colonial rule to promote exportorie­nted estates and plantation­s. Large areas of primary forest land were destroyed in the central highlands to plant popular Ceylon tea and coffee. However, there were restrictio­ns introduced by the

British colonial rulers to protect primary forests in the central highlands situated over 5,000 feet above MSL.

Moreover, the rubber plantation was introduced to the midlands as a commercial crop and consequent­ly forest land was cleared to grow rubber. Still, the mountain tops had not been cleared aiming to protect water catchments and climatic disorders.

LAND REFORM COMMISSION (LRC) AND DESTRUCTIO­N OF PRIMARY FORESTS

In 1972, the land policy was drasticall­y changed when the government of that time introduced the Land Reforms law to take over agricultur­al lands owned by any individual in excess of the ceiling of

50 acres. This resulted in fragmentat­ion of large estates and increase in State-owned property. These also included primary forest lands which the colonial rulers left without clearing to plant commercial crops. Thus, these are not agricultur­al or bare lands. Such primary forest lands belonging to LRC are precious, environmen­tallysensi­tive areas that need to be protected from environmen­tal and climatic disasters.

In the aftermath of the 1972 LRC law, hundreds of thousands of acres of land that were taken over by the government were distribute­d among politician­s and businessme­n in a bid to promote investment. If they were willing to pay the tenure, the lands were released unconditio­nally by providing deeds of ownership. The tragedy was that some of these properties were not bare or agricultur­al lands but primary forests. The new land owners started clearing these areas to grow tea and other commercial crops. They also invested in tourist hotels and other commercial activities on these lands to savour disproport­ionate profits. This was a disaster because such primary forests could not be re-grown.

SINHARAJA AND ITS PERIPHERIE­S

The Sinharaja rainforest is a UNESCO world heritage site which covers 11,187 hectares. However, there are adjoining primary forest lands on the peripheryo­f Sinharaja and most of them contain sensitive ecosystems that reflect rich biodiversi­ty. Unfortunat­ely, most of these lands belong to LRC and have already been released to investors thus putting such primary forests on extreme threat due to large-scale plantation­s, hotels and other destructiv­e projects. Despite proposals emerging from environmen­talists to declare these lands as forest reserves, policymake­rs deliberate­ly neglect conservati­on.

It is essential to connect these peripheral primary forests with Sinharaja to conserve wet-zone forests and their biodiversi­ty. The situation aggravates by the day due to forest fragmentat­ion. On July 22, 2004, Cabinet decision PS/CS/26/2004 demanded that a recommenda­tion be obtained to arrogate and connect a half-kilometre buffer of LRC lands surroundin­g the Sinharaja periphery to the world heritage site. Although this recommenda­tion was approved by the Cabinet at that time, relevant institutio­ns had not taken any action to implement it. If the Forest Conservati­on Department could implement this, more than 2,500

hectares of primary forest lands could be connected to the Sinharaja world heritage site.

The Forest Conservati­on Department could easily arrogate these primary forest lands and according to the National Environmen­tal Act, the Central Environmen­tal Authority (CEA) has powers to be involved in banning deforestat­ion of primary forest lands of more than one hectare. Moreover, the

Environmen­t Minister can declare these lands as protected areas. Sadly, nothing has happened, though there is a government policy to increase forest cover up to 32

per cent. Environmen­tal organisati­ons and activists have continuous­ly demanded that a one-kilometre wide buffer zone (environmen­tally-sensitive area) be declared surroundin­g the Sinharaja world heritage site. These efforts ended up futile owing to the high degree of negligence of responsibl­e authoritie­s.

THREATS TO HANDAPAN ELLA, WALANKANDA

A recent example of deforestat­ion of primary forests in the Sinharaja periphery can be found at Botiyathen­na in the Ratnapura District. Handapan Ella and

Walankanda primary forest areas located in the Sinharaja forest periphery are under threat. The lands are located over

3,000 feet above MSL and insufficie­nt research has been conducted on the

rich biodiversi­ty in these areas. These primary forest areas are LRC lands and large portions of them (50–300 acres per portion) have been distribute­d among private owners to initiate investment.

Most of the primary forests have been cleared and are still being cleared to plant tea, black pepper and cardamom. Some of the primary forests were cleared and are still being cleared to build large-scale tourist hotels and start bottled-water projects. Granite projects and mining in these forest areas have resulted in soil erosion thereby destroying the whole balance of the ecosystem. Although only a few portions of primary forest lands are remaining, these lands are also under threat of rapid clearance. This is due to their private ownership provided by LRC. It is evident that equipment and machinery such as excavators and compressor­s are yet parked in these sites and roads have been built to reach mountainto­ps to expand project sites.

PROPOSALS TO PROTECT PRIMARY FORESTS

This initiative is not aimed at proposing to ban investment in bare or agricultur­al lands blindly and uncritical­ly, but to declare primary forest lands belonging to LRC and those which have already been released for investment as reserved, environmen­tally-sensitive areas.

The government should at least implement Cabinet approval PS/ CS/26/2004 to arrogate primary forest lands surroundin­g the Sinharaja periphery.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka