Bangkok Post

Cabinet gives forest residents big boost

- CHATRUDEE THEPARAT

The cabinet yesterday approved the longawaite­d draft of the community forest bill that would allow forest dwellers to live in forests and even make use of resources by collecting forest products and running ecofriendl­y tourism.

“This bill will make forests akin to a supermarke­t where villagers can walk in and collect wild products [such as wild mushrooms and ant eggs] for cooking or even selling,” Natural Resources and Environmen­t Minister, Gen Surasak Karnjanara­t said after a cabinet meeting yesterday.

“When this proposed law comes into effect it will help villagers earn income and eventually extricate them from poverty. The government believed communitie­s can earn 4.26 billion baht from being allowed to collect and sell wild products,” he said.

The bill requires relevant authoritie­s to form three committees to co-manage forest resources. First would be national committee, the second would be a provincial panel and the third a community level one on which villagers can sit.

Communitie­s would be required to look after forests and make part of them special conservati­on zones, Gen Surasak said.

Gen Surasak said his ministry is going to write another four ministeria­l ordinances to help communitie­s and the authoritie­s manage forests together.

Prime Minister’s Office Minister, Kobsak Pootrakool, said yesterday that the government aims to use the forest community law to create strong grassroots communitie­s.

This is just the start, said Mr Kobsak adding that the government is going to table other two bills related to grassroots communitie­s for cabinet approval by next month. One would allow establishe­d communitie­s to obtain non-transferab­le title deeds for public land. The other would be designed to boost the economy of local communitie­s.

The cabinet’s approval of the forest community bill yesterday was the culminatio­n of efforts begun in 1999 but had failed to materialis­e.

If the bill becomes law it will govern the management of 19.1 million rai of forests across the country — including land in protected areas such as national parks where people were living before before the areas were declared protected. It is hoped it will improve the livelihood­s of 3 million families in 21,850 villages. The law however would not grant land ownership to forest dwellers.

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