|
Appeal by NESPON/National Forum of
Forest Peoples and Forest Workers (NFFPFW)
15 November 2008
Ever since the much-awaited implementation of the historic Forest
Rights Act 2006 (FRA) had started in North Bengal, the State Government
did everything possible to slaughter it. Grossly illegal orders
were issued from the Writers Buildings, and the Government Officers
in charge of the process have succeeded to make a mockery of the
provisions of the Law. What could have been a just and democratic
transition to people's management of forests and their sustained
conservation, had degenerated into a politically motivated and fruitless
exercise in bureaucratic apathy and arrogance.
Though the NFFPFW North Bengal Regional committee has consistently
pointed out the manifest irregularities and illegalities that accompanied
the governmental implementation of the Act, particularly in Jalpiguri
district, the administration did not pay any heed. Violations of the
FRA continue. In their latest round of attacks against the forest
people of the Dooars area, the Government officers have been making
rounds of the forest villages, and threatening villagers with 'dire
consequences' if they fail to agree with the Jalpiguri district administration's
version of the Act.
What is this version?
While the Act says that a Forest Rights Committee (FRC) will be
constituted from the members of the Gramsabha, and may have a maximum
of 15 members, the Forest Rights Committees in Jalpiguri District
have 19 members, 4 of them Government officers including a forest
officer. This, according to the SDOs of Alipurduar, Jalpiguri and
Malbazaar, has been done to ensure that the act is implemented properly.
A printed format with provision for 19 names is being circulated
in the villages to list FRC members, and the villagers are being
told that they should put only 15 names. The rest will be Government
officers.
The District has decided (the same happened in SW Bengal district
too) that the claims will be submitted to the Range Officer. The
Tribal Welfare Officer in Dhupguri Block (under Jalpiguri Sadar
Sub Division) refused to accept claims from several hundred tribal
villagers from the forest villages under the Moraghat Range of Jalpiguri
Forest Division, because they were not certified by the range officer.
When questioned about this, he said that this was according to the
decision of the 'nodal committee'. Apparently, the District has
such competent 'nodal committees' at Block level.
The Range Officers have been receiving claims regularly in various
parts of the district. Apparently, they are the 'nodal officers'
empowered by the 'nodal committees' to do so.
The exercise of the claim form submission has not been preceded
by training/awareness programmes at the village level. The villagers
submitting the claims have seldom any notion about the specific
nature of the claims that they can make under the Act. The only
thing that was told by the political parties and the officers was
'patta'. No mention has been made of community claims including
claims over CFRs.
One after another arbitrary cut-off date for submission of claims
is being announced. In the remote Hallapara village inside the famous
Jaldapara Wild Life Sanctuary, the villagers submitted blank claims
when the local tribal officer asked for those before the last cut-off
date. He later returned those under pressure from the villagers.
In the latest incident of 'forcible claim submission', the SDO of
Alipurduar visited the village and told them that they had to give
the forms within 15th, i.e. today. Otherwise, 'go to them who are
guiding you and submit the claims to them', she shouted.
The same SDO earlier refused to recognize hamlet-level FRCs formed
in most of the forest villages in the Sub-Division. 'We know only
the Gram Sansads, and FRCs formed at that level,' she said when
a deputation from NFFPFW met her in September. When the deputation
pointed out that such gram sansads can never function as Gram Sabhas
under the FRA, and FRCs can not be expected to meet or function
at Sansad level, which comprises several spatially and culturally
separated villages, she refused to listen.
The State-level Monitoring committee has already decided that titles
will be given in January. The process obviously is being expedited
keeping in mind the Parliamentary elections.
Because the claim submission process is being controlled by Government
Officers mostly from the forest department (aided by political leaders),
FRCs have not been required to convene hearings, and neither did
these committees meet to process claims. Gram Sabha Meetings have
not been held (or even convened) to verify the claims. Even if one
goes by the Governmental logic of Gram Sansad, then meetings needed
to be held at the Sansad level to discuss the issue, and pass relevant
resolutions before submitting the claims. Because such meetings
were not held, the SDLC can not legally accept any claim whatsoever.
It is clear that either the Gram Sabha resolutions will later be
cooked up, or the necessity of those will be simply overlooked.
The forest people of North Bengal kept on defying the intimidations
and threats that accompanied the FRA implementation, and started
a parallel process of people's implementation, the thrust of which
was creating a string of Community Managed Forests, using various
provisions of the Act. In the biodiverse semi-evergreen forests
of the Chilapata area the indigenous Ravas and other adivasis have
banned extraction of forest products and all forestry works inside
their forests, without explicit permission of the Gram Sabha. The
Gram Sabhas of seven forest villages of the area took this decision
jointly and informed the local SDO and the DFO, as well as the Panchayat,
about this on 24th October, 2008. On 25th October, the Range Officer
at Kodal Basti Range under the Coochbehar Forest Division threatened
the local activists with 'serious consequences' like police cases.
On 11th November, a member of NESPON and two Rava NFFPFW activists
were assaulted in front of the Chilapata Range Office by the members
of 'Shanti Committee', an infamous and powerful mafia group of the
area. Enquiries by NFFPFW revealed that as soon as the Ban notice
by the Gram Sabhas was officially circulated, the Forest Department
personnel of the area called a Meeting of the local Forest Protection
Committees and Eco Development Committees. It was reported that
the DFO of the Coochbehar Forest Division himself conducted this
'JFM' Meeting, which in reality was attended by the Shanti Committee
goons. The decision of the Meeting was to teach the 'Siliguri persons'
(they meant NESPON) and the Ravas a lesson, the hard way. The 11th
attack was the first of such lessons. On behalf of NFFPFW North Bengal Regional Committee and NESPON, we
reaffirm our pledge to reclaim the forest commons, and to continue
with our programme to establish Community Forest Governance in North
Bengal. We believe that the unity of all working people of North
Bengal will defeat the anti-people Government machinery and the
mafia.
Please support us in this struggle.
Shibo Sunuwar
Soumitra Ghosh
Soumitra Ghosh
NESPON/National Forum of Forest Peoples and Forest Workers (NFFPFW)
5, Krishanu Dey Sarani
Babupara, Siliguri-734004
Siliguri, West Bengal, India
91-353-2661915/9194347-61915
|