Press Release by National Forum of Forest People and Forest Workers
(NFFPFW) on Forest Rights Act (FRA) notification
January 2008
After an inexplicable delay of 12 months, the Government of India, at
long last, notifies the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest
Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006. This notification
means that the Act will be in force from 1st January, 2008. In these
12 months adivasis in various forest areas of the country have been
subject to systematic assaults by the forest department and a host of
other forces, who did not like the idea of India's forest resources
being controlled by the forest dwellers. Thousands of people living
in forest areas for generations in Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, West
Bengal, Chattisgarh, Gujrat, Kerala, Tamilnadu and elsewhere battled
eviction attempts, and in many cases, were brutally evicted, their villages
burnt or bulldozed, people tortured, harassed and arrested in false
cases--simply because they had demanded forest rights.
Paying no heed to laws passed by a sovereign country's Parliament,
a handful of forest bureaucrats, continued to tyrannize the rightful
owners of Indian forests. While on the ground forest officials denied
the very existence of the Forest Rights Act, the Ministry of Environment
and Forests, Government of India, issued a guideline to State Forest
Departments, to identify 'inviolate' Critical Wildlife Habitats as
defined in the Act! The Act was not notified, and neither had the
rights settlement process prescribed in the Act started anywhere.
This did not stop the MoEF from issuing the completely illegal guidelines.
Not to be left behind, the State Forest Departments notified 'inviolate'
tiger habitats in several states, claiming that the rights provided
in the Forest Rights Act will not apply to such notified areas.
The forest communities of this independent country expects that,
with notification of the Forest Rights Act, this charade will now
stop, and calls upon people everywhere to join them in the bitterly-fought
and still continuing struggle for forest rights. The implementation
of the Forest Rights Act must start in right earnest, giving full
primacy to the Gramsabhas. While we at the National Forum of Forest
People and Forest Workers (NFFPFW) welcome the notification of the
Act, we also want to point out that the Rules for the Act are still
extremely vague and sketchy, and these do not clear the ambiguities
latent in the original Act. We also demand that suitable Amendments
are brought to the Forest Rights Act, to include the recommendations
of the Joint Parliamentary Committee, and to ensure that all genuine
forest dwellers of the country come under it, and rights enshrined
in the Act do not get in any way compromised by interference from
Government Officials.
NFFPFW reiterates that the forest communities of India will continue
their struggle for the amendment and implementation of the Forest
Rights Act as part of the broader struggle to conserve forests--and
to defend their identity and livelihood--against all attempts to put
the country's natural resources on sale.
Pushpa Toppo, Munnilal, Shibo Sunuwar,
Kanta Marathe, Sanjay Basu Mullick, Asok Chowdhury
On behalf of
National Forum of Forest People and Forest Workers ( NFFPFW)
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