11 May 2007
Thousands of people have come on to the streets between May 7th and
11th in response to the call to action of the Campaign for Survival
and Dignity, a federation of tribal and forest dwellers' organisations
from across the country. The protesters demanded an immediate halt
to the evictions taking place across India, where adivasis and forest
dwellers are being targeted in a deliberate effort to prevent them
claiming their rights under the historic Forest Rights Act passed
in December last year. The protesters also demanded amendments to
the Act to correct the sabotage that took place at the time of its
passage, as well as demanding Constitutional protection for all adivasi
areas.
Yesterday, Rajasthan and Orissa witnessed large protests of 5,000
6,000 people each in Udaipur and Bhubaneshwar respectively. The
protesters marched against evictions, demanding the implementation
of the Act and amendments in it, while also protesting the seizure
of adivasi lands for industrial, plantation and SEZ projects in those
States. In Tamil Nadu, four areas Gudalur, Kalakkad (Tirunelveli
District) and Kanyakumari witnessed large protests, with Gudalur
seeing 2,000 people on the 7th and another 1,000 protesters on the
11th (today). In Andhra Pradesh, dharnas and padayatras took place
across 11 Mandals from the 7th till the 10th, demanding scheduling
of adivasi areas as well as protection of forest rights (organised
with the 5th Schedule Sadhana Committee and Andhra Pradesh Vyavasaya
Vridhidharula Committee). Meanwhile, Gujarat and Chattisgarh saw large
dharnas and public conventions, each drawing more than 500 people,
in Ahmedabad (on the 10th) and in Raipur (today). In Jharkhand, a
two day dharna in Ranchi drew more than 300 people on both the 9th
and 10th.
The protests have not yet come to an end. On the 14th, thousands
will be marching in taluka headquarters across Thane, Raigad and Chandrapur
districts of Maharashtra. In Madhya Pradesh, a three day public convention
is expected to take place starting tomorrow with the same demands.
Finally, on the 12th., more than 2,000 people are expected to march
in Siliguri, West Bengal, demanding land and forest rights.
The outflow of protest across India reflects popular anger at the
sabotage of the Forest Rights Act, both when it was passed in Parliament
and on the ground by the systematic, brutal pattern of evictions that
have occurred since then. The Forest Rights Act is a historic legislation,
the first legislative measure in India's history aimed at addressing
the seizure of the homes, lands and livelihoods of tribals and forest
dwellers through the declaration of 'government forests.' These 'forests'
are not uninhabited wildernesses, as they are often portrayed, but
are the homelands of this nation's forest communities. Now labelled
as 'encroachers' for no crime except their close relationship with
the forest and its resources, these communities have fought for more
than a century to reclaim their rights to their homes. This legislation,
which promised to be a step towards that goal, was sabotaged at the
last minute of its passage in Parliament, making it far more difficult
to implement. In the months since then, the forest authorities across
India have intensified their eviction drives, driving people off their
lands and homes to prevent them claiming their rights. Meanwhile,
these evictions are accompanied and amplified by the continuing process
of displacement and forcible grabbing of land and resources for mining
corporations, SEZs and private companies, all in the name of 'development'
and all in total violation of the Constitution's protections for
tribal communities, as well as any notion of social, environmental
or economic justice.
These protests are a cry of outrage against these developments, and
a warning to the Central government merely passing a legislation
in name, while trampling on the rights of people in practice, is no
solution to the conflagration engulfing our forest areas. The struggle
for justice will continue.
Remove the requirement that forest dwelling Scheduled Tribes and
other traditional forest dwellers should primarily reside in the forest;
if this is understood to mean that their residences should be on forest
land, this will exclude the vast majority of people. All those who
self-cultivate forest land or depend on collection of minor forest
produce or other forest resources for their survival and livelihood
should be eligible. Implement the assurance of the Minister for Tribal
Affairs that "all those settled in forests by government policy",
like forest villages, should be covered under the Act. Otherwise,
non-ST's among these groups, who are among the most vulnerable forest
dwellers, will be excluded unless they have resided in the forest
for 75 years. Reinstate the recommendation of the Joint Parliamentary
Committee that the gram sabha for the Act should be the assemblies
of the actual hamlets or settlements, not the gram sabha of the revenue
village or Gram Panchayat. The revenue gram sabhas will be too large
and will result in manipulation. Replace section 13 of the Act which
says the legislation will be "in addition to and not in derogation
of" other Acts - with a clear statement that this Act will override
any legislation that contravenes it. The vague clause gives far too
much space for judicial intervention and manipulation by the authorities.
Reinstate the process of recognition of rights recommended by the
Joint Parliamentary Committee, which stated that the primary authority
should be that of the gram sabha and that higher committees should
not have the power to arbitrarily overturn the decisions of the gram
sabha. This is necessary if the legislation is to be transparent and
democratic in implementation; otherwise there will be widespread abuse
of power and corruption.