We the tribal people and forest dwelling communities from across the
country, social activists, support organizations and concerned citizens,
gathered here in Delhi on December 7th & 8th 2004 for a National Convention
in Defence of the Rights of Forest Dwellers,
§ Believing that the
environment crisis of the country calls on the nation’s citizens to respond to
the crisis
§ Recognizing that the
tribal communities have nurtured the forest and as of now 59% of the best
forests are in the tribal districts.
§ Asserting that the
nature-spirit-human complex of the being and becoming of forest dwellers is
critical to survival of nature and humans as an organic whole.
§ Affirming that the
relationship of forest dwelling communities and the forest is not
instrumentalist or commercial but an organic relationship of food & health
security and cultural & ethnic integrity.
§ Asserting that the
forest-forest dweller relationship of subsistence use and conservation has
ensured both the preservation of nature and sustenance of humans.
§ Asserting that the
National Forest Policy 1988 has affirmed the symbiotic relationship between
forest dwellers and sought their close involvement in the conservation of
nature.
§ Asserting that in the
consolidation of the forests, in both colonial and post independent India, the
forest administration failed to record the communal and individual rights of
the tribal and forest people, at different levels of agricultural production,
resulting in a near extinction of their rights and effectively reducing them to
the status of ‘illegal encroachers’.
§ Asserting that the
Commissioner of SCs & STs drew attention to intense insecurity and distress
among tribal communities and called upon the nation to address the crisis with
alacrity and sensitivity.
§ Asserting that the
Government of India (Ministry of Environment & Forests) for the first time
in the history of independent India, admitted to the ‘historical injustice’
done to the tribal and forest people in the consolidation of the forests in the
country compounded by the failure of the state administrations to record rights
in compliance with the guidelines of Government of India of September 1990.
§ Protesting against a
development model that has systematically reduced millions of tribals to the
status of ecological refugees and forced them to fall back on the forest as
their last refuge.
§ Protesting that the
continued eviction of unrecorded adivasi title holders whether directly or
through the instrumentality of JFM/CFM/VSS is patently illegal and contrary to
all principles of justice & equity thereby unlawfully penalizing the
adivasis and forest dwellers for the failure of the state authorities to
perform their duties enjoined by law.
§ Asserting the
Fundamental Rights, Directive Principles and other basic Features of the Indian
Constitution, in particular the Vth and VIthe Schedules
§ Noting Government of
India’s international legal obligations under the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
Convention 107 of the International Labour Organization, Convention on
Biological Diversity among other International Conventions
Believe and assert that
1. Parliament pass a law
and place it under Schedule IX of the Constitution, to give a firm legal frame
to the rights and entitlements covered in MoEF Guidelines of 18th
September 1990, namely the regularisation of encroachments, the resolution of
disputed claims resulting from defective Forest Settlements, regularisation of
leases and pattas conferred by state governments & conversion of forest
villages and other old habitations into revenue villages. The law include in
its ambit the rights and entitlements of persons and communities in all forest
areas including protected areas, sanctuaries, parks and reserves under the IFA
and the WLPA.
2. No subsistence cultivators
and occupants of un-surveyed, disputed forest lands or ‘deemed’ forests, should
be treated as ‘encroachers’ and evicted, till their rights, including CPR
rights, have been inquired into through an open and transparent process and
final notifications under sections 20 or 29 of the IFA have been issued.
3. No forest dwellers who
have filed their claims for consideration by the authorities under the
Guidelines of MoEF dated 18th September 1990 or the MoEF’s order dated 5th
February 2004 should be evicted unless their claims have been inquired into and
all relevant evidence has been examined through an open, unbiased and
transparent process in the gram sabha within a fixed but realistic timeframe.
4. The process of Inquiry
into all claims, laying down a procedure, defining relevant evidence to be
adduced, providing claimants an opportunity and fixing criteria for acceptance
must be formulated by the Government. The Order of the Government of
Maharashtra No. Sankirn 2002/372/J-1dated 10th October 2002 be used as a model.
5. Compensatory
afforestation and recovery of Net Present Value should not be required for
implementing the guidelines of 1990 as these lands did not have ‘forests’ on
them at the time of the FCA enactment and were recorded as forest land only on
paper. And isolated patches of ‘compensatory afforestation’ do not contribute
in an ecologically meaningful way towards replacing the destruction of natural
forests comprising complex ecosystems and the habitats of diverse flora and
fauna.
6. Post 1980 tribal and
other poor forest land occupiers be rehabilitated in situ by granting them
heritable but inalienable conditional pattas through a Community Managed Forest
Conservation Program by gram sabhas under PESA Act 1996 and permitting them to practice
agro-silvi operations pursuant to their protecting mutually demarcated forest
areas.
7. An effective mechanism
for preventing illegal evictions be put in place immediately.
8. Adivasis and other
forest dwellers, who have been victims of forced evictions, must be given back
their land and compensated adequately for the destruction of their property.
9. Punitive action must be
taken against all those officials who have forcibly evicted forest dwellers
from land, the ownership of which is disputed as per the MoEF’s own admission
or for which they had legal titles.
10. All criminal cases filed
against the victims of such evictions arising out of evictions and the
resultant conflicts are immediately withdrawn.
11. The Government and Forest
Administrations desiring to rid the forests of encroachments prove their
bonafides by taking stringent action against powerful real estate and other
commercial/plantation/mining lobbies grabbing forest land.
12. The Ministry of Tribal
Affiars be given the responsibility to involve the Gram Sabha and peoples’
organisations in strengthening and building upon the indigenous knowledge of
forest dwelling communities in appropriate agro-silvi practices that must
integrate adequate tree cover as well as sustainable livelihoods to the poor.
13. The role of women, both in
conservation and livelihood protection is recognized and protected.
14. The subversion of the Gram
Sabha, as the peoples’ democratic institution be stopped forthwith. The
formation of Forest Protection/ JFM Committees by whatever designation be
done only in and with the consent of the Gram Sabha.
15. A new Conservation Law and
Forest Law be drafted, with provisions for protecting the indigenous knowledge
and rights of indigenous/forest dwelling communities in accordance with the
Convention of Biodiversity Conservation, other International Standards and the
Constitution of India in consultation with Peoples’ Representatives, Peoples
Movements & CBOs.
16. No lands ‘recorded’ as
forests in government records should be brought under the purview of the FCA
without verification of their actual use and status on the ground.
17. Purview of the FCA be
restricted to areas with real forest cover which have been notified as forest
under the Indian Forest Act after completing the due legal process of
settlement and clear demarcation of boundaries.
18. All areas not under the
direct jurisdiction of the FD but brought under its management control by
virtue of the dictionary definition of forests specified by the Supreme Court
in the Godavarman case should be excluded from the purview of the FCA.
19. Community grazing and
forest lands, even if recorded as ‘forests,’ be kept under community management
and control in accordance with existing rights instead of being transferred to
FDs for ‘scientific forestry’, thereby undermining local livelihoods and food
security.
20. Section 28 of the IFA
should be operationalised to convert reserved and protected forests into “village
forests” to be managed by gram sabhas of forest dwelling communities on
principles of conservation with sustainable use to enhance sustainable
livelihoods, on lines of the original model of Van Panchayats in Uttaranchal.
The PESA provision for management of community resources by gram sabhas should
be operationalised in Schedule V areas,
21. Under no circumstances
should additional tribal and other community lands, including jhum lands, be
declared state forests on grounds of meeting the 33% forest cover objective or
for ‘compensatory afforestation’, as appropriation of such lands have been
responsible for large scale destruction of livelihoods, poverty and alienation
of forest dwellers from forests.
22. In states with minimal
forest cover, incentives for landowners and communities to increase forest
cover on their lands should be developed.
23. Additional non-forest land
should not be notified as reserved or protected forests in lieu of the diverted
land as this leads to fresh displacement from livelihood uses. Compensatory
afforestation should be done only on the already notified large but degraded
forest lands.
24. In the case of community
owned jhum lands in the North East, instead of the MoEF granting clearance for
their diversion to other uses due to their also being categorised as ‘unclassed
forests’, the prior informed consent of the jhumming communities should be
obtained. In the same vein the Net Present Value of such lands be paid to the
communities not to CAMPA.
25. In Vth Schedule areas, as
required by the Samatha judgement, no land should be allocated for mining,
industry or private use without the prior, informed consent of the local
communities through their Gram Sabha.
26. The government must
implement both private and public land reform. While distribution of surplus
private land to the landless should be speeded up, a comprehensive public lands
reform must also be initiated which recognises the role of the uncultivated
common lands in diverse livelihood systems instead of treating them as ‘wastelands’
to be diverted to other uses or state ‘forests’ to be managed exclusively by
Forest Departments.
27. The President of India and
State Governors should be asked to exercise their
powers for withholding the application of forestry laws in scheduled areas with
due modification to suit the specific conditions of the areas and the
communities living therein.
28. The President of India and
State Governors should ensure that laws, like PESA,
which recognize alternative self governance systems and which recognize the
competency of the gram sabha to safeguard common property resources of the
community should be respected and implemented by the State governments and the
administration .
29. All attempts to undo the
law related to the restoration of alienated tribal lands and prevention of
tribal land alienation, as in Kerala, should be withdrawn and such laws should
be immediately enacted for areas where they have not been enacted as in Tamil Nadu.
30. The concept of “wilderness”
to promote flora and fauna, must be replaced with a concept of “stewardship”,
that recognises that both the forest and forest dwellers depend upon each other
for their own survival.
31. A specific approach for recognizing and recording the communal property rights
of pre-agricultural ‘Primitive
Tribal Groups’ and shifting cultivators, who, under no circumstances should be
treated as ‘encroachers’ on their ancestral lands, should be developed.
32. Instead
of classifying their customary lands as ‘forests’, the FAO’s practice of classifying shifting cultivation lands
as ‘forest fallows’ should be adopted. A different governance system for these
lands needs to be evolved which enables combining their livelihood uses with maintaining ecosystem integrity (as attempted by
the Government of Nagaland).
33. In line with GOIs
commitments under the convention on Biodiversity, the livelihood, cultural and
other rights of indigenous/forest dwelling communities in
all categories of protected areas should be protected.