This is what it means to take on the TIMBER MAFIA, in practical ways

SHE PAID RS 18 , 000 TO SAVE A TREE

When her efforts to persuade officials not to cut the ancient banyan in
front of her farm at Kothanur failed, 73-year-old Almitra Patel did the next
best thing: She shelled out Rs 27,000 so that the contractors spared the
banyan and two adjacent partially-cut trees

DEEPTHI M R



There are those who hyperventilate on greenhouse gases and the like and make
a cosy career out of it. And then there are those, like 73-yearold Almitra
Patel, who, intuiting how interlinked the sun, water, earth and seasons are,
make personal sacrifices to protect a tree or a pond.
Almitra’s has been a virtual saga to save the huge banyan tree in front her
farm in Kothanur. Her tryst with the banyan started in October 2007 when the
government decided to develop Bagalur Road as the cargo route to Bangalore
International Airport (BIA) at Devanahalli.
Almitra, who has a farm off the road for the last three decades, has been
quite popular among the residents for planting and nurturing saplings in the
area. But her heart sank when the carriageway for the cargo route was
proposed to be widened from 5.5 metres to 7 metres with 1.5 metre shoulders
on either side to protect the road from erosion. This meant that a total of
341 fully-grown trees on the eightkm stretch were to be axed!
TIME TO ACT
She decided to act when she saw some persons marking trees, including her
favourite banyan, in front of her farm for chopping. “The Public Works
Department had listed the trees to be felled. The forest department then
evaluated their market value and fixed the price for each tree as per
government norms and auctioned them in blocks of two and four kilometre
stretches. For the 341 trees on the 8 km stretch, the price was fixed at Rs
3 lakh. A group of six persons bid it collectively and had paid Rs 4.8 lakh
to the government,” Almitra told Bangalore Mirror:
But the tragedy was that some of the un-marked trees along the road, which
were away from the proposed carriageway, were also being cut along the
stretch — that is how the official-timber mafia nexus works. “When I
complained about this, a forest officer shrugged it off with a wink so as to
say, ‘A bonus for the contractor’. When I complained this to the Deputy
Conservator of Forest who ordered a site visit, the contractor denied up
front that he was cutting unmarked trees,” she said.
RANSOM FOR A TREE
This is just the beginning of Almitra’s story of saving a giant banyan tree.
“The oldest and the largest banyan tree with a seven-meter circumference and
branches spreading across the road was near a slight bend on the road. I
managed to track the road contractor and I persuaded him that a little road
straightening would improve the alignment and also save the tree. He obliged
but I had to convince the public
works department (PWD). When I contacted the PWD supervisor, he said that if
the tree was within 1.5 metres of shoulder space of the road and did not
obstruct the carriage way, then it could be saved.The heritage giant was
safe, exactly 1.5 meters from the edge of the road and the proposed
alignment.”
As she convinced the PWD supervisor, she realised that a few other trees in
the same row could also be saved. And it was all thanks to the little
alignment solution that had sprung in her mind. “It was then agreed that
three trees could be saved in this way. The decision was taken, the officers
left me to negotiate the price to be paid for purchasing the trees to be
saved from felling,” Almitra said. Then came the time to pay up the
contractor to buy the trees. After much negotiation, the contractor agreed
to spare the banyan tree and two nearby stumps. “Ultimately we settled for
Rs 18,000 for the heritage giant, and Rs 9,000 for the other two banyan
stumps which were partly chopped by the time I could save them,” Almitra
revealed, before hastening to add: “It was nothing but a ransom paid to free
the tree.”
FOR THE FUTURE
Not only did she save the banyan trees, she also paid extra money to send
the sprouting tree branches to eco-friendly college campuses. It has been
two years now, and Almitra has created basins around the stumps and
continues to water them regularly with a vain hope that they would
re-sprout.
But why this mad love for a tree which she does not own? Almitra answered:
“The banyan tree is home to a lot of insects that are regular visitors to my
farm (she prefers to call it the unusual nature sanctuary). The village next
door is turning into a concrete jungle and if tree-chopping continues at
this rate there is hardly any greenery left for the future generations.
Moreover, everytime I come out of house I do not want to see the open sky,
all I want to see and feel around me is greenery.” So the next time you spot
a woman sipping tea while sitting on the roots of a banyan tree on Kothanur
Road, it will be Almitra —- the woman who paid Rs 18,000 to save it.
Hope her tribe increases.

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