MARCH TO DELHI

FOREST RESOURCES ARE OUR BIRTH RIGHT.

RIGHT TO PEOPLE’S control over NATURAL RESOURCES.

MARCH TO DELHI

IMPLEMENT FOREST RIGHTS ACT.

RECOGNIZE COMMUNITY RIGHTS OVER FOREST*.*
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*PEOPLE**’**S FOREST R**I**GHTS RALLY *

*DEMAND**I**NG COMMUN**I**TY R**I**GHTs over natural resources*

*15th December 2011**,** JANTAR MANTAR**,** NEW DELHI*

*NATIONAL CONFERENCE 16TH DECEMBER, NEW DELHI***

*Friends,*

The Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of
Forest Rights) Act which was passed on 15th December 2006 in the Lok Sabha
is completing five years. This was passed on the 18th December 2006 in the
Rajya Sabha. It was a significant moment in the history of the Indian
Parliament as this Act was a political recognition, which was the result of
the efforts of two centuries of continuous and consistent struggles waged
by the forest rights movements. Through this legislation, approximately 150
million of forest dwellers and those dependent on forest resources could
claim access to their rights. It is to be noted that neither in the
colonial regime nor the post independent India, did the forest laws
recognize the rights of the people, but the State established and
strengthened monopoly over the resources and denied the legitimate rights
of people to the areas they lived in for generations. The laws essentially
sought to reserve forests for its timber value and put forward mechanisms
through which the tranfer of forest and non-forest produce could be
determined. This is exactly why the term “historic injustice done to the
tribals and other forest dwellers” was specifically mentioned in the new
legislation to set off a process of correcting those wrongs. This also
meant that the people could come back to their land without seeing
themselves as ‘encroachers’. Establishing a new democratic and
decentralized mechanism in the forests, this will ensure a sustainable
development process, aimed at enhancing livelihoods while conserving the
pristine forest ecology and habitat was to be the focus. This law therefore
directly has positive effects in being able to attain political rights in
the lives of the Adivasis, Dalits and other nomadic tribes who were
historically denied their democratic and constitutional rights. This
legislation also has an importance in recognizing the rights of women on
community forest resources as well individual forest rights. Though there
were loopholes within this legislation, the forest dependent communities
welcomed this as they were celebrating Independence for the first time.
This Act was also very timely especially in the context of globalization
and neoliberal reforms, as the valuable natural resources are literally
been sold to corporates and multi-national companies for a pittance. In
spite of the economic restructuring of the State and its anti-people
policies the Parliament was pressurized by the people’s movements to enact
this legislation. It must be noted that for an Act that was promulgated in
2006 and operationalised with a set of Rules on the 1st January 2008, the
FRA has only just begun to reach its intended constituencies.

If one closely observes the implementation of this important legislation,
it is clear that the corrupt and lame government’s will is not at all
visible on that front. Even the political leadership is clear that there
will be political, administrative and structural hindrances in the
implementation of FRA. These deliberate hindrances occur due to the fact
that this legislation can lead to the toppling of the supremacy of the
ruling elites and bureaucrats in Indian forests. In order to actually
implement this legislation in its true spirit, the government should have
taken special efforts to address these structural issues. It is very well
known to the government that all the progressive laws from Zamindari
Abolition, Land Reforms Act to PESA have not been implemented at the
grassroots effectively due to the apathy of the governments ruling us. In
the last five years, the Ministry of Tribal Affairs [MoTA], has taken only
an apathetic view regarding in the implementation of this important
legislation. The ministry’s lackadaisical approach in initiating a doable
structure of implementation and not being able to initiate anything to work
in harmony with the state level monitoring committees are causes of serious
worry. Its monthly update on the progress of implementation does little to
analyse trends, causes and consequences, and it has at best only
occasionally issued clarificatory circulars on the many complex issues of
the law. The MoTA has looked at this law limiting it to merely distributing
*pattas* [land titles] when the legislation clearly points out to the whole
issue of the rights to permanent ownership of the communities. The
government has also not done their duty of providing support especially
since the MoTA in comparison with Ministry of Environment and Forests
[MoEF] is considered to be a weak ministry. Here was the responsibility of
the government to handhold and strengthen the MoTA by engaging with the
grassroot communities working on this issue through a democratic process,
which was not done. On the other hand the MoEF, with all its ammunitions
has been systematically opposing the legislation and has continued policies
that are in direct violation of the spirit and letter of the Forest Rights
Act. It is only in recent times that the new Minister of Tribal Affairs has
basically started questioning the role of the MoEF.

Understandably, the officialdom of the forest department is also opposed to
this Act and there have been large scale interferences in the rights
recognition process by the claimants. The department is involved in the
intense propaganda that the forests will be destroyed by Adivasis and other
traditional forest dwellers, if this Act is implemented. Another strategy
has been to file petitions/ appeals in the High Court and Supreme Court
through retired forest officials or by using the conservation lobby. In
collaboration with the International Financial institutions, the forest
department has initiated afforestation and plantation programmes that
result in violations of rights like the Joint Forest Management along with
relocation of people from tiger reserves and diversion of forest land in
favour of large projects. All these actions are done without any respect
for the rights of forest dwellers under the Forest Rights Act or for the
procedures and safeguards provided in law. This is definitely a ploy not to
form Forest Rights Committees and replacing them with Forest Protection
Committees for namesake normally led by the powerful people of that area.
Amidst all these serious violations happening, the government is a
spectator watching and enjoying the circus and behaves as if it has nothing
to do in these serious concerns raised by the movement. How is it possible
that the Government is not aware of these issues when one arm of it is
openly opposing a law, which is passed by the Parliament and playing back
door tactics to dilute this important piece of legislation? This is a
classic open expression of the double standards of the government and the
anti-people development positions they stand for. Another clear instance of
this dubious nature of the government is also when it actually strengthen
the concept of the eminent domain of the Indian state over natural
resources and thus basically violating the basic premise of Forest Rights
Act. While questioning these positions of the government, the Adivasis and
forest dwellers are handled in fake encounters or jailed and branded as
Maoists. These have been going on in Chattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, West
Bengal, Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Andhra Pradesh, Uttarkhand, Odisha, Assam
etc.

With the experience of implementation of the Forest Rights Act in the last
five years, it is crystal clear that neither the Forest Department nor the
mainstream parties are not ready to hand over power to the forest dwellers
and the dependent communities. They do not want the transformation of the
forest administration in the manner as envisaged in the legislation. Other
parties too cannot be spared from this attitude as they always shudder off
the responsibilities. Apart from some minor exceptions, the trends in the
implementation of the Act are similar throughout the states. Eligible
claimants have been denied rights, particularly in the case of other
traditional forest dwellers, whose claims have been overwhelmingly rejected
in all States. 70 – 80 percent of the applications rejected are the result
of a bureaucracy not wanting to apply its mind, or simply not wanting to
give people their due. The reasons for rejection are not being conveyed to
the claimants and the FRA’s provision to give the claimant a hearing before
disposing of the claim, has almost never been utilised. All these incidents
very clearly point to the fact that the existing political system is very
clear in its intentions as the government’s economic policies are directed
towards selling off the natural and forest resources of India to the forces
of capitalist globalisation.

Comrades, the movement to effectively implement the Forest Rights Act is an
inalienable part of the struggles for democratic governance. Today the
struggle for the implementation of Forest rights is not just important for
the forest dependent people or communities, it is equally important for the
other natural resource based working people like fish workers, Mineral
dependents, agriculturalists, artisans who are partly or indirectly
dependent on forest resources and also the larger society. Based on this
understanding a larger framework is prepared by these communities for the
fight for environmental justice as such. It was in this context, that in
June 2011 inside the Great Himalayan National Park, Banjar, Himachal
Pradesh there was a national consultation on these issues. Thirty six
people’s movements and twelve support organizations from different parts of
India supported the consultation. The meeting decided to call for a
National Federation of Natural Resource based Traditional Working Peoples/
Communities and their organizations/ unions. It was discussed that such a
federation, while attempting to bridge the vacuum between social movements
and trade unions, will also give a political direction and tie loose ends
to the different struggles taking place across India.

The call for the Parliament rally on 15th December 2011, the day when FRA
was passed is being given in this context. It is intended that questions
regarding the implementation of FRA will be raised in this platform. Our
slogans must reach the Parliament. Shaheed-e-Azam Bhagat Singh said this
while defending the act of throwing a bomb on the Legislatures Central Hall
‘You need such explosions to open the ears of a deaf government.’ This
historical saying is still relevant for the social movements as even today
the situation has not changed from the British period.

We appeal to all the movements/ organizations to   join us for the rally
and public meeting of forest people on the 15th December, and the founding
conference of the federation on the 16th December 2011, in Delhi.

We demand:

*1.     *The forestland which has been snatched from the community and
placed under the control of the forest department should be returned back
to the village community using the community rights under the FRA.

*2.     *The land of the village community acquired by the forest
department should be returned to the landless.

*3.     *Put moratorium on all joint forest initiatives collaborating with
the International Financial Institutions for example like the Japan Company
Jaica or the World Bank led CDM projects or REDD.

*4.     *Women should have the ownership rights over the community forest
resources.

*5.     *Recognision of all Taungiya and forest villages as revenue
villages.

*6.     *Provide ownership rights on Non Timber Forest Produce for the
forest communities and terminate of all contract systems to contractors and
mafias.

*7.     *Strict implementation of FRA inside the protected areas and
implement rights for the Pastoral communities.

*8.     *Fishing rights for fishworkers in the rivers and ponds in the
forest areas

*9.     *Mining rights for the forest communities, cancelling all trades
with the companies on mines and minerals

*10.  *Withdrawal of all cases imposed on the forest people by the Forest
Department, as per the provisions of FRA.

*11.  *The provision of three generations, one generation equal to 25 years
should be scrapped for other traditional dwellers. The proof of residence
for both state and other forest dwellers should be the same.

*12.  *Organize conferences of Forest Right Commitees like P.R.I.s and
provide training

* *

*|**Rashtriya Van Jan Shramajeevi Manch [NFFPFW] **| **C/O NTUI B – 137,
Dayanand Colony, Lajpat Nagar, Phase 4, New Delhi, 110024. **|**Phone:
09868857723, 011 26680883. Telefax: 011 26687724**|***


-- 

ANIL THARAYATH VARGHESE

Programme for Social Action
F 10/12
Malviya Nagar
New Delhi - 110017

Phone: 011 26680883/ 26671556
Fax: 011 26687724

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