RIGHT OF TRIBALS AND OTHER FOREST-DWELLERS RECOGNISED UNDER THE FOREST RIGHT ACT-2006
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Backgrounder
In order to provide
the land and forest rights to the tribals and other forest dwellers, the
Government has enacted the Scheduled Tribes and other Traditional Forest
Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006, notified for operation
with effect from 31.12.2007. The Act will undo the
historical injustice done to tribals and Forest dwellers living there
for last three generations, before13th December 2005, by providing them
following rights-
RIGHTS RECOGNIZED BY
THE ACT
Ø Right to hold and live in the forestland under
the individual or common occupation for habitation or for self-cultivation
for livelihood by a member or members of a forest dwelling Scheduled Tribe or
other traditional forest dwellers.
Ø Community rights such as nistar, by whatever
name called, including those used in erstwhile Princely States, zamindari or
such intermediary regimes.
Ø Right of ownership, access to collect, use and
dispose of minor forest produce which has been traditionally collected within
or outside village boundaries.
Ø Other community rights of uses or entitlements
such as fish and other products of water bodies, grazing (both settled or
transhumant) and traditional seasonal resource access of nomadic or
pastoralist communities.
Ø Rights including community tenures of habitat
and habitation for primitive tribal groups and pre-agricultural communities.
Ø Rights in or over disputed lands under any
nomenclature in any State where claims are disputed.
Ø Rights for conversion of pattas or leases or
grants issued by any local authority or any State Government on forestlands
to titles.
Ø Rights of settlement and conversion of all forest
villages, old habitation, unsurveyed villages and other villages in forests,
whether recorded, notified or not into revenue villages.
Ø Right to protect, regenerate or conserve or
manage any community forest resources which they have been traditionally
protecting and conserving for sustainable use.
Ø Rights which are recognized under any State
law or laws of any Autonomous district Council or Autonomous Regional Council
or which are accepted as rights of tribals under any traditional or customary
law of the concerned tribe of any State.
Ø Right of access to biodiversity and community
right to intellectual property and traditional knowledge related to
biodiversity and cultural diversity.
Ø Any other traditional right customarily
enjoyed by the forest dwelling Scheduled Tribes or other traditional forest
dwellers, as the case may be, but excluding the traditional right of hunting
or trapping or extracting a part of the body of any species of wild animal.
Ø Right to in situ rehabilitation including
alternative land in cases where the Scheduled Tribes and other traditional
forest dwellers have been illegally evicted or displaced from forest land of
any description without receiving their legal entitlement to rehabilitation
prior to the 13th day of December, 2005.
What is the Forest Rights Act about?
Millions of people live
in and near India's forest lands, but have no legal right to their homes, lands
or livelihoods. A few government officials have all power over forests
and forest dwellers. The result? Both forests and people die. This Act
recognises forest dwellers' rights and makes conservation more accountable.
Why
is this law necessary?
What are called "forests” in Indian law often have nothing to do
with actual forests. Under the Indian Forest Act, areas were often declared to
be "government forests" without recording who lived in these areas,
what land they were using, what uses they made of the forest and so on.82% of
Madhya forest blocks and 40% of Orissa's reserved forests were never surveyed;
similarly 60% of India's national parks have till today (sometimes after 25
years, as in Sariska) not completed their process of enquiry and settlement of
rights. As the Tiger Task Force of the Government of India put it, "in the
name of conservation, what has been carried out is a completely illegal and
unconstitutional land acquisition programme."
What
are conditions like in the forest areas?
Because of this situation, millions of people
are subject to harassment, evictions, etc, on the pretext of being encroachers
in their own homes. Torture, bonded labour, extortion of money and sexual
assault are all extremely common. In the latest national eviction drive from
2002 onwards, more than 3,00,000 families were driven into destitution and
starvation. In Madhya Pradesh alone, more than 125 villages have been burned to
the ground.
The situation is so bad that the then
Commissioner for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, in his 29th Report,
said that "The criminalisation of the entire communities in the tribal
areas is the darkest blot on the liberal tradition of our country."
Why
were people's rights not respected when these forests were declared?
The Indian Forest Act, 1927, India's main
forest law, had nothing to do with conservation. It was created to serve the
British need for timber. It sought to override customary rights and forest
management systems by declaring forests state property and exploiting their
timber. The law says that, at the time a "forest” is declared, a single
official (the Forest Settlement Officer) is to enquire into and "settle”
the land and forest rights people had in that area. These all-powerful
officials unsurprisingly either did nothing or recorded only the rights of
powerful communities.
The same model was subsequently built into
the Wild Life Protection Act, passed in 1972, with similar consequences.
Mistakes may have been made, but surely these laws are the best way to
protect our forests?
It is not just people who have lost. The very purpose of the Forest Acts was to convert forests into the property of a colonial department; and when you convert an ecosystem into someone's property, there will always be stronger claims to that property than conservation. To destroy a forest today requires nothing more than either a bribe to the local forest officer or an application to a committee in Delhi. The results include:
The loss of more than
90% of India's grasslands to commercial Forest Department plantations.
The destruction of five
lakh hectares of forest in the past five years alone for mines, dams and
industrial projects;
The clearing of millions
of hectares of forest for monoculture plantations by the Forest Department;
Recent proposals to
privatise "degraded” forest lands for private companies' timber
plantations.
Moreover, the forest
laws destroyed all the community management and regulation systems that had
existed before, forcing people to choose between either abandoning the forest
entirely or living as 'criminals' within or near it. To this day it is a
criminal offence for you or I to plant a tree in a reserved forest; but it is
legal for the Department to fell the entire forest so long as it has Central
government permission.
What does the Forest Rights Act do?
The Act basically does two things:
·
Grants legal recognition to the rights of
traditional forest dwelling communities, partially correcting the injustice
caused by the forest laws.
·
Makes a beginning towards giving communities
and the public a voice in forest and wildlife conservation.
Who
is a forest dweller under this law, and who gets rights?
There are two stages to
be eligible under this Act. First, everyone has to satisfy two conditions:
1. Primarily residing in forests or forest lands;
2. Depends on forests and forest land for a livelihood (namely "bona
fide livelihood needs")
Second, you have to prove:
·
That the above conditions have been true for
75 years, in which case you are an Other
Traditional Forest Dweller (s. 2(o));
OR
·
That you are a member of a Scheduled Tribe
(s. 2(c)); and
·
That you are residing in the area where they
are Scheduled (s. 4(1)).
In the latter case
you are a Forest Dwelling Scheduled Tribe.
What kind of rights do forest dwellers get under this Act?
The law recognises three
types of rights:
LandRights
No one gets rights to any land that they have not been cultivating prior to December 13, 2005 (see section 4(3)) and that they are not cultivating right now. Those who are cultivating land but don't have document can claim up to 4 hectares, as long as they are cultivating the land themselves for a livelihood (section 3(1) (a) and 4(6)). Those who have a patta or a government lease, but whose land has been illegally taken by the Forest Department or whose land is the subject of a dispute between Forest and Revenue Departments, can claim those lands (see section 3(1)(f) and (g)). There is no question of granting 4 hectares of land to every family. If I am cultivating half a hectare on December 13, 2005, I receive title to that half a hectare alone; and if I am cultivating nothing, I receive nothing. If I am cultivating more than 4 hectares without documents or a dispute, I receive title to only 4 hectares. The land cannot be sold or transferred to anyone except by inheritance (see section 4(4)). UseRights The law secondly provides for rights to use and/or collect the following: a. Minor forest produce things like tendu patta, herbs, medicinal plants etc “that has been traditionally collected (see section 3(1) (c)). This does not include timber. b. Grazing grounds and water bodies (sections 3 c. Traditional areas of use by nomadic or pastoralist communities i.e. communities that move with their herds, as opposed to practicing settled agriculture. Right to Protect and Conserve though the forest is supposed to belong to all of us, till date no one except the Forest Department had a right to protect it. If the Forest Department should decide to destroy it, or to hand it over to someone who would, stopping them was a criminal offence. For the first time, this law also gives the community the right to protect and manage the forest. Section 3(1) (i) provide a right and a power to conserve community forest resources, while section 5 gives the community a general power to protect wildlife, forests, etc. This is vital for the thousands of village communities who are protecting their forests and wildlife against threats from forest mafias, industries and land grabbers, most of whom operate in connivance with the Forest Department.
How
are rights recognised?
Section 6 of the Act provides a transparent three step procedure for
deciding on who gets rights. First, the gram sabha (full village assembly, NOT
the gram panchayat) makes a recommendation - i.e who has been cultivating land
for how long, which minor forest produce is collected, etc. The gram sabha
plays this role because it is a public body where all people participate, and
hence is fully democratic and transparent. The gram sabha's recommendation goes
through two stages of screening committees at the taluka and district levels.
The district level committee makes the final decision (see section 6(6)). The
Committees have six members - three government officers and three elected
persons. At both the taluka and the district levels, any person who believes a
claim is false can appeal to the Committees, and if they prove their case the
right is denied (sections 6(2) and 6(4)). Finally, land recognised under this
Act cannot be sold or transferred.
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Monday, March 3, 2014
FOREST RIGHT ACT-2006
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