Mass evictions from tiger reserves: French TV

[image: On one hand resettlement of tribal people was taken up by the 
Forest Department to conserve forests but on the other thousands of 
tourists are welcomed every year.-File Photo: K.R. Deepak]
On one hand resettlement of tribal people was taken up by the Forest 
Department to conserve forests but on the other thousands of tourists are 
welcomed every year.-File Photo: K.R. Deepak



Thousands of tribal people from Kanha Tiger Reserve in Madhya Pradesh 
‘evicted’ in the name of forest conservation. The investigation is sure to 
trigger a debate.

A special undercover investigation by French TV channel Canal Plus has 
exposed the illegal eviction of thousands of tribal people from Kanha Tiger 
Reserve in Madhya Pradesh in the name of conservation, while more than a 
hundred thousand tourists are welcomed in every year.

The investigation is sure to trigger debate over what is described as 
skewed conservation policy of displacing indigenous people but attracting 
hordes of tourists to stay in wildlife reserves.

A reporter of the TV channel visited families of the Baiga tribe who were 
evicted from Kanha- home of the “Jungle Book”- in 2014, and found that 
their lives were devastated after being forced from their homes against 
their will. The tribes people have been struggling to survive after being 
scattered in surrounding villages, according to a note released by Survival 
International, the global movement for tribal peoples’ rights on Wednesday.

Sukhdev, a Baiga man, was killed after his village was evicted from Kanha 
in 2014, the report says. His body was found after he attempted to buy land 
for his family. In an interview to Survival International, in 2012, Sukhdev 
had said: “We won’t find another place like this. How will we set up home 
there? How will we raise our children? We need our fields and homes … Won’t 
we die?” (filmed in 2012)

Sukhdev’s brother told Canal Plus: “We were one of the last families to 
resist. But the people from the reserve [Forest department] forced us to 
leave. They told us they’d take care of us for three years, but they didn’t 
do a thing. Even when my brother was killed, no one came to help us.”

Studies have found that tigers thrive in areas inhabited by people, the 
report says. And while the Baiga tribe people have lived alongside the 
tiger for generations and regard the animal as their “little brother,” 
Kanha’s mass tourism has been called “incompatible and detrimental” to 
conserving the species by conservation experts.

The French TV crew gained access to a confidential official report which 
lists the systematic resettlement of 22,000 people from tiger reserves 
across the region. Under Indian law, tribal peoples’ consent is required 
before such evictions, but they are often harassed into leaving.

Survival International’s Director Stephen Corry said, “So-called 
‘conservation’ continues to destroy tribal people as it has for 
generations. They’ve never threatened the tigers, who would do better if 
the tribes remained and the tourists stopped. Tribal peoples are generally 
better conservationists anyway than industrial-sized NGOs like World Wide 
Fund for Nature which stand by in silence while the parks forcibly evict 
people like Sukhdev and his family. It’s time these evictions are stopped 
and this scandal exposed.”




On Thursday, January 15, 2015 at 7:44:27 PM UTC+5:30, AYUSH | adivasi yuva 
shakti wrote:
>
>
>
> Tribespeople illegally evicted from ‘Jungle Book’ tiger reserve 
> 14 January 2015
> [image: Tribal peoples like the Baiga are the best conservationists. But 
> they face eviction from their ancestral homelands in the name of tiger 
> conservation.] 
> <http://assets.survivalinternational.org/pictures/8910/ind-bai-s-2013-07_screen.jpg>
> Tribal peoples like the Baiga are the best conservationists. But they face 
> eviction from their ancestral homelands in the name of tiger conservation.
> © Survival International
>
> Tribal people have been forcibly and illegally evicted from India’s Kanha 
> Tiger Reserve – home of Kipling’s The Jungle Book – in the name of tiger 
> conservation. Across India, many more face a similar threat 
> <http://www.survivalinternational.org//about/tigers>.
>
> Evicted tribespeople report that the Forest Department threatened to 
> release elephants to trample their houses and crops if they did not leave 
> immediately.
>
> The area is the ancestral home of the Baiga and Gond tribes, who face a 
> desperate future without their forests 
> <http://www.survivalinternational.org/progresscankill>.
>
> The families were harassed for years to leave the reserve. When they were 
> finally evicted, they received no land or help in establishing their lives 
> outside. Months after their eviction, families report that they have 
> received only a fraction of the compensation they were expecting – others 
> have received nothing.
>
> “We got some money, but we are lost – wandering in search of land. Here 
> there is only sadness. We need the jungle,” a tribesperson evicted from 
> Jholar village in Kanha said.
> [image: This man’s whole community was evicted from Kanha Tiger Reserve. 
> Villagers report that guards threatened to release elephants on them.] 
> <http://assets.survivalinternational.org/pictures/3495/ind-bai-uh-2012-01_screen.jpg>
> This man’s whole community was evicted from Kanha Tiger Reserve. Villagers 
> report that guards threatened to release elephants on them.
> © Survival
>
> The communities have now been scattered among the surrounding villages. 
> Their rights to stay in, live from, and protect their forests are enshrined 
> in Indian law.
>
> One Baiga man told Survival International, the global movement for tribal 
> peoples’ rights, before the eviction, “They want to give us money. We don’t 
> want money. We want land. Money doesn’t mean anything to us. It comes and 
> it goes.”
>
> *Watch moving interviews with the residents of Jholar village in Kanha 
> tiger reserve, who have now been evicted (filmed in 2012):*
>
>
> Tribal families evicted for “tiger conservation” 
> <http://www.survivalinternational.org/films/baiga>Moving first-hand 
> accounts by the residents of Jholar village in Kanha tiger reserve, who 
> have now been evicted (filmed in 2012)
>
> Survival has written to the Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF), which has 
> been providing infrastructural support, training and equipment for 
> frontline Forest Department staff.
>
> Tribal peoples are the best conservationists. Survival’s "Parks Need 
> Peoples" <http://www.survivalinternational.org/parks> campaign challenges 
> the current model of conservation. Conservation programs must stick to 
> international law, protect tribal peoples’ rights to their lands, ask them 
> what help they need in protecting their lands, listen to them, and then be 
> prepared to back them up as much as they can.
> [image: While tribal people have been illegally evicted from Kanha Tiger 
> Reserve – home of the 'Jungle Book' – tourists are welcomed in.] 
> <http://assets.survivalinternational.org/pictures/9750/royal-bengal-tiger-kanha-cut_screen.jpg>
> While tribal people have been illegally evicted from Kanha Tiger Reserve – 
> home of the 'Jungle Book' – tourists are welcomed in.
> © Survival
>
> Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said today, “What’s happening in Kanha 
> epitomizes the ugly side of the conservation industry – thousands of 
> tourists career through the park in noisy jeeps, clamoring to take photos 
> of the beleaguered tigers. Meanwhile, Baiga communities that have carefully 
> managed the tiger’s habitat over generations are annihilated by forced 
> evictions. The irony appears to be lost on the conservationists. If India 
> doesn’t allow the Baiga and Gond to return and prevent further villagers 
> being kicked out, these communities will be completely destroyed. Evicting 
> tribes won’t save the tiger.”
>
> *Notes to editors:*
>
> - In a similar eviction in December 2013, 32 Khadia families were moved 
> out of Similipal Tiger Reserve 
> <http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/10239> in Odisha state and 
> were living in dire conditions under plastic sheets. They have not received 
> the compensation they were promised. 
> - Read Survival’s letter to WWF 
> <http://assets.survivalinternational.org/documents/1344/141218lettertowwfindia.pdf>
>  (pdf, 
> 454 KB)
> - Read Survival’s letter to the National Tiger Conservation Authority 
> concerning the illegal evictions from Kanha and Similipal Tiger Reserves 
> <http://assets.survivalinternational.org/documents/1345/150112-letter-ntca.pdf>
>  (pdf, 
> 482 KB)
> - Indian and international law require that the authorities must prove to 
> the communities that their co-existence with the wildlife is impossible; 
> that communities’ forest rights are processed; and that they have given 
> their free, prior and informed consent to the move. None of these 
> conditions were fulfilled in Kanha.
>

-- 
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