---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Campaign for Survival and Dignity <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Oct 27, 2007 8:54 PM
Subject: [forestrights] Open Letter to Conservationists Challenging FR Act
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

   *CAMPAIGN FOR SURVIVAL AND DIGNITY*

National Convenor: Pradip Prabhu, 3, Yezdeh Behram, Kati, Malyan, Dahanu Rd.
401602.

Delhi Contact: SRUTI, Q-1 Hauz Khas Enclave, New Delhi 110 016. Ph:
9968293978, 26569023. [EMAIL PROTECTED]


 *SECOND OPEN LETTER TO BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, WILDLIFE PROTECTION
SOCIETY OF INDIA, CONSERVATION ACTION TRUST AND WILDLIFE FIRST
*


 Dear Friends,


 This is our second open letter to you. We had first written to you in
January regarding your petition in the Supreme Court challenging the "tiger
amendment" to the Wildlife Act last year; your response to that letter is
still awaited. It appears you have since filed an affidavit in that case
challenging the 2006 Forest Rights Act, which your Advocate Mr. Raj Panjwani
referred to in court. Despite your refusal to provide us with a copy of that
affidavit, we recently managed to examine it.


 We are hence writing this second open letter. Now as then, we write to
protest the fact that your 'legal' arguments actually are an attempt to use
law to cloak a deeply elitist, repressive and authoritarian model of
"conservation" that has caused immense harm both to forest dwellers and to
conservation itself. In particular, we wanted to raise certain issues with
you:



   -

   In your petition you make the remarkable claim that "*if co-existence
   [between humans and wild animals] was feasible, wild animals, ages ago,
   would have been domesticated just as horses, dogs and pigs*." You also
   claimed that coexistence is a *"myth, based on utopian visions,
   deriving its sustenance from folklore."* In January we had pointed out
   that this position runs counter to that adopted by the world's largest
   conservation organisations, in addition to contradicting history, ecological
   science and common sense. Since then, you have not clarified this position
   at all. Can we then assume that your approach continues to be based on such
   notions?
   -

   Your affidavit attacks the Forest Rights Act on several grounds. First
   is that the sections that empower the the community to *also* protect
   forests amount to *"transferring control and management of the
   country's natural heritage to the gram sabha / individuals." *The law
   is very clear that this power in no way detracts or derogates from the
   powers of the existing authorities; it is a power in addition to that of the
   Forest Department. Indeed, this section one of the most pro-conservation
   elements of the law, for it is communities who have fought most fiercely
   against practically every environmentally destructive project, against every
   open cast mine, dam, or polluting industrial estate. You are no doubt aware
   that internationally, "community conserved areas" are seen as a priority
   area of work for conservation organisations such as the IUCN, with even
   India's Wildlife Protection Act providing for their recognition. Yet your
   position would imply that the forest authorities should have the *sole
   *power to protect forests and wildlife. Are your organisations in
   favour of truly open, people-based conservation, as it is understood
   internationally? Or in favour of a closed system where a handful of forest
   officials decide everything, the system under which five lakh hectares of
   forest have been destroyed in the last five years alone?
   -

   Second, you say that this law will *"infringe upon the rights of
   non-beneficiaries to natural heritage / ecology*" by destroying
   forests. The Forest Rights Act is not a land distribution measure that
   will wipe out forests. It is intended to address the failure to record
   people's rights during the process of declaring government 'forests', many
   of which often are not forests at all. To this day 82% of Madhya Pradesh's
   forest blocks have not been surveyed, and 60% of India's national parks have
   not completed the recording of rights. Millions of people have lost their
   lands and their livelihoods during this seizure of resources by the British
   Empire and post-Independence governments. Till today they live under extreme
   oppression, facing daily harassment, violence and extortion. The Tiger Task
   Force called it "a completely illegal and unconstitutional land
   acquisition programme"; the then Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
   Commissioner, in his 29th report, said the "criminalisation of the
   entire communities in the tribal areas is the darkest blot on the liberal
   tradition of our country."

   How can addressing this enormous injustice inherently be a violation
   of the right to natural heritage? You may not agree with this Act's methods
   or approach; but by repeatedly denying that there is an issue of rights, you
   imply that "conservation" can only work by violating the rights of millions
   of people. If this is your position – and we hope that it is not - your
   notion of 'conservation' is both untenable in principle and doomed in
   practice. It is worth noting that the IUCN once again takes a position
   completely contrary to yours when describing their work: "Indigenous
   peoples, landless workers, small producers, mobile communities, low-income
   consumers, and all others who are dependent on natural resources, but
   without property rights over them, will hopefully acquire some form of
   rights entitling them to an equitable participation in managing those
   resources and benefiting from them."

   -

   Moreover, if natural heritage is indeed a concern, one would expect
   that you would enthusiastically support communities in their struggle
   against the Polavaram dam, against Vedanta's mines in Orissa, or against
   Coca Cola in Plachimada. One would expect you to condemn the dilution of the
   Environmental Impact Assessment notification, the draft new mining policy,
   or the moves to privatize forests and take away community lands for timber
   plantations. The communities fighting these projects and policies are truly
   fighting for their natural heritage – not as a legal abstraction but as a
   lived reality. Yet on all these issues, all we hear from your organisations
   is a deafening silence.


We can only conclude from this that, as in January, you are simply
uninterested in the real issues at stake. Far easier to condemn forest
dwellers than to resist corporate interests. Far easier to sentence
communities to inhuman oppression than to demand both conservation and
justice. Far easier, at the end of the day, to join with power than to fight
it.


 Conservation has not succeeded and can never succeed if it is based on an
authoritarian, repressive model inherited from an Empire. We have no doubt
that you believe in conservation. The question is: do you believe in
democracy?



 Campaign for Survival and Dignity

 


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