Orissa tribals win rights over cashew plantations after 50 years

An official of Orissa's cashew development corporation got a rude shock when he 
entered Hantalpur village of Koraput district on February 6. He wanted to 
persuade the people to bid for the cashew harvesting contract being auctioned 
by the corporation. It infuriated the women of the village so much that they 
tied up the official. "We told him if the corporation wanted it could cut and 
take away the trees but the land would remain ours. When he did not listen to 
us we tied him to a post. He was released only after he promised never to come 
again to the village, let alone talk about auctioning," said Subarna Hantal who 
led the women. Batti and Rukmini of the village said they had been harvesting 
the fruits in the plantation near the village since 2003 against the 
corporation's wishes. "We are not afraid of arrest," they declared.

Tribals and dalits in Orissa have turned the tables on the Orissa State Cashew 
Development Corporation (oscdc ), which controls 30690.5 hectares (ha) of 
cashew plantations and has been auctioning the harvesting contracts for nearly 
three decades. First the people began to demand rights over the plantations, 
then they resorted to open defiance. In the past few years they subverted the 
corporation's auctioning process and began harvesting cashew themselves.

Giving in to the people's 24-year-long protest, the Orissa government last year 
decided to grant them the right to harvest fruits in 20,234 ha of plantations 
in the state's 20 cashew-growing districts. The process of selecting 
benefeciaries has just begun. The land was transferred to the corporation in 
1979 by the soil conservation department, which had taken up plantations as a 
soil conservation measure in the catchment areas of reservoirs in the 1950s. 
oscdc will now be left with only those plantations raised through its own 
resources and over which it has lease.

According to the decision taken by a high-level meeting chaired by chief 
minister Naveen Patnaik on July 31, 2008, cashew plantations will be 
distributed among families in predominantly tribal or scheduled areas and in 
areas of smaller tribal concentration-officially recognized as Modified Area 
Development Authority and Cluster areas. The biggest beneficiary will be the 
tribals of Koraput, Orissa's biggest cashew growing district with 6,608 ha 
under plantation.

People will get only usufructuary rights, that is the right to harvest fruits 
but not ownership of land. No family will be given more than 0.8 ha (two 
acres). Priority will be given to landless tribals followed by small and 
marginal tribal farmers below the poverty line, then other tribals. Surplus 
land will be distributed among poor scheduled caste families.

The corporation's assistant manager responsible for finance, R K Kar, said the 
beneficiaries would be selected in consultation with gram sabhas by the 
sub-collector-level committees in each sub-division. The committee will include 
the block development officer, assistant district welfare officer and 
representatives of oscdc and the soil conservation department. The process of 
forming committees has begun in most areas, but the selection of beneficiaries 
might get delayed because of the general elections, said official sources in 
Bhubaneswar.

Koraput mla Taraprasad Vahinipati said the government was forced to take the 
decision because people had prevented auction of plantations by oscdc for two 
years. There had been gheraos and demonstrations. Tribals of Koraput, one of 
Orissa's most backward districts, call usufructuary rights a big victory. "We 
have fought (cashew) traders, moneylenders (who lend to contractors) and the 
police to achieve this," said Rama Badnaik of Matamput village of Koraput and 
member of the Dangar Adhikar Samiti (das), which spearheaded the movement for 
rights over cashew plantations. Another das member, Rajkishore Lendru added the 
government should give usufructuary rights not to individuals but village 
communities. "We have fought as a community and would like the right to be 
conferred on the community. Otherwise the movement's unity might break," said 
Lendru. Vahinipati said distributing plantations will set right a historical 
wrong done to the people in plantation areas.

Promised land
In Koraput the soil conservation department started planting cashew trees on 
what was called government wasteland in areas of big dams, like Machkund, Kolab 
and Chitrakonda, in the 1950s to check soil erosion. The Machkund project, 
which came up in 1955, was the focus of the plantation with the result that 
cashew was grown in 4,047 ha in the undivided Machkund tehsil, which comprised 
Lamtaput and Nandpur blocks. The plantation was taken up under government 
anti-poverty schemes with an unwritten assurance to the people that once the 
trees bore fruits and became commercially exploitable-four years after 
plantation-they will be allowed to harvest and sell the fruits.


 "We have fought traders, moneylenders and the police. We are happy that the 
government has decided to give us the right to harvest plantations. It's a huge 
victory"
Rama Badnaik, Matamput village, Koraput

 "The corporation put pressure on a member of our village (Enugu) to obtain the 
contract for cashew plantation but we did not let him harvest. He was forced to 
give up his plan and join the movement"
Sania Sisa, former president, Dangar Adhikar Samiti

 "It has always been a community struggle, hence the rights over cashew 
plantations should be conferred on the community not individuals"
Bidyut Mohanty, secretary, Society for Promoting Rural Education and Development

 "People have encroached upon plantations. They will just not let tender 
holders in"
Hemant Kumar Rout, Divisional Manager, Jeypore, OSCDC

The so-called wasteland on which the plantations came up had been under 
cultivation by tribals for generations but their rights on the land could not 
be recorded, partly because of their own ignorance and partly because of the 
faulty method of survey. Tribals mostly did shifting cultivation, locally known 
as podu, on hill slopes. A survey carried out between 1939 and 1965 in the 
undivided Koraput district, covering Koraput, Nowrangpur, Rayagada and 
Malkangiri, was to record cultivation on hill slopes up to a 10-degree 
gradient, but the idea was abandoned because of the high cost of survey, 
recalled Jagannath Shroff, former revenue officer of Koraput.

Recording the land on slopes was crucial because Koraput is a hilly district 
and today bulk of the cashew in Machkund grows on these slopes. Tribals say 
they initially objected to raising cashew plantation on their land but kept 
quiet when officials of the soil conservation department assured them the 
plantations would be theirs for harvesting. They even helped guard and nurture 
the plantations. However, when the time for harvesting came, the department 
claimed the cashew and made money.

This was a blow to farmers in Koraput, which is home to 62 tribes, including 
Paraja, Gadaba, Kondh and Bhumia. Though tribals constitute half the district's 
population of 11,77,954, they own less than a third of the private land in 
Koraput. The tribals were also displaced in large numbers by the dams.

In very few cases the department transferred the usufructuary rights to 
landless people. According to Koraput soil conservation department officials, 
till date 20,672 people have been given usufructuary pattas (deeds) in Nandpur 
and Lamtaput blocks, where plantations are concentrated. The figure is 
negligible considering that over 100,000 people were affected in the district 
by cashew cultivation, said Bidyut Mohanty, the secretary of the Society for 
Promoting Rural Education and Development, which supported das. The 
department's assistant engineer in Koraput, S K Parida, insisted people were 
never promised usufructuary rights or ownership. "In fact, there were very few 
people engaged in farming on hill slopes then. However, we still tried to help 
them by involving them in plucking, for which they were paid Rs 20 to Rs 25 a 
day," said Parida.


'We have been successful in our fight. We have got back our cashew land,' 
announce the people of Kujaamb village in Koraput

When oscdc was formed in 1979, the government transferred the bulk of the 
cashew plantations to the corporation, which started auctioning them for 
harvesting. This despite the corporation not having lease rights over more than 
90 per cent of land.

das member Sukhram Gadanga alleged oscdc did not consult gram sabhas while 
inviting bids for plantations on common land, though in scheduled areas like 
Koraput it is mandatory. Guneipada sarpanch Sukura Muduli said except for once 
the gram sabha was not consulted on plantation matters.

Tribals revolt
Though anger against the corporation had been brewing for quite sometime, the 
first revolt took place in 1985 in Enugu village in Koraput under the 
leadership of Sania Sisa, a marginal farmer. People entered the plantations 
leased to a businessman in Jeypore, Koraput's commercial nerve centre. The 
businessman tried to have a deal with them but they refused to pluck fruits for 
him. "Next year we decided not to allow anyone to obtain the lease. However, 
the corporation put pressure on its guard Manu Khilo of our village to get the 
lease but we didn't let him harvest fruits. He was forced to give up his plan 
and join the movement," said Sisa, 50.

Soon the movement spread to neighbouring Bangurpada, Raipada, Mahada and 
Dahanaput villages, with people harvesting cashew from auctioned plantations. 
Sisa and his three colleagues were arrested but it did not deter the tribals. 
The agitation intensified with the formation of the Dangar Suraksha Samiti in 
2000, with Sisa becoming its founder president. The Samiti was converted into 
Dangar Adhikar Samiti in 2005. As its first president Sisa declared harvesting 
cashew from the plantations on the village common land the right of the people.

das launched a massive awareness drive, holding meetings and organizing 
demonstrations against auctioning. Village after village started resisting the 
entry of corporation officials and tender holders into the plantations. In 2007 
feisty Domai Khilo of Litiput village took on tender holders in her village. 
"The contract had been obtained by Budu Khilo and Kesab Khilo who were 
hell-bent on entering plantations but the rest of the village protested," she 
said. "They called the police. We said we were ready to go to jail but with our 
children and livestock. The police had to go back."

Hemant Kumar Rout, oscdc manager of Jeypore division, admitted people have 
taken over the plantations in Machkund. Shantanu Mohanty, officer-in-charge of 
the Machkund police station who has received transfer orders, expressed 
helplessness. "You cannot do anything under these circumstances. People will 
just not allow tender holders to enter plantations," he said.

Even tender holders have joined the movement against the corporation. Ghenu 
Dalei of Hantalpur used to bid for cashew tenders by pawning gold at 
moneylenders'. The harvested stock was sold to the same moneylenders who 
charged a monthly interest of 4 per cent. In 2006 das members did not let him 
harvest cashew. When he demanded his money back from the corporation he was 
returned Rs 40,000 of the Rs one lakh paid. "That day I decided to quit bidding 
and join the movement," said Dalei, whose son Daitari is one of the most active 
members of das.

"The movement is flourishing. The money from cashew sales has been used to form 
a fund. We have Rs 1.30 lakh in Lamtaput Gramya Bank and Rs 50,000 in two post 
offices," said Manu of Enugu, adding an acre (0.4 ha) yields 300-400 kg cashew 
worth Rs 10,000.

As people celebrate their victory, Rout of oscdc doubts it will be a peaceful 
end to a long struggle. He said the government's decision to give priority to 
landless tribals might drive a wedge between tribals and dalits. "They have 
emasculated oscdc with the decision," Rout added. das activists have launched a 
campaign for granting usufructuary rights to village communities. They are also 
drawing up plans to maximize people's profits from cashew. They want to set up 
a cashew processing unit by forming a cooperative. "We sell businessmen raw 
cashew for Rs 35-50 per kg and they sell the processed product for Rs 300 per 
kg," said Sukhram. The victory over the corporation has given the tribals the 
confidence to plan the future.





---------- BOX:Take and give ----------





1950s: Soil conservation department begins cashew plantations
1939-65: Official survey does not recognize people's rights over land under 
shifting cultivation
1979: Orissa State Cashew Development Corporation set up
1985: First revolt against the corporation at Enugu in Koraput
2000: Dangar Suraksha Samiti formed
2005: The Samiti converted to Dangar Adhikar Samiti
2007: Tribals overtake most plantations in Koraput
2008: Orissa government announces distribution of plantations among tribals





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