Community Forest Rights | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Sat, 05 Apr 2025 04:34:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Community Forest Rights | SabrangIndia 32 32 AIUFWP submits letter LoP Rahul Gandhi, calls for action as forest rights remain in limbo https://sabrangindia.in/aiufwp-submits-letter-lop-rahul-gandhi-calls-for-action-as-forest-rights-remain-in-limbo/ Sat, 05 Apr 2025 04:34:50 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=40950 AIUFWP urges Congress leader and LoP Rahul Gandhi to intervene as tribals face eviction, harassment, and bureaucratic neglect

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Nearly two decades after the passage of the Forest Rights Act (FRA) 2006, forest-dependent communities across India continue to battle for their legally recognised rights. At a meeting between Sokalo Gond, Chairperson of AIUFWP and Rahul Gandhi, Leader of the Opposition, the All India Union of Forest Working People (AIUFWP) has raised urgent concerns over the slow and ineffective implementation of the Act. The letter submitted to him calls for his intervention to ensure justice for millions of tribals and traditional forest dwellers, who remain at the mercy of state authorities and the Forest Department’s unchecked power.

The FRA 2006, enacted under the UPA-I government, was a watershed moment in recognising the rights of forest-dwelling communities by breaking away from the colonial-era policies that placed forests solely under government control. For the first time since Independence, the Act aimed to correct historical injustices by empowering Gram Sabhas (village councils) to determine land rights and putting an end to the arbitrary control exercised by the Forest Department. However, despite its promise, the on-ground reality remains bleak. The AIUFWP’s letter highlights multiple reasons for the failure of implementation, including:

  • Lack of political will among state governments to enforce the FRA.
  • Deliberate neglect by administrative officials, who refuse to acknowledge claims under the Act.
  • Continued harassment of forest-dependent communities by the Forest Department, which, instead of recognising their rights, evicts them and falsely prosecutes them under various laws.
  • Deliberate rejection of individual and community claims by authorities without proper consideration.
  • Failure to inform forest-dwelling communities about their legal rights, leaving them vulnerable to dispossession.

By submitting the letter to Gandhi on April 2, the AIUFWP had specifically pointed out that despite repeated submissions, no decision has been made on the community claims filed by the union. A list of these pending claims has been attached to the letter, underscoring the extent of bureaucratic delay.

Given these persistent challenges, the AIUFWP is demanding urgent intervention and has requested a meeting between Rahul Gandhi and representatives from multiple states to discuss the issue in detail. The letter, signed by Sokalo Gond, Chairperson of AIUFWP, makes it clear that without political action, the FRA risks becoming yet another unfulfilled promise for India’s most marginalised communities.

Sokalo Gond was accompanied by Munnar Gond. The meeting took place in Sansad Bhavan.

The complete letter may be read here.

 

 

Related:

Adivasi Land Rights Erosion: The effects of the 2023 Forest Conservation Amendment Act

Record number of forest diversion took place in 2023 amidst decline in spend of CAMPA funds, MoEF data reveals

All India Union of Forest Working People (AIUFWP) lists out their demands before the Lok Sabha election 2024

With less than two weeks for polling, how concerned are national parties on land and forest rights for Adivasis?

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What keeps the Tharu Adivasis going in their quest for Community Forest Rights? https://sabrangindia.in/what-keeps-tharu-adivasis-going-their-quest-community-forest-rights/ Wed, 08 Dec 2021 12:45:23 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2021/12/08/what-keeps-tharu-adivasis-going-their-quest-community-forest-rights/ Tharu tribes of 20 villages in Dudhwa region of Lakhimpur Kheri, Uttar Pradesh have objected to the rejection of their claims by the district level committee, contending that the committee has no power under the Forest Rights Act, 2006 (FRA).

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Tharu Adivasi
 

Since 2013, members of the Tharu Adivasi tribe of Dudhwa region, in Lakhimpur Kheri district of Uttar Pradesh (UP) have been awaiting the approval of their community rights claims under the  Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 (FRA). Procedural delays have kept them deprived of their rights for eight years! Yet they have continued their peaceful struggle.

Governments have come and gone, administrators have changed, but the resolve of the Tharu Adivasis remains unshaken. A representative and one of the leaders of the Tharu community, Sehvaniya, said the community has not lost hope. “The government is not paying any attention to the process. The district level officials are coordinating well but we have told them that they do not have the power to reject the claims. If there are any defects they can just return the claims and inform us about the same. When we spoke to the Welfare Officer, while submitting our objections to the rejection letter, he assured us that they will resolve this issue for us,” says Sehvaniya.

In their objections submitted to the Welfare officer of the district, the community has mentioned specific provisions of the FRA to demonstrate that the district committee has no power to reject their claims. Sehvaniya explains, “We told them that you have not bothered to read or look at FRA and have just plainly rejected our claims. They had pre-decided to just reject them; had we not read through the laws, we would not have known what to do. They are referring to the T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad vs Union Of India & Ors (1997) 2 SCC 267 but the legislature has formulated FRA and we will go by the law.”

They are hopeful as they have been assured of a meeting with the District Magistrate (DM). “We will ask for a meeting with the DM soon but before that we will need to understand our rights and the law better so that we are better prepared to have a discussion. They often comment that our claims and objections and communications with them are drafted by outsiders but that is not the case, we understand the laws and the legal process and we draft by ourselves with a help in understanding our rights and laws. They tell us some defect is there in our claims so we tell them you need to assist us in understanding the law so that the process becomes easy for us,” says Sehvaniya advising caution.

When asked about what has been the overall attitude of the forest department generally, she says, “The forest department does not cooperate with us, they have stuck to their ways of filing false cases against us. We are allowed to take lakdi (firewood) but they do not let us; we tell them that it is in the law but they say they do not go by it. They also set fire in the forests sometimes which destroys the habitat for the animals. There is not one family where a member has not had a false case against them. We just want our claims to be approved so the forest department’s behavior towards us changes.”

Sehvaniya says that they do receive cooperation from the police but they are also not much aware about forest rights and the laws “so they also get stuck between us and the forest department” She also added that there are some forest officers who come on transfer and if they try to help them in any way, they get adversely affected in one way or the other.

She sounds hopeful and resilient as they are eager as a community to learn and know about their rights and follow proper legal procedure as prescribed in the FRA, to finally get their community rights.

Related:

8 years on, Tharu tribe’s struggle for land rights continues
UP: Merely 20% land rights claims approved by district committees
Forest rangers relent; release Forest Rights Committee Chairman in face of resounding dissent

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