Wizened old Jidemadamma has to depend
on her neighbours for meals. Her son and daughter-in-law have gone to
Kodagu to collect pepper from trees and will not be back before two
weeks. “They took the children along because I cannot move around much.
Earlier, all of us stayed together here. Now there is nobody,” says the
septuagenarian, sitting outside her hut in Kaneri Colony, one of the 62
hamlets in Biligiri Rangaswamy Temple (BRT) Wildlife Sanctuary in
southern Karnataka.
Jidemadamma is among the few Soligas, an indigenous community,
left in the hamlet. Soligas, literally meaning the “bamboo children”,
are known for their environment-friendly practices and sustainable
collection of minor forest produce. But most have migrated in search of
livelihood since the government banned collection of non-timber forest
produce—honey, lichen, amla, soapberry and soapnut—their main source of
income, about two years ago. Same is the story in other hamlets inside
the sanctuary in the Western Ghats.
Migration is happening at a time the Soligas should be returning home,
for good. The Scheduled Tribes and other Traditional Forest Dwellers
(Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006, recognizing tribals’ rights
over forests, was notified on January 1, 2007. “We thought once the act
is in place our troubles will cease and people will come back, but
there has been no change,” says C Madhegowda, who works with the Ashoka
Trust for Research in Ecology and Environment (ATREE) and is the first
post-graduate among Soligas.
The ban on commercial use of non-timber forest produce was
introduced in 2004 under the Wild Life (Protection) Amendment Act,
2002, but the Soligas continued collecting minor forest produce under
Large Adivasi Multi-Purpose Societies until April 2006 because there
was confusion whether the activity fell within the definition of
“commercial” (see ‘Stop trade’, Down To Earth, September 30, 2004).
The produce collected by tribals was sold through multi-purpose
societies in BRT, Chamarajanagar and Hanur to the highest bidder. There
are some 16,000 people in the sanctuary’s core area who depended on
selling forest produce and subsistence agriculture. They are migrating
on a large scale.
Uprooted
In Puranipur hamlet, 80 of 110 families have migrated. Most of them
either work in coffee and pepper plantations or as contract labourers
in farms and at construction sites in Kodagu, Wayanad in Kerala and as
far as 150 km away in Tirupur and
Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu. “In Kuntguri village on the foothills,
tribals have permanently shifted to contract labour in the farms,” says
Sidappa Shetty of ATREE who has been working in the area for 12 years.
Twice a week both my sons pluck weeds on the roadside for the forest
department. Other days, they go to Chamarajanagar to work as coolies or
construction labourers. Half the wages go in travelling expense. It is
only because we have a coffee plantation, which buttresses our earning
by Rs 4,000 a year, that we are able to survive,” says Bummana
Madhegowda of Muthugade Gadde.
“Sale of forest produce used to constitute about 60 per cent of our
income and a person could earn up to Rs 12,000 a year from it.
Agriculture here is only for subsistence,” adds C Madhegowda of ATREE.
Soligas shrugged
The Soligas have for years monitored forest resources to determine
what, how and when to harvest. They are not interested in it anymore.
The adivasi societies and the Vivekananda Girijana Kalyan Kendra
(VGKK), an NGO that has been working with the Soligas for 30 years, had
evolved a system of participatory resource mapping. “The purpose of the
participatory system is to keep track of resources over time and space,
and to monitor not only available stocks, but also regenerative
capacity of trees and potential threats to resources,” says Shetty in
his study of the region. So during extraction of amla the tribals would
remove hemiparasites, plants that partly obtain nourishment from their
hosts, from trees. But since it did not happen this year, there were a
lot of dead trees.
The tribals have also stopped helping the forest department in checking
forest fires and in March 2007 there was a big fire in the sanctuary
that took the department about 10 days to douse. The fire was blamed on
tribals who wanted to revoke the ban on commercial extraction of forest
produce. A case was registered against 28 tribals, says C Madhegowda.
According to H Sudarshan, honorary secretary of VGKK, the fire was
partly due to lack of vigilance by tribals. “The tribals played an
important role in controlling big fires. The forest department employs
20-25 of them as fire watchers every year. This year the Soligas did
not bother to check fires. Besides, very few people were employed for
fire-prevention,” he says.
Lack of tribals’ cooperation is also telling on trees and
wildlife. Unchecked lantana has inhibited the growth of kidiya trees,
on which elephants feed, and there have been instances of elephants
rampaging and destroying whatever small crops people have. “My husband
Ramegowda has gone to Kodagu for coffee harvest. Here, too, we grow
coffee, ragi and bananas. But three days ago, an elephant trampled the
crops. Had it not been for our neighbours who alerted us that night, it
would have destroyed our hut,” says Nanjamma of Kaneri Colony.
Long wait
VGKK’s honey and pickle processing units in the region are not getting
enough honey and amla. “There have also been instances of villagers
selling honey to tourists illegally and we will not be able to control
them for long if the ban continues,” warns C Madhegowda.
On January 24, about 700 tribals held a protest meeting in Bangalore.
“The governor assured us that a committee would be formed with forest
officers and tribal leaders to set conditions for implementation of the
forest rights act, but gave no date,” says C Madhegowda. The forest
department says it will take some time to implement the act. “After
notification, it takes time to constitute various committees and decide
upon the modalities,” says R Raju, deputy conservator of forests,
Wildlife Division, Chamarajanagar.
Till then, Jidemadamma will have to stay alone.
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