We
value employment industry provides but dismiss the employment in the
livelihoods of poor people.
Jambudwip is a tiny dot in the Bay of Bengal. A few years ago, it hit
headlines when wildlife activists dragged fishermen, who used the
landmass to dry their fish, to the Supreme Court. A case was filed
regarding ‘encroachment’ of this island, partly covered by mangroves.
The apex court’s central empowered committee (CEC), which advises it in
all forest matters, got into the act. Its report to the court was
clear: Fish drying was a non-forest activity, so disallowed under the
Forest Conservation Act (1980).
The fishermen appealed. They had to go out into the open sea for days,
putting life on hold and everything they had at risk. Jambudwip was a
convenient transit camp; they used this nearest landmass, with a
natural harbour, only to dry fish. They had no fancy refrigeration;
this was the only way they could preserve fish for sale in the
mainland. Their practices were sustainable — fishing nets were
handcrafted to catch only the adult fish, leaving the small to the sea.
They used the sun to dry fish. They took from nature only what they
needed.
The fishermen also put forward a plan — use the money we pay for
permits to the forest department to plant mangroves; create a
sustainable management plan for the island; restrict boat numbers.
Sensible solutions. But “No”, said the CEC. The court concurred. In one
stroke, the livelihood of over 10,000 people engaged in fishing,
drying, transporting and selling fish ended.
Was it a victory for conservation?
Cut now to another ‘forest case’. Same court, same committee. This
time, though, the matter concerned a very powerful industrial house —
Sterlite Industries, the subsidiary of London-based Vedanta plc — which
wanted some 700 hectare of rich, much more bio-diverse and valuable
forest for its bauxite mine. This time, the decision was different.
Court and committee agreed to a compromise. The company could get the
forest, but would have to pay for the value of the forest to be
destroyed — Rs 55 crore, paltry when you think of the wildlife and the
priceless watershed value of this forest, which feeds two rivers and
countless streams of the region. It would also have to pay another Rs
50 crore for a wildlife management plan. And of course, it would only
do ‘sustainable’ mining. No questions were asked on how ripping the top
of a hill and dumping three tonnes of waste for every tonne of bauxite
mined in a high rainfall area could be sustainable.
In this case, the apex court was possibly conscious that it could not
hold up ‘development’, and opted for a middle path. So let us move back
in time. Same committee, same court. Some years ago, the committee had
decided that no non-forest activity would be allowed in any national
park or sanctuary, not even removing dead or decaying trees, grasses or
drift wood. In the sanctuary of Kumbalgarh, in Rajasthan, this order
was a death-knell for camels, which used the area, for three monsoon
months, to graze. No appeal worked. Conservation science itself proved
grazing benefited the sanctuary in these months. But “No”, said the
committee. “No”, said the court.
Back to the present. Same committee. Same court. The matter is of
diamond mining in the core area of the Panna national park, where
tigers breed. The decision: Mining to continue in the protected
reserve; company to pay some 5 per cent of its capital cost and the net
present value of the forests it would destroy. Interestingly, no
deadline has been given for closure of the mine, which is a non-forest
activity in protected core of the park.
These cases are not just about power and powerlessness. They are about
our understanding of what works for conservation and what is good for
development. It is clear we cannot comprehend why livelihoods of the
poor are important. In our view, these are both destructive of the
environment and dispensible. So, we value the ‘employment’ (meagre by
any standards) modern industry will provide, but dismiss the
employment, much larger in numbers, in livelihoods.
We also believe modern industry, which by its very nature is extractive
and destructive of resources, can be made sustainable. But we cannot
believe the economies of the poor, which do not have such huge
footprints to begin with, can be managed for sustainability. It is
either our contempt for their practices or for the people, or both. In
this way, increasingly, conservation has become a mere money game. If
you can pay, you can cut the forest, destroy the wildlife. No forest is
so priceless it cannot be cut, or land so inviolate it cannot be had.
Not by the poor, because they cannot pay and in any case their use is
destructive and valueless. But by the rich.
Whatever happened to our quality of mercy?
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