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iger Reserve

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However, the conflict continues in Madhya Pradesh, with news suggesting that the Congress Party in Chhindwara (former Environment Minister Kamal Nath's constituency) had promised the fishing mafia of Nagpur unbridled access to the Pench reservoir. The matter has actually reached the Supreme Court which issued very strict orders allowing only 300 or so fishing licences to be issued to local villagers, for fixed routes and for fixed times.

However, it is reported that no less than 1000 people are being pushed into the National Park from all sides to fish, and they camp there for days on end. This appears to be a clear contempt of court, and NGOs have demanded that the concerned M.P. government officials should go to jail for this.

The issue is complicated by the fact that a number of villagers are dependent on fishing for their economic livelihood, and the above mentioned case in the Supreme Court had considered their needs. However, clearly vested commercial interests are exploiting the situation, and have thwarted NGO attempts at reconciling the genuine livelihood interests of villagers with the conservation values of Pench.

Contact : Bittu Sahgal, Sanctuary Magazine, 602 Maker Chambers V, Nariman Point, Mumbai 400 021. Tel: 91-22-283 0061; Fax : 287 4380. Email: bittu@giasbm01.vsnl.net.in

MAHARASHTRA

Mining at Radhanagari Sanctuary A Division Bench of the Bombay High Court has restrained the Indian Aluminium Co. Ltd (INDAL) from carrying out any mining activity within the Radhanagari Bison Sanctuary in District Kolhapur, in a writ petition filed by the Bombay Environmental Action Group. Armed with a lower court order, INDAL has earlier stripped the protective cover from a key plateau in the Sanctuary, using bulldozers. It is reported that, thus far, not one truck of bauxite has actually been smelted by the company.

Radhanagari Sanctuary contains many endemic and rare plants, insects, birds, and mega-fauna including leopard, gaur (Bos gaurus) and tiger. A proposal is being readied by a special investigative team to propose this vital Western Ghats forest as a Project Tiger Reserve.

Meanwhile, INDAL and researcher Sharad Subramanyan have stated that the mined area is outside the current sanctuary limits, and even if the sanctuary is extended as proposed to include this area, the mine will be 8 km. from the core area. They also state that the mining technology used will cause minimal disturbance to the area. Activists from Kolhapur and Bombay maintain, however, that the mining poses a serious hazard, not just because of the actual mining activity but also because of the access roads and other associated activities. The High Court will hear the matter further before final judgement is passed.

sContact: Bittu Sahgal, see MP above. Debi Goenka, Bombay Environmental Action Group, c/o 4 Kurla Industrial Estate LBS Marg Mumbai 400086 India

Tel: 91-22-5700638 Telefax: 91-22-5701459

e-mail: debi@ilbom.ernet.in

Sources: Postings by Bittu Sahgal and others, and subsequent discussion between them and Sharad Subramanyan, on nathistory-india@lists.princeton.edu, Feb-March 1998.

Meeting on Communities in Melghat Tiger Reserve

Melghat Tiger Reserve is once again in the centre of controversy, following the state government's zealous drive to build or tar roads throughout the Reserve, ostensibly as a response to NGO demands for amenities to villages affected by malnutrition deaths last year. Conservationists have opposed this move, fearing that it will only open the area to further commercial exploitation, and arguing that tribals outside the Reserve are more affected by malnutrition than those within, who have adequate forest resources to survive on.

The NGO Co-ordination Committee (the NGO CC), of NGOs working with communities living in and around the Reserve, held a meeting on 28th January, 1998, at Chikhaldara inside the Reserve. While this was one of their regular meetings to assess the state of their work on issues such as malnutrition, they had also invited conservationists to discuss the above controversies. NGOs present at the meeting included YUVA Nagpur, Oxfam Nagpur, Koro Kora, ADIM, Utkarsh, Upekshit, Apeksha Home Society, Kal ke Liye, Prem, Sarita, Human Rights Law Network, Kalpavriksh, and Amravati Nature Conservation Society. The discussions brought out the following main points:

(i) The serious communication gap between wildlifers and human rights activists on the status of communities inside the Reserve must be bridged with regular correspondence and meetings.

(ii) Community-based NGOs clarified that they did not want major tarred roads through the Reserve, but rather 'traditional' approach paths, to ensure access for villagers especially in the difficult monsoon months.

(iii) Other developmental amenities being demanded included medical and educational facilities; however, NGOs agreed that they should try to build on local health and learning traditions and only supplement these with allopathic and formal educational systems where necessary.

(iv) On the proposed hydro-electricity dam proposed on the edge of the Reserve, the NGOs were eager to fight against it.

(v) There was general agreement that forced relocation was unacceptable, nor was a situation where villagers are so cut off from basic amenities that they are forced to ask for relocation.

(vi) Community-based NGOs agreed to work out, with the 22 villages inside the Reserve, joint management plans which would help to protect the forests and wildlife as also meet livelihood requirements.

(vii) To this end, a joint statement between conservationists and human rights organisations would be worked on; the Melghat NGOs would discuss this in their next meeting.

(viii) The government would be jointly pressurised to release all information relevant to Melghat; urban NGOs would help local groups to obtain such information.

(ix) The Amravati Nature Conservation Society member requested NGO members to report poaching cases to him, especially where forest staff were involved; he also promised immediate payment of compensation for cattle kills, using his position as Honorary Wildlife Warden for Amravati district.

Contact: Datta Patil, YUVA Nagpur, 295 Abhyankar Nagar, Nagpur 440 010, Maharashtra. Tel/Fax: 91-712-54 3561; Ashish Kothari, at editorial address; Bittu Sahgal, see MP above.

Rehekuri Blackbuck Sanctuary

The Maharashtra government has declared 217.30 hectares of reserve forest sat Rehekuri in District Ahmednagar as a sanctuary for the endangered Blackbuck, locally known as 'Kalvit'.

The wildlife authorities had initiated a project with a small Blackbuck population (15) in the 1980s; the population has shot up to about 400. The Blackbuck, found only in India, has suffered a serious decline in numbers all over the country in the past few decades. According to a forest range officer of the sanctuary, a population of 40 lakhs in the 19th century has recently receded to 4 lakhs (Editorial note: the basis for these figures, which seem grossly exaggerated, is unclear). He attributes illegal poaching by tribals as one of the reasons for this considerable reduction in the Blackbuck population.

Another threat to the animal was from wolves and dogs which hunt it, taking sa heavy toll of fawns.

These factors led the government to take the decision to declare Rehekuri as a sanctuary. Simultaneously Ramling-Ghat in Beed district and an area in Akola district have also been declared as sanctuaries. Protection, food, water and prevention of diseases, research and counting process are some of the major responsibilities of the officials. More than 15 forest guards patrol the sanctuary. The state government has also made accommodation facilities to promote eco-tourism.

Source : Press Trust of India. Rehekuri - A Sanctuary for Black Bucks. Indian Express 25/3/98.

ORISSA

Rare migratory birds sighted at Chilka

Ornithologists have sighted some rare migratory birds this winter in the Chilka lake, a bird sanctuary and one of the country's largest waterfowl habitats. Baikal teal (Anas formosa), the resident bird of lake Baikal in northern Asia, was found in the 'Nalaban' for the first time this year.

About two million birds had arrived at the lake since October 18, 1997. The influx which continued till the second week of January, was expected to end now, and the winged visitors have started leaving at the first hint of summer towards the end of February or early March.

Source : Deccan Herald, Jan.22, 1998 (PTI), reported in nathistory-india@lists.princeton.edu.

TAMIL NADU

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