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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Legal fight over India forest rights drags on

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Rina Chandran -


Millions of indigenous people face eviction in India after states stopped processing new land claims under a law that is being challenged in the country’s highest court, land and human rights advocates warned on Friday. Earlier this year, India’s Supreme Court stayed its ruling that ordered the eviction of millions of indigenous people whose land claims were rejected, and directed 21 states to file affidavits with details on how they had processed claims.


Since then, many of these states had become bogged down with the legal challenge to the Forest Rights Act (FRA), and now lacked the resources to process fresh land claims, said Tushar Dash, a forest rights activist. “With these states fully engaged in re-examining the claims, no new claims are being processed, and nor are states training local and district officials to ensure claims are processed in the right manner,” Dash said.


“The ongoing case is a big risk to the implementation of FRA, with the fate of millions hanging in the balance,” he said. India’s 104 million tribal people — also known as Adivasis, or “original inhabitants” — make up less than 10 per cent of the country’s population, and are among its most impoverished.


The FRA, passed in 2006, aimed to improve their lives by recognising the right of at least 150 million people to inhabit and live off about 40 million hectares of forest land.


But states have been slow to implement the law, and more than half the land claims were rejected, often on flimsy grounds, indigenous activists said.


Seventeen states have filed affidavits with the Supreme Court on how they processed FRA claims, with several stating that local officials did not follow due process in rejecting claims, according to land rights campaigners who asked not to be named as they were not authorised to see the affidavits.


“Claims were wrongly rejected, claimants were not told why they were rejected or given time to appeal, as required by the law,” said Dash, speaking on the sidelines of a land forum in Udaipur city in Rajasthan state. In Rajasthan, one of 21 states named in the court order, authorities were following due process, said Qummer Choudhary, chief of Udaipur city’s district council.


“If the law is not being implemented, I urge you to go to the local official or the district official and demand implementation because it is your right,” he told indigenous representatives at the forum.


The case against the FRA was brought by a group of conservationists and wildlife organisations who said it had led to fragmentation of forests, threatening biodiversity and wildlife, and causing deforestation. — Thomson Reuters Foundation


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