I Indien skaber et tigerreservat konflikt mellem myndighederne og lokale stammer, da det er besluttet at området skal renses for menneskelig beboelse. Trods desperate forsøg på at blive på deres land, anses beboerne som en trussel for naturen og dyrelivet og må flytte.
Survival International – a global movement for tribal people’s rights – has received disturbing reports that several tribal villages are facing imminent eviction from Tiger Reserves in Odisha in eastern India, despite the villagers’ desperate appeal to stay on the land and to involve them in protecting the forest, writes the international NGO on its website Tuesday.
Testimony obtained by Survival shows that tribes in Similipal Tiger Reserve, who have been living with the forest’s wildlife for generations, are determined to stay on their land, but have been facing years of harassment and pressure from forest guards to force them out of the reserve.
A Munda man from Jamunagarh, one of the villages slated for eviction, told Survival, ‘We are very much dependent on the forest…We don’t have any conflict with the wildlife. We don’t hunt or cut down trees. If we leave we will face a lot of hardship… Please don’t displace us!’
Tre ud af seks landsbyer allerede flyttet
In potential breach of the law, wildlife authorities in Odisha are determined to clear ‘core areas’ inside Tiger Reserves of all human habitation. Three out of six villages have already been removed from Similipal and eviction plans are currently underway in the neighboring Satkosia Tiger Reserve.
During the most recent eviction from Similipal in December 2013, 32 families of the Khadia tribe were moved to a resettlement village outside of Similipal and only received a fraction of the compensation they were promised.
Sheltering under plastic sheets on a tiny patch of land, the tribe is now entirely dependent on government handouts for their survival.
Local media reports heralded the December eviction as a ‘major success’ which will make further relocations ‘easy’. But Munda from Jamunagarh were horrified by conditions at the resettlement site, saying, ’We have been there. Seeing their condition made my heart cry. Please don’t displace us.’
National lov om erstating ved tvangsflytning ignoreres
According to Indian law, the villagers’ consent needs to be obtained and their claims to their forest land processed before such resettlements can go ahead.
But their rights are ignored and communities are worn down with harassment and promises of money, food, livestock and land – most of which never materialises.
As the original conservationists, tribal peoples inhabit the world’s most biologically diverse regions – and it is often because they have protected their fragile environments that the wildlife has managed to survive.
But India’s authorities seem intent on creating human-free zones inside tiger reserves around the nation.
Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said Tuesday: ‘Tribal peoples are usually the best conservationists. In spite of this, in many places around the world they are being illegally evicted from their lands in the name of ‘conservation’.
Nowhere is this more blatant than in reserves where people who have lived alongside wildlife for generations are kicked out to make way for busloads of tourists and the roads and infrastructure they demand.
It’s not about conservation, it’s about others profiting from tribal lands.’