The Lost World
Prerna Singh Bindra,
2006 will go down as the year that formally
marked the beginning of the end of India's rich natural
heritage
It's the season of good cheer, my apologies
for injecting a grim note amid all this joy and bonhomie, but
2006 was possibly the worst year for India's wildlife and shall
be remembered as the year when the end began. The beginning of
the end of India's amazing bio-diversity, of wild animals like
the Royal Bengal tiger, the Asian elephant and "lesser"
creatures like the hangul, gharial, and the Malabar banded
swallowtail - a rare endemic butterfly of the Western Ghats.
2006 will mark the end of India as a nation that leads in the
battle of wildlife conservation.
Let me quickly recall the news that filtered
in only earlier this month. In Bokulaguri in Assam, a tiger was
hacked, yes, hacked to death. One does not know the gory
details, but it appears that the tiger had become a "menace" in
the surrounding villages. Why had it become one? It's the same
old story - its forests have been fragmented, degraded,
destroyed to be replaced by agricultural land and human
habitation. With decline in the numbers of its natural prey, the
tiger in turn invaded human territory and became a victim of
man's rage - a classic, tragic case of man-animal conflict,
perhaps the most severe problem that confronts wildlife not just
in India, but across the world, as humans encroach into forests
which shrink till the wilderness becomes a thing of the past.
Then, a second hapless tiger fell to the
poacher - the other big threat that has brought many creatures
to the brink of extinction - in Kanha, feted as the best reserve
of the country in a recent study by the World Conservation
Union. This tiger was photographed by a tourist limping in the
forest, his leg caught in a steel trap, the trap's jaws cutting,
bruising, tearing at his flesh and bone. Does this tragic story
ring a bell? In June 2002, a tiger had been filmed limping
around in Nagarhole National Park. It was tranquilized, its leg
chopped off and the once wild animal now spends time in
captivity in Mysore. Great, isn't it, that the poor creature was
spared the agony of death and that he wasn't skinned, chopped
and sold in the market? Yet, I do not applaud, for what right do
we have to condemn a free spirit to a life behind bars?
Another horror story filtered in from Jammu
and Kashmir. A Hindi news channel brought into our drawing rooms
a horrific tale of a rare Himalayan black bear being burnt
alive. A group of villagers crowded around the bear, and stoned
and set it on fire. Black bears are critically endangered,
protected under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act. It's
shocking, our increasing intolerance towards wild creatures and
our callous attitude, but as deforestation and consequently
man-animal conflict increases, the antipathy can only grow. The
battle lines have been drawn between man and beast; need I say
who will be the winner?
There are other tragedies that dot the year.
We began with Orissa's elephant carnage. Killing elephants for
ivory, and for revenge for intruding into human habitation, has
hit an all time high in the state. More than 30 elephants were
killed from April to November this year. Nine elephants that
were poached have been discovered just in October from various
parts of the state. Most of these were slaughtered for their
tusks, which were dismembered from the body. There is more
happening in Orissa when it comes to wildlife and intolerance.
The coastal region of Gahirmatha is one of the world's only
three nesting sites for the rare Olive Ridley turtle. Lakhs of
turtles come to mate and nest along this coast, and thousands
meet a brutal end. Well over a hundred thousand have died in the
past decade. Already seriously threatened by trawlers, the
proposed Dhamra port is another immediate and very serious worry
for what is believed to be the largest turtle rookery in the
world. Orissa is expanding another 13 ports, including Posco at
Paradip, along the rivers and coasts. Reliance's offshore
drilling project falls plumb in the middle of the route the
turtles take to Gahirmatha.
Simlipal, Orissa's lone tiger reserve, is
said to have about a hundred tigers since the past decade. But
earlier this year, a team appointed to estimate tiger and prey
base numbers came back with distressing preliminary reports
which made even 20 to 25 tigers an optimistic guess. Then
mining, industry and unplanned development continue to break
forest and environmental laws to plunder Orissa's - and
neighbouring Jharkhand's - already fragmented forests.
The Great Indian bustard is critically
endangered with no more than 500 remaining. So desperate is the
situation in Madhya Pradesh - where there has been no report of
the sighting of the bird in the Ghatigaon and Karera wildlife
sanctuaries for the last one year - that the government even
announced rewards of Rs 1,000, Rs 2,000 and Rs 8,000
respectively to anyone who was able to show a bustard, its eggs
or its chicks.
Another shocker is the gharial: with numbers
estimated at 200, it is among India's most endangered animals
today. Initial reports of the Crocodile Specialist Group of the
World Conservation Union estimate that areas once occupied by
the gharial have shrunk by over 98 per cent. Gharials were once
common in the Chambal river; today, you would be hard put to
spot a single one. Sand mining to feed the construction boom in
cities like Delhi and Agra has destroyed their basking and
nesting sites, and there are a lot "accidental" deaths with
gharials getting stuck in fishing nets and caught in vicious
hooks used to illegally poach freshwater turtles. Lawlessness in
the region makes patrolling and protection difficult and of
course, the gharial is killed for its skin, coveted in the
fashion industry for wallets, purses, coats and shoes.
Furthermore, we do not realise that the gharial needs free
flowing waters, clean rivers and unfettered sandy banks - in
short intact, protected river habitats crucial not only for the
survival of gharials, rare freshwater dolphins and turtles, but
also for humans, for where would we be without clean rivers and
water?
It is the forests that feed our rivers, and
forests that form the catchments of a majority of India's great
rivers. When we destroy forests, we are not just condemning the
creatures that thrive within, but ourselves. This is a simple
truth, but apparently very difficult for us to grasp and
assimilate, for we are bent upon destroying the forests, and so
us.
These are just a few tragedies that took
place this year. However, no development of 2006 is more
catastrophic for the wildlife world than the Scheduled Tribes
and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest
Rights) Bill, 2006, passed in Parliament in mid-December. In my
writings, I have described this bill as the most destructive and
damaging piece of legislation to have been passed since
Independence, and have explained why. The land rights bill will
kill India's wild animals, its forests, and us. Future
generations will remember this, and not forgive the Manmohan
Singh Government for doling out our natural heritage to
forest-dwellers to retain their vote banks.
So what has this bill done? It's just
come into public domain, but it basically provides for forest
land to pass into private ownership. Dwellers occupying forest
lands as on December 5, 2005 will be given that land, and the
catastrophic impact this redistribution of land will have on the
country's ecology surpasses imagination. With private ownership,
the goals will shift from conservation to economics - why would
a man protect a tree if he can sell the wood for good cash in
the market? Why would a forest dweller protect a tiger, which
may prey upon his cattle, if he gets good money for its skin,
bones and other derivatives? Do we expect people and tigers to
live together in the forest? It is a marriage doomed from the
start. The tiger is a carnivore and it will attack livestock
and, driven by hunger because of depleting prey numbers (thanks
to a plundered habitat), it will attack man. There is no
example, worldwide, of large carnivores co-existing peacefully
with humans. Of course, we need only worry about this
eventuality till the time tigers and leopards survive.
So, will we "develop" forests, build roads,
schools and hospitals - for this what tribals need - and then
construct theatres and shopping complexes? For, good living is
what the tribal youth of today aspires. If not, then do we not
deny them their basic rights?
Will the tribal benefit? Your guess is as
good as mine. History shows that these men and women are
exploited and rarely empowered. Furthermore, chances are that
the land mafia will move in.
An India shorn of its wilderness, with no
tigers, no elephants, no bears and no animals roaming free and
wild is not an India I would want to grow old in.
I wonder, too, at the ease with which the
bill was passed. I do not hear a murmur of protest. NGOs which
scream out loud against Salman Khan's and Pataudi's hunting
trips (make no mistake, I am glad they are doing this - those
who break the law must be punished), have maintained an eerie
silence over a bill which will destroy India's forest in one
blow. There are no demonstrations, no protests, no morchas.
Why hasn't anybody gone to court challenging this dangerous law?
The end of a year and the beginning of a new
one is a time to reflect, and I wonder if those who sit in power
realize the import of their actions. We, and future generations,
will pay for their greed and folly. It strikes me that it is
just as well that we will lose our wildlife, for perhaps we do
not deserve such wealth at all.