Published: Friday, Aug 3, 2012, 16:34 IST
By DNA Correspondent | Place: Ahmedabad | Agency: DNA
Did the forest department purposely turn a blind eye to the fact that
Maldharis relocated from the Gir Sanctuary had been selling their land
and returning to the sanctuary? Prima facie it seems it was indeed the
case. For, there were several indications regarding the same, with even
the CAG too pointing out irregularities in the matter.
A 2010 CAG report highlighted that between 1972 and 1978, 588
families were shifted out of the Gir protected area. The report stated
that each relocated family was given eight acres of cultivable and
grazing land, 600 sq meters of residential plot and Rs6,050. The report
said that a total of 257 families were not shifted.
Of the 588
families that were relocated, 87 returned to the forests and began
residing there with the authorization in the protected area, the report
further said. According to the CAG report, adequate steps to prevent
relocated Maldhari families from returning to the protected area were
not taken.
“Consequently, the expenditure that was incurred on
their earlier relocation towards farm lands, housing plots and cash,
proved to be infructuous,” the report had then commented. A forest
official, in know of the situation said that several of the Maldhari
families that were relocated had indeed returned to the forest. “It is a
known fact among the forest department and Gir officials that some of
the relocated Maldharis had returned to the sanctuary and were living
there,” said the official.
With the Maldharis returning, shouldn’t
the officials have asked what happened to the land given to them?
Apparently nobody bothered to look into the question with the result
that several the community continued to sell their land to third
parties. Even the CAG report apparently did not act as a wake up call.
The matter only came to light after one Anil Chudasama filed a petition
in the HC challenging the forest departments’ decision not to let him
farm on a piece of land he bought from a Maldhari.
Chudasama had
bought the land near Mendarada taluka from a Maldhari who was given the
plot by government in 1982. In his affidavit he had alleged that the
forest dept officials from time to time fined the Maldharis who had
returned to Gir but did not bother to prosecute them. The Gir and its
surrounding areas, is home to 411 lions as per the last census.
Source: http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_return-of-the-maldharis-did-forest-dept-know-the-secret_1723541
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