Tribal Act is law of land, implement it now, says CPI
D Raja describes the failure to notify the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) as a betrayal of the people.
The Act was passed last winter. Government sources, who said the notification was finalised this July, confirmed that the government is facing stiff resistance from the Congress president and wildlife enthusiasts close to her.
The Left, which rammed in the point that the government was defying Parliament by not notifying an Act passed nearly a year ago, alleged that attempts are underway to weaken the law.
CPI’s D Raja, who sought the prime minister’s intervention, described the failure of the government to notify the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) as a betrayal of the people. “Most remarkable of all is the opposition to this Act by some individuals on grounds of wildlife conservation. It is extraordinary how a government that has weakened all environmental and social regulations for private companies suddenly discovers environmental values when it comes to the rights of the poor,” Mr Raja said.
The CPI MP attacked wildlife conservationists for opposing the Act. “After Parliament passed the Act, it is the law of the land. It is not open to the government to undermine it and allow it to be rendered null and void by evictions. The government must ensure that the Act is not sabotaged,” he said.
The Act aims at giving Scheduled Tribes living in forests and other tribals who have been living in forests for three generations the right to be entitled to four hectares, where they can cultivate. Though July 31 was the deadline for comments on the Draft Rules, the Act is yet to be notified and rules finalised. The Committee for Drafting Rules was formed in March, 2007, three months after the bill was passed. The Draft Rules were put on the website on June 19.
Mr Raja also said delay in notifying it was causing unrest among people facing repression and brutal violence in various parts of the country. He said cases of uprooting of villagers have taken place in Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh and Gujarat. “These evictions are clearly aimed at removing people before the Act comes into force — a blatant fraud on the legislation and on Parliament,” Mr Raja said in a letter to the prime minister.
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