Update Collective

An information source on people’s movements, issues and struggles from across India

Dehradun Declaration of Forest Peoples on Environment Justice

Posted by updatecollective on June,2009

DEHRADUN DECLARATION

12 June 2009

During the process of enactment of the Forests Right Act (in 2006), the National Forum for Forest People’s and Forest Workers (NFFPFW) passed two important resolutions in the second National Conference held at Ranchi:
1) Establishment of community governance over forest resources
2) To resist commodification of forests and related resources

Over the last 2-3 years, in many states including Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Maharashtra, Karnataka and West Bengal, we have taken significant steps in realising these resolutions. In many villages we have been successful in forming Forest Rights Committees on the basis of Forests Right Act (FRA). On10-12 June 2009, we forest peoples; adivasis, forest workers and other forest dwellers, from 16 states of India have converged at Dehradun, the forest capital of India – discussing, debating and uniting to send a strong message to the whole world. The following is the declaration from the conference on‘Resisting commodification of Forests; Establishing community governance over forest resources’, adopted as ‘Dehradun Declaration 2009’.

We, the forest people of the world – living in the woods, surviving on the fruits and crops, farming on the jhoom land, re-cultivating the forest land, roaming around with our herds – have occupied this land since ages. We announce loudly, in unity and solidarity that let there be no doubt on the future: we are the forests, and the forests are us and our existence is mutually dependent. The crisis faced by our forests and environment today will only intensify without us.

This is no ordinary crisis. Not merely, a climate crisis – or in your words this magnified self-created monster of a financial crisis. We believe it’s a crisis of Civilizations. It’s no ordinary clash but a fundamental clash between our knowledge systems; of being, of nature and your wisdom, technology and the demonic tendencies. Your world rests on ideas of power, territories, boundaries, profit, exploitation and oppression and you try to own everything, including Mother Nature. This is what drives your civilisation. You need this world of oppression and exploitation; to survive and feel good. If you want to include us in your world by ‘civilising’ us, we will happily choose to remain uncivilised. Call us savages, we do not care! We have learnt amidst these trees, this water, this air, and other forest beings- a life of freedom, of being without boundaries, and yet never forgetting the boundaries of nature. You need your legal monoliths, and structures of governance to attempt to tide over this crisis but for us the laws of nature, learnt and assimilated over generations are sufficient.

You talk of attaining Independence on August 15 1947… What’s that ? We, the forest people and the forests have been independent since ages. You tried enslaving us; by trapping us in your illusion that believes in converting living beings into slaves – hollow occupants of servile bodies – a life of death; by capturing our forests, establishing your false laws of oppression and exploitation – contradicting the fundamental laws of nature. We know the way you exploited and enslaved our native American comrades in other parts of the world. Let us remind you that you behaved no differently than those feudal and imperialist ancestors of yours. We, therefore, reject your unnatural law, your civilization of tyranny and cruelty. What freedom? We see no freedom, in being driven out of our forests, separated from water, land, fields, trees, air, and friendly animals, to the ecosystem to which we belong. What freedom, which doesn’t forget to chain its own brothers and sisters. False Freedom! We see no truth in a society that remains haunted by the prosperity of a few capitalists, whilst, never forgetting to oppress the workers, adivasis, dalits, women and poor of the world! We reject you!

Forest Rights Act, you need it more than us. If you think you are bestowing rights on us, then you are wrong. We have lived with these forests for ages. Our ancestors, gods, goddesses, friends and life lived in this and will continue to live here. We don’t define rights, we know what is ours and to whom we belong. We are the forests, forests are us. Out of necessity, if you want to talk the language of rights, we are ready for it. It’s your need to recognise our rights over the forests and correct the historical injustices and exploitation. However, if by granting pattas (land titles) over a portion of forest, you conspire to control, commodify and sell the rest of the forests, then you are wrong. We understand your vested intentions and are determined to save the forests from your corrupt desires of exploitation, developmentalism, ill-sighted conservation and technological fixes.

If you think the ghosts of commodity capitalism are going to chain our minds and souls for eternity, then you are mistaken. From the forests, the nature we have learnt that power is not infinite, exploitation is not infinite too. We, the labouring workers, adivasis and dalits don’t treat the forest a resource to be exploited but as something which lives and supports life.

There is a climate crisis around and no amount of free trade, capital or technology will eliminate the roots of this crisis. You forget that the crises has emanated from the way your society is structured – an edifice based on an unending desire for resources and a way of life that sees nature as an object of exploitation and extraction. Fools! You are doomed to bear the brunt and suffer the pains of your actions, but we ask you – Why must we suffer? You have intruded in our lifestyle, in the rhythm of Mother Earth. You have corrupted the environs by your vehicles, industries, arms, and development and your actions have created a crisis in our homes. You have sinned against the essence of our being, and amidst our rage and tears, we reject the basis of your being: a thought – of mistrust, of control, of vicious self-interest, of injustice, and blame.

How dare you blame us for a climate crisis? It is the product of un-natural practices, and it has devastated our lives. How could you- cut our trees unthinkingly? Temperature is increasing, rainfall is diminishing and the forests are burning- consuming themselves in pain. Now you want us out of our habitats in the name of conserving our forests! You kill, unsparingly, relish in “terrorizing” busts of tigers, decorating your mantelpiece – all pointing to your moral sensibility – and – yet you have the audacity to tell us to leave the forests so that you can protect the Tigers! What law do you know? Who are you to teach what is legal? You are illegal – contradicting the very law of nature – of coexistence. You have no solutions – you only destroy.

You may not care of our times, but, spare a thought for the coming generations, their inheritance. Do you wish to present to them a world of chaos and destruction? Are you so blinded by your greed? At least, now – in this crisis – we need to unite, all civilizations, and forest people of the world, to resolve the crisis, to restore our relationship with nature.

Today, at Dehradun, we call for and welcome the solidarity and harmony of all world’s forest people; workers, adivasis and fellow travellers, on this journey to realizing the fulfilment of our existence, in communion with our forests. We warn your civilization that we are a people, united in struggle against the structure of capitalism – of greed, thievery and profiteering. We warn the nations of the world, that you must not forget to honour our existence, or else – from deep within our hearts – we shout out loud:  NO MORE SILENCE! We will rise from the ashes of your devastating fire! To resist your order, undeterred by your traps. We will rise – a united forest people – together, in strength and solidarity, to challenge the very fabric of your civilization, and become one with nature, again!

Arise! Forest People of the World Unite! Zindabad!

National Forum of Forest Peoples and Forest Workers, India

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People’s rally against Special Economic Zone

Posted by updatecollective on April,2009

More than 25000 people took part in a rally organised by Jan Sangharsh Samiti and other groups from Chattisgarh against the  Special Economic Zone and Land acquisition. The agitation began because the farmers lands were transferred to Jindal Steel Power Limited by the Chattisgarh Government without any prior consultation with the farmers.

People  from various districts of Chattisgarh mainly from Jashpur, Raigarh, Bilaspur, Raipur, Bastar and from various other cities and states  including Ranchi, Delhi, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Uttar Pradesh gathered at Jashpur for a mass rally and public meeting on 23 March 2009.

The main issues/demands by the farmers:

  • the hydro power plant in 4 Gram panchayats, displacement due to industrialisation.
  • against Special Economic Zone Act
  • Land Acquisition without prior information and consultation from the peoples.
  • against the rehabilitation policy which is not yet declared.
  • against the violation of law and constitution by not implementing Forest Rights Act.

People assembled at Gamharia chowk and the rally took place via Collectarate office, Citi jail road, Maharaja Chowk and the public meeting was held at Balram Chowk.  Slogan like: “Loha Nahi Zameen Chahiye“,  “Jindal Bhagao Zameen Bachao” were said by the farmers.

Representatives from various organisations and inidividuals addressed the public meeting  among these some of the  representatives are: Pravin Patel -Orissa, Sudha Bharadwaj – Bilaspur, Dr. Harihar patel – Tamnar, Arti Kujur – Jharkhand, Jayant Pahira , Lakhan Sahu, Rajesh Tripathi – Raigarh, Smt. Rajim Bai – Dalit Adivasi Manch Pithora, Smt. Indu Netam – Jeevan Suraksha Sangathan Bastar, Kumud Nagdev, Gautam Bandhopadhyay – Nadi Ghati Morcha, Smt. Manju Gardia – PSA, Mamta Kujur- Adivasi Mahila Mahasangh, Ashok Chawdhury – NFFPFW and Roma- Kaimur.

See the photographs and the video of the rally below:

For more photogrpahs visit: http://picasaweb.google.co.in/romasnb/JashpurRally23rdMar2009?authkey=Gv1sRgCIHboprYg96a_AE&feat=email#

See the footage of the rally:

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The Tyranny of Internal Security

Posted by updatecollective on April,2008

Dr. Binayak Sen’s prolonges incarceration has become iconic of the way Indian State is out to snuff out all voices of dissent, to crush anyone who talks of civil liberties or human rights.It is, however, by no means a small and isolated incident. The past year has seen an alarming increase in the number of such cases across the country. From peace and civil liberties activists to journalists, from labour rights activists to those opposing the loot of people’s resources, everyone is a target now. These cases tell the story of what this ‘world’s largest democracy’ is all about. They speak of the increasing intolerance and brutality of the State and the brazenness with which it set out to crush dissent. The scant respect shown for human rights and the fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution is shocking.

Some trends are unmistakably palpable. Increasingly, activists are being imprisoned not for specific actions or crimes, but for their supposed political views. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s declaration, in April 2006, that “the problem of Naxalism is the single biggest internal security challenge ever faced by our country”, forms and important backdrop to most of these arrests. Almost all those who have been arrested, are indicted either on false charges of working for Maoists or for having Pro-Maoist or Pro-ULFA sentiments! The Government is unashamedly using the self hyped “internal security threat” as a pretext to suppress peaceful people’s struggles, to persecute human rights defenders. The on-going Salwa Judum campaign in Chhattisgarh is a horrifying example of how the Indian state is using “internal security” to justify its support what can only be described as genocide.

The charges against most of the activists and journalists are astonishingly similar – ‘sedition’,‘waging war against the state’, associating with ‘unlawful organisations’. There is a clear propensity to utilise draconian legislations such as the National Security Act (NSA), the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA) and state legislations, promulgated on similar lines, such the Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act (CSPSA) along with the with the ‘Offences against the State’ chapter of the Indian Penal Code. These criminalize perceived ‘intention’ or ‘tendency’ to disrupt law and order or association with a banned organisation, without any act actually being committed by the accused. This gives the State arbitrary powers to target anyone who questions the state, on purely subjective grounds. Further, banning organizations silences dissent and smothers varied political voices which are the very essence of democracy. Also, once a law declares all association with banned organisations as criminal, the intention of a doctor treating a patient, a journalist interviewing an activist or a civil liberties activist ascertaining jail conditions can all be construed as criminal acts.

Activists and journalists raising concerns regarding civil liberties, protesting against the plunder of people’s resources and fighting for the preservation of people’s lives and livelihoods peacefully are being ruthlessly targeted, nullifying the ideological difference between them and those fighting these issues by violent means. Binayak Sen, Mohan Rao, Arjun Samad, Saroj Mohanty, Govindan Kutty, Prashant Rahi and Santanu Sarma are just a few of them. What is at stake today is not just the right to liberty of these individuals but also the right to speech and expression and right to freedom and liberty, and above all, the right to life of every citizen of this country.

While State repression emerges as a serious challenge, the response of the diverse community of social and political activists and the large community of journalists and writers also calls for some introspection. Strong resistance on the ground by people’s movements and the tremendous political pressure have forced the government to even withdraw serious, albeit false charges, such as those under NSA on Roma last year. Why and how have we failed then to build enough political pressure in other cases? How have our responses been inadequate?

As these and several other questions and challenges loom large in front of us, we attempt chronicle some of the cases of incarceration of activists and journalists. We also briefly look at some of the draconian “security” legislations that have been employed therein in this issue of Update Collective.

Click here to read English version of Update Collective March 2008

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Forest Rights Act Dharna

Posted by updatecollective on March,2008

Tribal Forest Dwellers call indefinite protest: Forest Rights Dharna in Delhi 23rd November 07.

With every passing day there is more violence and repression in forest areas. Mine after mine is cleared and forest after forest destroyed. Meanwhile, despite more than eleven month having been passed, the scheduled tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Right) ACT, 2006 has yet to be notified.
This law is the biggest step forward for forest communities in India’s history. But at every stage,

The UPA Govt. has sought to render it toothless.

While the law is held up because it will” harm wildlife” forest destruction is accelerating at a great peace. In the since this low was passed, People continue to face evictions and inhuman violence across forest areas. Neither forest nor people are on this government’s agenda.

see the footage of the dharna below:

 

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Chengara Land Struggle

Posted by updatecollective on February,2008

The hilly terrains at the southern plantation belt of the Pathanamthitta district in Kerala reverberates with a major land struggle of an unprecedented nature involving more than 5000 families of the most deprived sections of the population – Dalits and Adivasis. These are the people left-out in the land reforms of Kerala, once lauded as a grand success. They demand land to live in and labour on.

The Sadhujana Vimochana Samyuktha Vedi-SVSV (The United Front of the Poor for Liberation) has now completed 172 days in their struggle for land. The number of huts of landless Dalits, Adivasis, and Dalit Christians have increased to around 14,000. The People in struggle continue in the same resoluteness and spirit that nothing can dissuade them from their goal i.e: land for meaningful existence.

 

  • The video A Space to live and Tu Zinda hai documents the Chengara Land struggle in Pathanamthitta Kerala. Both the videos are below:

 


Posted in Chengara, Land Struggle, Videos | 3 Comments »

The Silicosis Struggle Marches on…

Posted by updatecollective on January,2008

For more than seven years now, a resolute struggle has been going on in Delhi against Silicosis- an incurable occupational disease. In a scenario where national and international health investment is dictated by what diseases the international donors are willing to put their money in, the struggle has succeeded in bringing to the fore a serious health concern which has so far been neglected, led by the very victims of the disease.

It has highlighted the crucial issues of labour standards, occupational safety and human rights in the mining and quarrying industry. It is has also managed to engage various arms of the State – from various ministries to the NHRC and the Supreme Court- to recognise and deal with the issue. More importantly perhaps, it has been successful in exposing the policies of the State and politics of its inaction. It has succeeded in establishing that the onus of diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of victims lies on the State and the companies.

We bring you the story of Lal Kuan’s struggle against Silicosis in this issue of Update Collective.

Read the English version of Update Collective January 2008 issue here

Posted in Forest Rights Act, Lal Kuan, Narmada Bachao Andolan, Silicosis, Srikrishna Commission, Update Collective | Leave a Comment »

Urban Renewal and the Illegalisation of Poor

Posted by updatecollective on November,2007

Being re-imagined and re-designed with ambitions of becoming “world-class”, Indian cities are in the throes of change. There is no longer any space in it for the poor, the working class and their squalid settlements. Demolitions have always been tools to clear the lands and disperse the poor. However, the policy of resettlement which, no mater how imperfectly or incompletely implemented, tempered the violence of demolitions for the past few decades is also being done away with now. With “urban renewal”, as demolitions have gradually acquired the façade of legitimacy, the urban poor acquired ‘illegality’ being termed as “encroachers” on “public land”. The fundamental rights of life, livelihood, housing and shelter guaranteed constitutionally are now been reinvented and replaced by a legality that sees the urban poor as encroachers and a threat to civic existence. The language of the administration, judiciary and the political elite has changed.

Voices of the urban poor, who form majority of the urban population and are most affected by this”urban renewal” are ignored at best and brutally suppressed at worst. While the increasingly poor conditions of civic amenities in urban areas, ineffective local governments, corruption and so on remain problems that the government must deal with, the question that begs to be asked is how and for whom they are when achieved bypassing democracy and denying the majority their Fundamental and human rights? Who stands to profit?

Read the English version of Update Collective’s November 2007 issue here

Posted in DMRC, JNNURM, Update Collective, Urban Renewal | Leave a Comment »

Hunger Strike by Narmada Bachao Andolan Activists

Posted by updatecollective on November,2007

The indefinite dharna of over 5000 people demanding immediate government action for proper rehabilitation of the Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar dam affected people continues in Bhopal with fervour and strong resolve. The indefinite fast by two senior activists of Narmada Bachao Andolan – Chittaroopa Palit and Bhagwan Mukati entered its 31st day. Their health is showing decline but their morale and resolve to fight for the just rights of proper rehabilitation for the affected population continues undaunted.

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Dalit Arthik Adhikar Andolan

Posted by updatecollective on October,2007

Agenda- to make visibility of non allocation of Scheduled caste sub plan The proportion of plan allocation earmarked for SCs is far below as per the proportion of Dalit population in the total population of the country. In the Union Budget 2007-08, out of Rs. 32,816 Crore meant for SCSP, SCs have been deprived of Rs. 20280 Crore. In each year a similar denial has been taking place for over 25 years. Similar is the case with the Scheduled Tribes in our country.


Proper allocation and utilization of this amount would have ensured that in this last 25 years, poverty would have been eradicated in our country — with a house, higher education, healthy environment, employment and land or source of livelihood to all those who are below poverty line!
We condemn this denial of right to development, right to budgetary share as citizens of this country!

Watch the video of the dharna below:

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A Dalit Women in Sonebhadra, Uttar Pradesh

Posted by updatecollective on October,2007

Uttar Pradesh’s Sonebhadra district has become the epicenter of a major land rights struggle, especially after police repression and the arrest of several activists of the Kaimur Kshetra Majdoor Mahila Kisan Sangarsh Samiti (KKMMKSS) under the draconian National Security Act. The KKMMKSS won a land mark victory, not just for the local movement but also for land struggles across the country, when due to the strong and persistent political pressure created by it the Mayawati Government was forced to withdraw charges on activists under the draconian National Security Act within 10 days. In a historic decision, the state government has also agreed to the demand of the Kaimur Samiti for land distribution to Dalit and Adivasi families.

For several years now the Kaimur region and several districts of eastern Uttar Pradesh have been the focus of a struggle between the Forest Department and the forest dwellers, mostly landless Adivasis and Dalits for the return of the land that the local community claims as their traditional gram samaj land, been illegally taken over by the Forest Department. The KKMMKSS, a movement led by women, Dalit and Adivasis, has been at the forefront of this struggle. Repeated protests and clashes have ensued, while the Forest Department has refused to negotiate the issue or recognize the rights of local communities.

Since the enactment of the Forest Rights Act in December 2006, tension between the officials of the forest department and local organizations heightened with the forest department in collusion with the local police issuing threats and harassing innocent people. Their repeated statements that the Forest Rights Act is still not in place are actually contempt of the Parliament

The video below shows a Dalit Women giving her statement:

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