Profile: Forest rights victoryIndia passes landmark human rights bill for the country’s indigenous people For most of India’s indigenous populations, every day is a fight for basic survival and legal and social acceptance. Their social status—determined at birth by an illegal but deeply entrenched Hindu caste system—is used to deny their basic rights and keeps tens of millions of indigenous families without electricity, running water, schools, access to health care, and little chance to escape crushing poverty. India’s indigenous people live in a constant fear of having the land on which they and their ancestors have lived taken away. After India’s indepen Out of the more than 80 million indigenous people in India, an estimated 40-50 million of India’s poorest indigenous people live in rural areas under such circumstances. In the photo to the right: indigenous people gather to demand that the Indian state give them legal title to the land their ancestors have inhabited for hundreds of years. Without legal title, they are often treated as “encroachers” on their own land. Over the past decade, Fund grantees, DISHA (in Gujarat), ASTHA (in Rajasthan) and Yakshi (in Andhra Pradesh), other activists, and politicians have galvanized tens of thousands of India’s indigenous people in a campaign to defend their rights and dignity, and eventually moved the national legislature to pass the landmark “Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights)” Bill, which took effect on January 2, 2007. The law was a culmination of a decade-long and persistent struggle. Indigenous rights activists began with local protests, meticulously documented the widespread abuses, tirelessly press The law protects the rights of India’s forest dwellers to their homeland and livelihoods, and dramatically strengthens the rights of the country’s indigenous peoples (“scheduled tribes” as they are known in India) and other fore In the photo to the right: indigenous people in the Northeastern “tribal belt” of Gujarat celebrate the landmark victory that enshrined their rights to land and livelihood with a week-long celebration. The next step for our grantees will be enforcement of the law. Currently, thousands of indigenous families and forest dwellers are being evicted or live under threat of eviction across a rapidly industrializing India. Mass evictions are being fueled by corporations and government officials eager to control their valuable land. While the tribal population now has a clear means for defending their rights, activists predict that vested interests will attempt to derail the law’s implementation and weaken its provisions. The next battle for the human rights movement is to make sure that the law makes a difference in the lives of the millions of poor people across India. This involves an investment in educating indigenous communities about the new law and its provisions, conditions, and rules, challenging violations of the forest rights bill, and fostering public campaigns for its enforcement. Paulomee Mistry, a leader of Fund grantee DISHA, states: “This victory is a major milestone in the people’s movement. It is special because it was led by the section of society (the indigenous community) who were never given their due share in history. Now the challenge for civil society and the Indian government is in implementing this law into reality.”
|

