Editorial Simplified: Humanise the Law | GS – II


Relevance :  GS Paper  II


Theme of the Article

The draft Indian Forest Act must be redrawn to rid it of bureaucratic overreach.


Why has this Issue been Raised?

The draft Indian Forest Act, 2019 is woefully short of being a transformative piece of legislation.


Classification of Forests

Only 2.99% of India’s geographic area is classified as very dense forest; the rest of the green cover of a total of 21.54% is nearly equally divided into open and moderately dense forest, according to the State of Forest Report 2017.


The Draft Forest Bill

  • The draft Bill reinforces the idea of bureaucratic control of forests, providing immunity for actions such as use of firearms by personnel to prevent an offence.
  • The hardline policing approach is reflected in the emphasis on creating infrastructure to detain and transport the accused, and to penalise entire communities through denial of access to forests for offences by individuals.

Impact of the Draft Bill on the Poor

  • Such provisions of the draft Bill invariably affect poor inhabitants, and run counter to the empowering and egalitarian goals that produced the Forest Rights Act.
  • India’s forests play a key role in moderating the lives of not just the adivasis and other traditional dwellers, but everyone in the subcontinent, through their impact on the climate and monsoons.

Way Forward

  • Any new forest law must aim to reduce conflicts, incentivise tribals and stop diversion for non-forest uses.
  • This can be achieved by recognising all suitable landscapes as forests and insulating them from commercial exploitation.
  • Such an approach requires a partnership with communities on the one hand, and scientists on the other.
  • The Forest Department should allow independent scientific evaluation of forest health and biodiversity conservation outcomes.
  • Environmental policy should strengthen public scrutiny of decisions on diversion of forests for destructive activities such as mining and large dam construction.
  • Impact assessment reports have mostly been reduced to a farce, and the public hearings process has been diluted. This must change.
  • The government needs to launch a process of consultation, beginning with the State governments to ensure that a progressive law is adopted by all States, including those that have their own versions of the existing Act.
  • The Centre must hear the voice of all stakeholders and communities, including independent scientific experts.

Conclusion

The provision of the original law, the Indian Forest Act, 1927 had been drafted to suit the objectives of a colonial power that had extractive uses for forests in mind. A new law enacted should make a departure and be aimed to expand India’s forests, and ensure the well-being of traditional forest-dwellers and biodiversity in these landscapes. The need is for a paradigm that encourages community-led, scientifically validated conservation.


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