Party candidates may face ire of tribal community

Tribals live in abject poverty with no access to any government facilities. Even inside the forest they are barred from collecting forest produce. The Mysuru region has a tribal population of over 1.25 lakh.

Successive Governments have ignored crucial tribal issues; facilities not reaching them, allege Adivasis

Mysuru: Tribal communities in Mysuru-Kodagu Lok Sabha Constituency are a disappointed lot after successive governments at the Centre and State have ignored their demands.

There are nearly 50,000 tribal families in the Mysuru-Kodagu segment and the number of tribal voters is reckoned to be around 1.25 lakh and they have decided to consolidate themselves in the run-up to the Lok Sabha elections.

Tribal issues related to Forest Rights Act and rehabilitation will come to haunt the BJP and the Congress/ Janata Dal (Secular) candidates during their campaigning in parts of Hunsur and Periyapatna in Mysuru district and in Kodagu which is part of the LS seat.

The Scheduled Tribes and Other Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 was enacted 13 years ago to correct the historical injustice meted out to the tribal and forest-dwelling people by recognising their rights over forests apart from the community rights over common property resources.

A typical tribal hut on the fringes of forest.

A case in point is the demand for the implementation of Panchayat (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act (PESA) 1996, which provides for tribal self-rule in areas where their numbers are high. PESA has been enacted in States like Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, and Odisha.

If PESA is enacted, tribal people will feel empowered and their culture and way of life can be protected, according to activists of Vikasa Vahini. Likewise, the provisions of the Forest Rights Act, though on paper, have not been implemented in spirit, said tribal leaders.

However, the anger against the governments and the elected representatives is for their failure to implement PESA as a result of which their applications for forest rights have been rejected. This has resulted in a grave situation with the Supreme Court ordering the eviction of tribals whose applications for forests rights had been turned down.

“The Act was passed by the UPA Government in 2006 and the Congress was in power in Karnataka for five years from 2013 to 2018 and it failed to implement the provisions of the Act sincerely’’, said M.B. Prabhu, a tribal activist who is based in Veeranahosahalli, also in Hunsur taluk.

There is brewing discontent among the tribals that most of the welfare programmes launched either by the Centre or the State were not reaching them. There is scope for creating employment under Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchai Yojana and Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Grameena Kaushalya Yojana by extending horticultural activity to the tribal hamlets but none have been taken up, say tribals.

The tribals are aware that both the BJP and the Congress/JDS(S) will woo them. Hence the adivasis are planning to leverage their collective strength to ensure that their voice is heard at least this time. A meeting of the leaders and elders of the tribal hamlets is planned in due course to decide their next course of action, according to Prabhu.


This post was published on March 20, 2019 6:35 pm