HYDERABAD: Andhra Pradesh is losing its land to migrant tribals and
indigenous non-tribal groups There has been a spurt in land
encroachments after the implementation of the Recognition of Forest
Rights Act, 2006, says the records of the AP Forest Department (APFD)
Around
32,770 acres of forest land has been encroached in Khammam, Warangal,
Adilabad, and Karimnagar districts, according to the records
“Influx
of non-tribes from the neighboring Maharashtra, Odisha, and
Chhattisgarh into the forest areas is the main reason for the declining
forest land in the state Felling of trees is on the rise in the forest
areas ,” said Rajesh Mittal, additional chief conservator of forests
He
said that there was an urgent need to assess the allotments of forest
land in the state adding a wide publicity of the ongoing encroachments
is needed, to be made by the revenue and tribal welfare departments
“Fresh
encroachments should not be regularised under any circumstances, and if
people resort to the same, the benefits under the Forest Rights Act
should be withdrawn,” he opined
It is
learnt that the state government has regularised thousands of acres of
forest lands in the interest of tribes and non-tribes before 2006
As
there is no stringent punishments against the encroachers under the
Forest Protection Act, 2004, it has been increasing day by day, said
Rajesh Mittal
However, he said that
encroachments are mostly being done by the rich, urban citizens, and
land mafias Still, forest-dwellers are unfairly being labelled as
encroachers
A senior official from
forest department said, some landlords had appropriated lands allotted
by the government to tribal communities in the state
�The
government had distributed lands to the Chenchu, Koya, and Yanadi
tribal communities in some forest areas But, most of them were found in
the possession of the landlords, he said
Nine
Integrated Tribal Development Agencies (ITDAs) were set up in the state
for the uplift of tribal groups However, the officials seemed least
bothered to their welfare
There are
hundreds of cases against non-tribals who have encroached the forest
land, yet the government seems less concerned to intervene into the
matter, Mittal added(IBN Live)
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