[This piece was published on the op-ed page of the New Indian Express on 3.5.2017]
Britain exterminated
all its wildlife a hundred years ago, it still slaughters six million pheasants
every year for “Sport”, and its last remaining carnivore( if you can call it
that), the fox, will be doing its own Brexit within a decade. So its a bit rich
for the BBC to be advising us on how to conserve wild-life, which is what it
has had the gall to do in a recent documentary, KILLING FOR CONSERVATION, a
short film ostensibly about efforts to protect the one-horned rhino in
Kaziranga. Strangely, though, in this 20 minute misrepresentation the reporter
( Justin Rowlatt, BBC’s South Asia correspondent) completely upends the focus-
from wildlife conservation to a flawed view of human rights! Short on facts and
woefully lacking in perspective or understanding of what wildlife conservation
entails, he is outraged by the killing of poachers ( he terms them “extra
judicial executions!”), the eviction of illegal settlers from within the
Kaziranga National Park( KNP) and alleged tortures for which he has no shred of
evidence. To me he appears to be a bit schizophrenic, for while acknowledging
that “ man is the most vicious predator” and that Kaziranga “ is an incredible
story of conservation success”, he still goes on to find fault for just about
everything the Park authorities do, and condemns them ( and the WWF, for good
measure!) for their success.
Lets just
recapitulate the context here. Kaziranga National Park is vast, 900 sq. kms of
the most difficult and inaccessible terrain, of which 228 sq. kms has been
exclusively set aside for the protection of the Greater One Horned Rhinoceros (
Rhinoceros Unicornis), the horn of which fetches upto Rupees twenty million in
China. Two thirds of the world’s population of these rhinos are in Kaziranga.
The efforts of the KNP constitute one of the greatest conservation success
stories in the world: the rhino population has doubled in the last 22 years-
from an alarming 1164 in 1993 to 2401 in 2015. But the poaching has not
stopped- 151 rhinos have been killed in the last 10 years, 89 in just four
years between 2013 and 2016, something which Mr. Rowlatt was not bothered to
find out. In fact, there has been a sharp spike in poaching in these years,
which cannot but be a cause for concern.
The BBC, in the
throes of liberal humanism, castigates the KNP management for arming its forest
guards and for permitting them to shoot at poachers within the Park boundaries. The documentary makes no mention of the
fact that poachers are armed with AK-47 rifles or that insurgents of outlawed
factions have also taken to poaching the rhinos for the enormous sums that can
accrue to them. ( Ironically, the BBC itself covered another story recently to
show how money from drugs and wildlife poaching follow the same trail to fund
terrorism !).
Yes, 55 poachers have
been killed inside the Park in the last four years- that is the price you pay
for breaking the law, and that is the price the nation extracts for protecting
one of our most valuable natural heritages. The documented study of major parks
in Africa has established that poaching has considerably declined in areas
where forest staff were armed and authorised to “ shoot to kill”. Any genuine
lover of nature would be happy that the Assam govt. has had the decisiveness to
so empower its forest staff. The BBC film stresses, again without any solid
proof other than statements of a few relatives of those killed, that innocent
local villagers often stray within the Park boundaries and are shot. This is
dishonest reporting. In the first place, the Park’s boundaries are defined and
well known to the locals- there is no question of their “ straying” into it.
Secondly, why should an innocent person go into the park at night, which is when
most of the encounters have taken place ? And finally, according to the Park’s
Director, only 4 of the 55 poachers killed since 2013 were local villagers- all
the others were outsiders, clinching proof that they were there for the money
and had no business to be there.
The same lack of
diligence and journalistic ethics is on display when the BBC reporter
highlights the eviction of families from within the Park boundaries by force.
He does not mention that all due legal processes were followed and that a large
number of these families were illegal squatters ( an endemic problem in Assam)
with no rights to the land. The reporter is wrong when he portrays the
evictions as illegal, but I agree that the displacement could have been handled
differently, with better planning and vision. Experience has shown that
Conservation/ Protected Areas succeed in their objective only if the local (
especially displaced) villagers are co-opted into the effort. There is an
inevitable loss of livelihoods and usufruct rights when such Areas are notified
and governments must have proper plans in place for their rehabilitation. A
stellar example of this is the Great Himalayan National Park in Kullu district
of Himachal Pradesh, declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2014. The
affected villagers here were given training and financial help in eco-tourism,
handicrafts, vermi-composting, raising nurseries for medicinal plants, and
provided sale outlets. They now derive gainful employment and incomes from the
tourists/ trekkers that the GHNP attracts in ever-increasing numbers. They have
now developed a vested interest in preserving the Park’s bio-diversity and
natural uniqueness and have become stakeholders. This is the way for the
Kaziranga authorities to go. Do not relinquish the gun, but don’t depend on it
exclusively.
The BBC documentary
is irresponsible and misleading journalism, but so is the Govt’s reaction to
it. It has blacklisted the reporter and barred him from entry to any of our
Protected Areas. It has also sought to revoke his visa. This is not only
overkill but also censorship. The battle of ideas should not be fought in
passport offices or with bans but with facts, full disclosures and counter
points. It does not behove the govt. to be churlish or bear a grudge- this puts
it on the backfoot and makes it appear defensive. Kaziranga is doing a fine job
of protecting one of our natural icons and one ill informed reporter with a
bias should not detract it from its course.
Dear Sir, a very logical piece of writing. Only a judicious mix of people's participation and enforcement of law of land can save our precious wildlife. I hope that your article ignites interest among the forest officers to follow a balanced path between participatory management and defending wildlife by force. Many regards, sanjeeva
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