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field firing range, again causing wildlife disturbance. A branch of the Narmada canal has been planned on the fringe of the sanctuary, which, according to a Wildlife Institute of India report, could cause further havoc. The sanctuary is short of manpower and equipment to patrol its vast area, according to the Wild Ass Sanctuary superintendent. Fodder bed plantations for the asses and guarding of the areas fringing the sanctuary have been undertaken as a measure to protect the animal. Although no legal action can be taken against the rampant salt-panning, the Revenue Department has stopped issuing new licenses.

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Source : Balaram, G. Wild Habitat Deteriorating, Wild Ass of the Rann Find Going Tough. Times of India. 2/2/98.

Gir: villages will not be part of extended area

Revenue villages and agricultural land in Gir forest area will not be included or be a part of the proposed extension to the existing national park, the Deputy Conservator of Forests said in a statement. The people in these villages will hence remain unaffected by the extension.

It may be noted here that following earlier notifications which included one lakh hectares of land of Gir forest in the national park, apprehension was created among dwellers in this area that their villages would also be included in the park, and they had made a representation against it. The clarification was issued to dispel this apprehension.

Contact: Deputy Conservator of Forests (WL), Sasan Gir 363 125, Dist. Junagadh, Gujarat.

Source : Anon. 'Villages Will Not be a Part of the National Park'. Times of India 25/3/98.

JAMMU AND KASHMIR

Militant activities threaten existence of the Kashmir stag

The Hangul or Kashmir stag (Cervus elaphus hanglu) is reported to be slipping towards extinction in its last bastion, the Dachigam National Park. Unofficial estimates point to an alarming decline of this majestic deer over the decade of militancy, from 818 to its lowest-ever population of between 100 to 170 individuals.

Set up as a royal hunting reserve in 1910, and declared a sanctuary in 1951, Dachigam was voted the best National Park in the country in the 1980s. It then turned into a sanctuary for militants and renegades, who shot and injured an estimated 200-250 Hangul.

Dachigam is a prime example of the devastation wrought upon the Valley by the years of turmoil. There are no more than 15-16 functionaries of the Wildlife Department to watch over the 141 sq. km. Park, whose altitudinal range (1700-4000 m) make patrolling doubly difficult. Dachigam is home to 20 mammal species, 150 bird species and 50 species of trees. For fear of the lurking threat of the militants, the park is not guarded/patroled by the wildlife functionaries during the night. Besides poaching of the Hangul and birds like the Monal and the Koklas pheasants, the last few years were an open season for timber felling, extraction of gravel, stones and boulders, and grazing with the connivance of either the wildlife functionaries or the militants. The deforestation accruing from these illegal activities has contributed to the siltation of the Dal Lake and a falling capacity of the woodlands to absorb the pollution from the urban areas. The Park forms half the catchment area of the Lake and provides a substantial part of the freshwater supply of Srinagar, the state capital.

The Park's infrastructural facilities were nearly wrecked over the militancy years. The interpretation centre suffered a bomb blast, while the library lies in neglect and is used to billet security forces. Wildlife functionaries are not spared by militants, a few having fallen to their rifles over the years. It is now known if the relative decline in militancy in the state has now improved matters.

Source : Indian Express 7/2/98

MADHYA PRADESH

Fishy goings on in Pench Tiger Reserve

With a reported annual income of about Rs. 2 crores, the commercial fish mafia of Nagpur has for the last three years lobbied successfully to exploit the fishing potential of the Pench resevoir spread across Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, inside the National Park boundaries. The fishing activities are being prevented and discouraged within the Maharashtra shore by strict surveillance from a patrol boat donated to the forest department with the initiative of Tiger Link.

However, the conflict continues in Madhya Pradesh, with news suggesting that the Congress Party in Chhindwara (former Environment Minister Kamal Nath's constituency) had promised the fishing mafia of Nagpur unbridled access to the Pench reservoir. The matter has actually reached the Supreme Court which issued very strict orders allowing only 300 or so fishing licences to be issued to local villagers, for fixed routes and for fixed times.

However, it is reported that no less than 1000 people are being pushed into the National Park from all sides to fish, and they camp there for days on end. This appears to be a clear contempt of court, and NGOs have demanded that the concerned M.P. government officials should go to jail for this.

The issue is complicated by the fact that a number of villagers are dependent on fishing for their economic livelihood, and the above mentioned case in the Supreme Court had considered their needs. However, clearly vested commercial interests are exploiting the situation, and have thwarted NGO attempts at reconciling the genuine livelihood interests of villagers with the conservation values of Pench.

Contact : Bittu Sahgal, Sanctuary Magazine, 602 Maker Chambers V, Nariman Point, Mumbai 400 021. Tel: 91-22-283 0061; Fax : 287 4380. Email: bittu@giasbm01.vsnl.net.in

MAHARASHTRA

Mining at Radhanagari Sanctuary A Division Bench of the Bombay High Court has restrained the Indian Aluminium Co. Ltd (INDAL) from carrying out any mining activity within the Radhanagari Bison Sanctuary in District Kolhapur, in a writ petition filed by the Bombay Environmental Action Group. Armed with a lower court order, INDAL has earlier stripped the protective cover from a key plateau in the Sanctuary, using bulldozers. It is reported that, thus far, not one truck of bauxite has actually been smelted by the company.

Radhanagari Sanctuary contains many endemic and rare plants, insects, birds, and mega-fauna including leopard, gaur (Bos gaurus) and tiger. A proposal is being readied by a special investigative team to propose this vital Western Ghats forest as a Project Tiger Reserve.

Meanwhile, INDAL and researcher Sharad Subramanyan have stated that the mined area is outside the current sanctuary limits, and even if the sanctuary is extended as proposed to include this area, the mine will be 8 km. from the core area. They also state that the mining technology used will cause minimal disturbance to the area. Activists from Kolhapur and Bombay maintain, however, that the mining poses a serious hazard, not just because of the actual mining activity but also because of the access roads and other associated activities. The High Court will hear the matter further before final judgement is passed.

sContact: Bittu Sahgal, see MP above. Debi Goenka, Bombay Environmental Action Group, c/o 4 Kurla Industrial Estate LBS Marg Mumbai 400086 India

Tel: 91-22-5700638 Telefax: 91-22-5701459

e-mail: debi@ilbom.ernet.in

Sources: Postings by Bittu Sahgal and others, and subsequent discussion between them and Sharad Subramanyan, on nathistory-india@lists.princeton.edu, Feb-March 1998.

Meeting on Communities in Melghat Tiger Reserve

Melghat Tiger Reserve is once again in the centre of controversy, following the state government's zealous drive to build or tar roads throughout the Reserve, ostensibly as a response to NGO demands for amenities to villages affected by malnutrition deaths last year. Conservationists have opposed this move, fearing that it will only open the area to further commercial exploitation, and arguing that tribals outside the Reserve are more affected by malnutrition than those within, who have adequate forest resources to survive on.

The NGO Co-ordination Committee (the NGO CC), of NGOs working with communities living in and around the Reserve, held a meeting on 28th January, 1998, at Chikhaldara inside the Reserve. While this was one of their regular meetings to assess the state of their work on issues such as malnutrition, they had also invited conservationists to discuss the above controversies. NGOs present at the meeting included YUVA Nagpur, Oxfam Nagpur, Koro Kora, ADIM, Utkarsh, Upekshit, Apeksha Home Society, Kal ke Liye, Prem, Sarita, Human Rights Law Network, Kalpavriksh, and Amravati Nature Conservation Society. The discussions brought out the following main points:

(i) The serious communication gap between wildlifers and human rights activists on the status of communities inside the Reserve must be bridged with regular correspondence and meetings.

(ii) Community-based NGOs clarified that they did not want major tarred roads through the Reserve, but rather 'traditional' approach paths, to ensure access for villagers especially in the difficult monsoon months.

(iii) Other developmental amenities being demanded included medical and educational facilities; however, NGOs agreed that they should try to build on local health and learning traditions and only supplement these with allopathic and formal educational systems where necessary.

(iv) On the proposed hydro-electricity dam p bNude Meetingstrippeddevi K Meeting Celeb Ca Members Kris Del Vegas Meeting Stripped Devi JPAM Newsletter 16 b f k Meeting Fuck iNude Meetingstrippeddevi K Meeting Celeb Ca Members Kris Del Vegas Meeting Stripped Devi JPAM Newsletter 16 p Porno Meeting Stripped Devi