Sunday, June 1, 2008

Protected Area Update - New Issue, June 2008

Dear FriendsPosted below are the list of contents and the edit of the new issue of the Protected Area Update. If you want to receive any of these stories or the entire newsletter in a soft copy version, please do write to me.
Pankaj
psekhsaria@gmail.com

PROTECTED AREA UPDATE
News and Information from protected areas in India and South Asia

Vol. XIV No. 3
June 2008 (No. 73)

LIST OF CONTENTS
EDITORIAL
An enduring vibrancy

NEWS FROM INDIAN STATES

ANDHRA PRADESH
Meeting on wildlife training in Tirupati

ASSAM
Radio link between forest and railway officials to protect elephants
Wildlife sanctuary proposed near Jatinga
Seven hectares of Amchang WLS for NH 37 under East West Corridor Project
Pygmy hogs to be released in Sonai Rupai WLS

Tourism festival at Chakrashila WLS
CBI to probe rhino poaching cases in Assam

GUJARAT
Gir Wildlife Sanctuary to be expanded
Wildlife Crime Cell begins work
Rs. 830 crore proposal for ‘development’ of forests

JAMMU & KASHMIR
CRPF personnel given wildlife related training in Dachigam NP

JHARKHAND
Local women, ex-servicemen for protection of Betla NP

KERALA
Suspected viral infection kills wild elephants in Waynad forests
State wetlands to be mapped
Air Deccan and Kerala FD to promote Periyar TR

LAKSHADWEEP
Marine Conservation Reserve in Agatti

MADHYA PRADESH
Gaur to be translocated from Kanha NP to the Bandavgarh NP

Tourism development plans in Madhya Pradesh
Kanha guides threaten to strike work
MAHARASHTRA
Protected Area status proposed for Sewree-Mahul Wetlands
Illicit liquor dens in Sanjay Gandhi NP may be responsible for leopard deaths
SC allows eviction from Sanjay Gandhi NP
Bhorkada (Bhorgad) Conservation Reserve in Nashik District
Proposal for Muniya Conservation Reserve 15 kms from Nagpur
Villagers inside Tadoba Andhari threaten mass suicide if forced to relocate

MEGHALAYA
Nokrek BR nominated for UNESCO Biosphere Reserve program

ORISSA
Demand for new tiger reserve, six new wildlife sanctuaries

Two elephants electrocuted near Badrama WLS
Steps to increase forest protection
Water shortage threatens elephants, other wildlife
Increased salinity threatens Bhitarkanika mangroves
Villagers around Bhitarkanika NP allegedly harassed
Crocodile attacks in and around Bhitarkanika NP
Ferry ghats in Bhitarkanika sealed to prevent poaching, intrusion

RAJASTHAN
Water, fodder scarcity in Tal Chappar WLS

TAMIL NADU
Artificial salt licks for de-worming wildlife in Coimbatore Division
Coral diseases to be investigated in the Gulf of Mannar BR

UTTARAKHAND
Bamboo cover being increased to reduce human-elephant conflict in Shivaliks
Now, weekly off for domestic elephants in Corbett
Fires affect Corbett TR, Rajaji NP
Van Gujjars allowed passage to Govind Pashu Vihar National Park
Delhi Dehradun highway through Rajaji NP to have six lanes
Peacock deaths in close vicinity of Rajaji NP

WEST BENGAL
Restrictions on tourism establishments around forests, PAs

NATIONAL NEWS FROM INDIA
Privilege motion against forest secretary
2007-08 funds allocations for conservation in North Eastern States
Total number of wildlife sanctuaries and national parks in India

SOUTH ASIA
BHUTAN
Tiger presence in Jigme Dorji NP overlaps with snow leopard habitat
NEPAL
Vulture breeding centre set up in Chitwan
OPPORTUNITIES
ATREE Small Grants Programme
For implementing watershed and livelihood projects in Samrakshan’s MP office

UPCOMING
World Conservation Congress

IN THE SUPREME COURT

FUNDS RELEASED UNDER PROJECT TIGER

Forest occupancy and population estimates of tiger as per the refined methodology


EDITORIAL
AN ENDURING VIBRANCY

That wildlife conservation and protection is low down in the list of priorities for the country in general and the political class in particular is a well known and well accepted fact. Though the community of those interested in conservation is small, funds and resources are always a problem, support is minimum and even those who support the idea of conservation often disagree with each other vehemently, those who follow the fate of conservation will willingly point to the enthusiasm of the conservation movement here. In spite of the bleak prospects and endless trouble there can be no denying that there is an enduring vibrancy to conservation efforts being made across the length and breadth of the landscape.
A cross section of the news reports in this issue of the PA Update is perhaps a good indicator of this interest and the eagerness. In Assam the critically endangered pygmy hog is being given a new lease of life in an important and path breaking captive breeding and re-introduction initiative. In Jammu & Kashmir the Forest Department has taken up a program with the Central Reserve Police Force to sensitise troops stationed inside the Dachigam National Park, while authorities in the Betla National Park are, for the first time, involving local women in the protection of the forests in the area. In Lakshadweep and in Maharashtra researchers and NGOs have worked with the local communities to create conservation reserves in line with newer thinking on protected area creation and management and in other parts of the country, be it Orissa, Assam or Maharashtra, there are more proposals for setting aside areas for the benefit of wildlife.
This is not to say that the problems are not there. Poaching, habitat destruction, encroachment, ingress of roads and other infrastructure projects, diversion for commercial and industrial activities…the list is long and one can go on. Also the fact that in India we still cling to the ways of the past; still invoke the legacy of a long gone Prime Minister to argue for conservation in a politically, socially and economically new India; that we continue to show huge reluctance to learn from other experiences from around the world, of new methods and practices of co-managing along with communities; devolving power and ensuring stake and participation of a larger numbers of those negatively affected by the present exclusionary paradigm of conservation.
Even the initiatives mentioned above might have their own problems but in concentrating only on what’s not right, we often tend to neglect and undervalue all the good intentions and the many efforts that are continually being made. Not to acknowledge these would be unfair because the picture that gets created then is only an incomplete one. These are as real as the problems and the threats faced by our wildlife and their habitats and it is as important to oppose and fight the threats as it is to recognize and support the initiatives and the successes.
There is a vibrancy to the conservation efforts here and it’s only right that they be given their due.

PROTECTED AREA UPDATE
Vol. XIV, No. 3, June 2008 (No. 73)
Editor: Pankaj Sekhsaria
Editorial Assistance: Wrutuja Pardeshi
Illustrations: Madhuvanti Anantharajan
Produced by: Kalpavriksh
Ideas, comments, news and information may please be sent to the editorial address:
KALPAVRIKSH, Apartment 5, Shri Dutta Krupa, 908 Deccan Gymkhana, Pune 411004, Maharashtra, India. Tel/Fax: 020 – 25654239.
Email: psekhsaria@gmail.com
Website: www.kalpavriksh.org
Production of PA Update 72 has been supported by Foundation for Ecological Security (FES), Anand.

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