The
Minister of state for (I/C) Environment & Forest
Smt. Jayanthi Natarajan
today listed the following steps for tiger conversation. She stated this in
reply to a question in Lok Sabha
today.
Milestone initiatives taken by the Government of
India for fostering tiger conservation are as follows.
Legal
steps
1. Amendment of the Wild Life (Protection)
Act, 1972 for providing enabling provisions towards constituting the National
Tiger Conservation Authority and the Tiger and Other Endangered Species Crime
Control Bureau.
2. Enhancement
of punishment in cases of offence relating to a tiger reserve or its core area.
Administrative steps
3. Strengthening
of antipoaching activities, including special
strategy for monsoon patrolling, by providing funding support to Tiger Reserve
States, as proposed by them, for deployment of antipoaching
squads involving ex-army personnel / home guards, apart from workforce
comprising of local people, in addition to strengthening of communication /
wireless facilities.
4. Constitution of the National Tiger Conservation Authority with
effect from 4.09.2006, for strengthening tiger conservation by, interalia, ensuring normative standards in tiger reserve
management, preparation of reserve specific tiger conservation plan, laying
down annual audit report before Parliament, constituting State level Steering
Committees under the Chairmanship of Chief Ministers and establishment of Tiger
Conservation Foundation.
5. Constitution of a multidisciplinary Tiger and Other Endangered
Species Crime Control Bureau (Wildlife Crime Control Bureau) with effect from
6.6.2007 to effectively control illegal trade in wildlife.
6. The in-principle approval has been
accorded by the National Tiger Conservation Authority for creation of five new
tiger reserves, and the sites are:, Pilibhit (Uttar
Pradesh), Ratapani (Madhya Pradesh), Sunabeda (Orissa) and Mukundara
Hills (including Darrah, Jawahar
Sagar and Chambal Wildlife Sanctuaries) (Rajasthan)
and Satyamangalam (Tamil Nadu). Final approval has been accorded to Kudremukh (Karnataka) for declaring as a Tiger
Reserve. Besides, the States have been
advised to send proposals for declaring the following areas as Tiger Reserves:
(i) Bor (Maharashtra), (ii)
Suhelwa (Uttar Pradesh), (iii) Nagzira-Navegaon
(Maharashtra), (iv) Guru Ghasidas National
Park (Chhattisgarh), (v) Mhadei Sanctuary (Goa) and
(vi) Srivilliputhur Grizzled Giant Squirrel / Megamalai Wildlife Sanctuaries / Varushanadu Valley (Tamil Nadu).
7. The revised Project Tiger guidelines have
been issued to States for strengthening tiger conservation, which apart from
ongoing activities, interalia, include funding
support to States for enhanced village relocation/rehabilitation package for
people living in core or critical tiger habitats (from Rs. 1 lakh/family to Rs. 10 lakhs/family),
rehabilitation/resettlement of communities involved in traditional hunting,
mainstreaming livelihood and wildlife concerns in forests outside tiger
reserves and fostering corridor conservation through restorative strategy to
arrest habitat fragmentation.
8. A scientific methodology for estimating
tiger (including co-predators, prey animals and assessment of habitat status)
has been evolved and mainstreamed. The
findings of this estimation/assessment are bench marks for future tiger conservation
strategy.
9. An area of 33472.01
sq. km. has been notified by 16 Tiger States (out of 17) as core or critical tiger habitat under
section 38V of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, as amended in 2006 (Andhra
Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala,
Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Mizoram, Orissa, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal). The State of Bihar has taken a decision for
notifying the core or critical tiger habitat of Valmiki
Tiger Reserve.
Financial steps
10. Financial and technical help is provided to
the States under various Centrally Sponsored Schemes, viz. Project Tiger and
Integrated Development of Wildlife Habitats for enhancing the capacity and
infrastructure of the States for providing effective protection to wild
animals.
International Cooperation
11. India has a Memorandum of Understanding with
Nepal on controlling trans-boundary illegal trade in wildlife and conservation,
apart from a protocol on tiger conservation with China.
12. A Global
Tiger Forum of Tiger Range Countries has been created for addressing
international issues related to tiger conservation.
13. During
the 14th meeting of the Conference of Parties to CITES, which was
held from 3rd to 15th June, 2007 at The Hague, India
introduced a resolution along with China, Nepal and the Russian Federation,
with directions to Parties with operations breeding tigers on a commercial
scale, for restricting such captive populations to a level supportive only to
conserving wild tigers. The resolution
was adopted as a decision with minor amendments. Further, India made an
intervention appealing to China to phase out tiger farming, and eliminate
stockpiles of Asian big cats body parts and
derivatives. The importance of
continuing the ban on trade of body parts of tigers was emphasized.
14. Based on
India’s strong intervention during the 58th meeting of the Standing
Committee of the CITES at Geneva from 6th to 10th July,
2009, the CITES Secretariat has issued a notification to Parties to submit
reports relating to compliance of Decisions 14.69 and 14.65 within 90 days with
effect from 20.10.2009 (Progress made on restricting captive breeding
operations of tigers etc.).
Reintroduction
of Tigers
15. As a part of active management to rebuild Sariska
and Panna Tiger Reserves where tigers have become
locally extinct, reintroduction of tigers / tigresses have been done.
16. Special
advisories issued for in-situ build up of prey base and tiger population
through active management in tiger reserves having low population status of
tiger and its prey.
Creation of Special Tiger Protection Force
(STPF)
17. The
policy initiatives announced by the Finance Minister in his Budget Speech of
29.2.2008, interalia, contains action points relating
to tiger protection. Based on the one time grant of Rs. 50.00 crore provided to the National Tiger Conservation Authority
(NTCA) for raising, arming and deploying a Special Tiger Protection Force, the
proposal for the said force has been approved by the competent authority for 13
tiger reserves. Rs. 93 lakhs each has been released to Corbett, Ranthambhore & Dudhwa Tiger
Reserve for creation of STPF during 2008-09. Since
then, the guidelines of the STPF have been revised for deploying forest
personnel in place of Police as an option-II, with scope for involving local
people like the Van Gujjars. During the year 2011-12, an amount of Rs. 3 crores has been provided to the Similipal
Tiger Reserve for raising, arming and deploying the STPF.
18. In collaboration with TRAFFIC-INDIA, an
online tiger crime data base has been launched, and Generic Guidelines for
preparation of reserve specific Security Plan has been evolved.
Recent initiatives
1. Implementing
a tripartite MOU with tiger States, linked to fund flows for effective
implementation of tiger conservation initiatives.
2. Rapid assessment of tiger reserves done.
3. Special
crack teams sent to tiger reserves affected by left wing extremism and low
population status of tiger and its prey.
4. Chief
Ministers of States having tiger reserves affected by left wing extremism and
low population status of tiger and its prey addressed for taking special
initiatives.
5. Steps
taken for modernizing the infrastructure and field protection, besides
launching ‘M-STrIPES’ for effective field patrolling
and monitoring.
6. Steps
taken for involvement of Non-Governmental Experts in the ongoing all India
tiger estimation.
7. Initiatives
taken for improving the field delivery through capacity building of field
officials, apart from providing incentives.
8. Action
initiated for using Information Technology to strengthen surveillance in tiger
reserves.
9. The
second round of country level tiger status assessment completed in 2010, with the
findings indicating an increase with a tiger population
estimate of 1706, lower and upper limits being 1520 and 1909 respectively, as
compared to the last country level estimation of 2006, with an estimate of
1411, lower and upper limits being 1165 and 1657 respectively.
10. The
second round of independent assessment of Management Effectiveness Evaluation
of Tiger Reserves done in 2010-11 for 39 tiger reserves based on globally used
framework.
11. Increase
in the allocation for Project Tiger with additional components.
12. Providing
special assistance for mitigation of human-tiger conflicts in problematic
areas.
13. As an
outcome of the fourth Trans-border Consultative Group Meeting held in New
Delhi, a joint resolution has been signed with Nepal for biodiversity / tiger
conservation.
14. Regional
Offices of the National Tiger Conservation Authority sanctioned at Nagpur, Bengaluru and Guwahati.
15. Launching
of Phase-IV tiger reserve level monitoring.
16. A protocol on
conservation of the Royal Bengal Tiger of the Sundarban
signed between India and Bangladesh in September, 2011.
DK