Ecological balance of goa requires community-based governance – News2IN
Goa

Ecological balance of goa requires community-based governance

Ecological balance of goa requires community-based governance
Written by news2in

Wild pigs and monkeys are talk today.
CM Goa reflects on declaring wild pigs as fleas, while garden owners confirm that monkeys are also pests.
These are two of the many animals involved in humongous wildlife conflicts that haunt Rural India, conflicts where thousands of people die every year and property losses managed up to tens of thousands of crores.
The root of this problem returned more than a thousand years with British conquest by William The Conqueror at 1066.
He complements the British land among a handful of Mr.
Feudal.
These rulers attach Commons villages, impoverish the peasants.
All humans, restrictions on exceptions, have enjoyed hunting because our species originated as a group of three lakh groups years ago.
Even so, the British rulers who dominated back to hunting themselves hunting farmers to fill their stomachs as chicken hunter and very hanging them.
Fallout of these authoritarian steps is that forests and British wildlife was washed down in the 14th century.
When England became an Indian ruler, they intend to loot the resources.
Their tools in this seizure are the Ministry of Forestry, an agent made to confiscate the wealth of trees maintained by farmers and our forest residents by taking over community land.
The results reflect what happened in the UK and the wealth of Indian forests quickly ran out of the end of the 19th century.
Goa avoided this fate under the Portuguese government.
The Portuguese also tried to dismantle community control, but because this caused the loss of agricultural production and agricultural income, they allowed its continuation.
So, Goa maintained a green coat until the end of the Portuguese government in 1961.
Because it was integrated into the Indian Union, the new regime consistently tried to take power from people and dismantle comunidades triggering the erosion of Goa’s natural heritage.
The Foresters with colonial heritage they stepped into a clear cave cutting natural forest to raise exotic tree plantations.
With the promulgation of the wildlife protection law in 1972 throughout the countryside came in the grasp of foresters with farmers and forest residents became victims of conflict with wildlife.
Gouops also suffer from wild pigs, monkeys and gaur species of major problems that cause large losses of plants and livestock.
Unique Indian wildlife protection law; There is no distribution of other countries that hunt outside the national park and reserve games.
Sweden abound on wildlife, he treats it as a renewable resource that uses it through the hunt that is properly arranged.
Because of our strange law, people are not free to defend themselves against robbers because they get out of their homes and plant fields need official permission and if they hurt wild pigs while maintaining their plants, they must be prosecuted as criminals.
But the Indian punishment code, section 100 and 103 sanctions voluntarily cause death or other damage to the wrong actors if the attack by incorrect actors can reasonably cause fears that it will cause death or wrong or the perpetrators to violate or robbery of a house or property.
Wild and Gaur pigs on the opportunity to kill people, wild pigs, Gaur and monkeys regularly violate farmer property and seize the results.
Obviously a hard action protects wild animals is constitutionally invalid.
Goans should raise this problem through pills.
Foresters, the intention to harass farmers who use weapons of wildlife protection greatly ignores their own functions that are far more important to protect national parks.
Mollem National Park is threatened by the railway that cuts it.
Are people who protested and went to court to save Mollem while the forester stood up with silence.
Therefore we must return the allegations to maintain the nature of the Goa community, the responsibilities they have exhausted well until 1961.
But while reviving the governance of the community, we must reform institutions to get rid of them from the injustice of the Indian caste community.
It brought memories of my mind about my good friend FR Bismarck Dias.
He was the president of his comunidade and many believed that he lost his life to try to maintain its properties of encroachment by real estate sharks.
He often talked to me about the need to democratize the institution and create a model for the revival of community-based governance throughout the country.
I hope that Goa will lead with progressive steps.
The author is a leading ecologist and towards the 2010 Western Ghats Ecology Panel.

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