PESA and Self-Governance
-- A Participant's Ringside View
A
symposium, PESA and Self-Governance: A Concern of 12th Five Year Plan,
was held at the Indian Institute of Public Administration, New Delhi on
February 25-26 2013. The Panchayat (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act or
PESA, if implemented effectively, has the potential and provision to
radically change the socio-political landscape of adivasis in India.
With a central role to the Gram Sabha, it provides for adivasi-centric
governance and control over community resources and their life. The
pressure on natural resources in these areas continues due to large
projects being set up therein and unscrupulous elements indulging in
illegal mining, land grabbing & forest felling. This has led to
dislocation of communities and loss of major sources of livelihood and
also increased vulnerability and disenchantment with governance.
In
his keynote address former Minister for Panchayati Raj and currently
Rajya Sabha Member Shri Mani Shankar Aiyar opined that the Act fulfiled
practically all aspirations of adivasis in India in so far as their
autonomy, well being and identity are concerned. He however cautioned
that given the high degree of poverty, lack of infrastructure,
illiteracy, exploitation and marginalization has led to firm
entrenchment of leftwing extremism in Schedule V areas. Of 94 PESA
districts, 32 have been declared as Extremist Affected Districts (EADs).
Of 76 EADs, 32 are PESA districts. Of 34 Most Extremist Affected
Districts, 19 are PESA districts, according to official estimates. The
rights, livelihood and habitat of the people in these Areas, therefore,
continue to be under stress, leading to disaffection with the system.
Shri Aiyar also pointed out that extremism is an entirely indigenous
response of people to the government's failure to effect its own Acts
and Laws. It had no "foreign hand" whatsoever.
Continuing
in the same vein, Dr. Bhalchandra Mungekar, Member, Rajya Sabha, argued
that though the Act was passed by Parliament in 1996, the government
did not do much for its implementation. It currently is in a stalemate.
Decisions such as PESA are taken by the ruling political elite that
backs out when the time comes for implementation. Central and state
governments seem to be in some sort of competition in its
non-implementation. If one takes all the positive aspects of development
one finds adivasis at the bottom even in the 9 PESA states; if one
takes the negatives, then adivasis are at the top. Practically, no
provision of the Act has been implemented at the village level. Amongst
PESA states, there are several who do not want intermediary Panchayats
(as at village/block level). Hence, their unwillingness to implement. It
is significant to note that the Act has no rule making powers; so much
so it cannot issue directions to government functionaries even at the
lowest levels of hierarchy. According to an Advocate from the Supreme
Court Judiciary is ill-informed of the Act; most Lordships may not have
even heard of it. He cited an example of Rajasthan High Court. Villages
in some Schedule V states are being upgraded to urban villages for the
purpose of land acquisition.
Shri
T.N. Chaturvedi, Chairman IIPA, raised a fundamental issue, that of
asking where does PESA fit into the government's scheme of things.
Another participant pointed out that the governance mode at the national
level is GDP-focused. It does not take much into consideration issues
as local self governance: the very spirit of PESA. The fall in growth
rate from 8% to 5% is about the only major concern of planners in India.
Higher the GDP grew, lesser were the funds sent to adivasi areas. Those
who make money during high growth rates do not allow adivasis to reach
even the peripheral levels of their consciousness. Of the $360 billion
of foreign reserves not a cent reaches the adivasis. This, amongst other
issues, has given rise to leftwing radicalism in PESA areas. As a
result, 32 districts have spun out of control and the government writ
does not run there.
It
was expected that PESA would lead to self-governance and empowerment of
the people. The second Administrative Reforms Commission too had
stressed the effective implementation of the Act. “The Union and State
legislations that impinge on provisions of PESA should be immediately
modified so as to bring them in conformity with the Act,” it stated .
Moreover, international organizations too have stressed the right to
self determination of these groups. “Indigenous people around the world
have sought recognition of their identities, their ways of life and
their right to traditional lands, territories and natural resources; yet
throughout history, their rights have been violated,” states a UN
report. Hence, PESA seems to be the best policy to fulfil this concern.
There is a case for creating a special arrangement:
1. Faster, Sustainable and More Inclusive Growth: An Approach to Twelfth Five Year Plan
2. Recommendation of 2nd Administrative Reforms Commission, 2008
3.
United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, October 2006
whereby in the two years of the Twelfth Plan funds can be
unconditionally released for all these districts to facilitate the
speedy implementation of PESA
Not
surprisingly, various expert committees have recommended implementation
of PESA in letter & spirit. There is evidential urgency to its
implementation. It can achieve three things simultaneously:
(1)
Deprive the leftwing extremists of the fertile ground of backwardness
and poverty in the “Red Corridor” and make them baseless;
(2) Assimilate the 8 percent tribal Adivasis into the mainstream political current through self governance; and
(3) Preserve forests and local ecology because only they know their land and its resources best.
Summarised by Narendra
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Narendra has spent over three decades amongst adivasis of Central India.
SOURCE:
http://www.ecologicaldemocracy.net/archive/archive1/tree.php?action=view&id=3
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SOURCE:
http://www.ecologicaldemocracy.net/archive/archive1/tree.php?action=view&id=3
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