Kerala Farmers Face Growing Despair Amidst Wildlife Attack Surge
Human-wildlife conflict intensifies in Kerala, leaving farmers in despair over crop and livestock losses.
त्वरित संशोधन
केरल में किसान वन्यजीवों के हमलों में बढ़ोतरी के कारण बढ़ती निराशा का सामना कर रहे हैं।
वन्यजीवों के हमलों से फसलों को भारी नुकसान और पशुधन की हानि हो रही है।
राज्य सरकार और राजनीतिक दल दोनों ही पर्याप्त समाधान या मुआवजा देने में विफल माने जा रहे हैं।
बढ़ता संघर्ष पर्यावरण प्रबंधन और कृषि स्थिरता में महत्वपूर्ण मुद्दों को उजागर करता है।
इन हमलों के कारण ग्रामीण समुदायों की सामाजिक-आर्थिक भेद्यता बढ़ रही है।
जंगली सूअर, हाथी और मोर उन जानवरों में से हैं जो नुकसान के लिए जिम्मेदार हैं।
किसानों की ओर से मानव-वन्यजीव संघर्ष को प्रभावी ढंग से संबोधित करने के लिए एक नए कानून की कड़ी मांग है।
मौजूदा मुआवजा तंत्र को अक्सर धीमा और अपर्याप्त होने के लिए आलोचना का सामना करना पड़ता है।
मुख्य परीक्षा और साक्षात्कार फोकस
इसे ज़रूर पढ़ें!
The escalating human-wildlife conflict in Kerala represents a critical governance failure, demanding immediate and comprehensive policy intervention. Current mechanisms, primarily relying on the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972, are proving inadequate against the surge in attacks by wild boars, elephants, and peacocks.
This situation underscores a fundamental flaw in India's conservation strategy: an overemphasis on species protection without sufficiently addressing the socio-economic realities of communities living adjacent to forest areas. The delayed and insufficient compensation for crop damage and livestock loss, as highlighted by the farmers, exacerbates their agricultural distress. This directly contradicts the spirit of inclusive development and environmental justice.
Effective solutions require a multi-pronged approach. First, a robust, time-bound compensation mechanism, perhaps modeled on disaster relief funds, must be established, ensuring farmers receive fair value within 30 days. Second, proactive mitigation strategies, including scientific management of problematic animal populations and the creation of effective physical barriers, are essential. Merely declaring a species as 'vermin' without a clear, implementable action plan offers little long-term relief.
Furthermore, the state must invest in research to understand animal behavior patterns and develop innovative, non-lethal deterrents. Community participation in conservation and conflict management, as seen in some successful models in Karnataka and Maharashtra, is paramount. Empowering local self-governments to manage localized conflict, with technical support from forest departments, could decentralize and expedite responses.
Ultimately, this crisis calls for a re-evaluation of the Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980, and the WPA, 1972, to incorporate a more balanced approach that prioritizes both wildlife conservation and human well-being. A new, comprehensive state-level law, as demanded by farmers, could provide the necessary legal backing for integrated human-wildlife conflict management plans, moving beyond piecemeal solutions.
विस्तृत सारांश देखें
सारांश
Farmers in Kerala are facing severe hardship because wild animals are destroying their crops and killing their livestock. They feel that neither the government nor political parties are providing enough help or compensation, leaving them in a desperate situation.
Source Articles
‘Neither Govt nor parties care for us’: In Kerala, why farmers’ despair grows over wildlife attacks | Political Pulse News - The Indian Express
Alappuzha battles livelihood distress as NDA rise unsettles traditional political equations
Farmer dies by suicide in Kerala over debt: What ails the state’s paddy cultivation sector? | Explained News - The Indian Express
Coconut growers in Kerala in despair as output slumps
Parity index reveals farm distress in Kerala as cultivation costs rise | Thiruvananthapuram News, The Indian Express
लेखक के बारे में
Ritu SinghEcology & Sustainable Development Researcher
Ritu Singh GKSolver पर Environment & Ecology विषयों पर लिखते हैं।
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