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Towards Securing Himalayas From Disasters – People for Himalaya Demand Charter 2024

By migrator • 2024-05-08 • 11 min read


NEW DELHI: The people living in the Himalayan Region all along the Himalayan Range have called for a complete halt to the mining and unsustainable development process to prevent climate change and development related disasters, which can adversely impact the population and trigger unthinkable disasters.

An amalgam of civil society groups have drawn the attention of the governments to the previous disasters that have impacted the lives of the people in the entire besides focusing attention on the issues being highlighted by the environment activist in Ladakh Sonam Wangchuk calling for complete stop on the corporate interests in the fragile ecology of Ladakh region.

Following in the statement released by the civil society organisations and activists from the region:

People for Himalaya campaign is an initiative of progressive groups, civil society organisations and activists from the region. The campaign is not affiliated with any political party. For the list of supporting organizations, please scroll to the bottom of the post.

[Last year we witnessed the hills of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Sikkim in virtual revolt against the mindless development that they have been subjected to. It was against the backdrop of these frightening developments that discussions began among groups across the Himalayan states in February this year, leading to the adoption of the Charter for the Himalayas. We also just saw environment activist from Ladakh, Sonam Wangchuk sit on a 21-day hunger strike in freezing minus 10 degrees Centigrade, demanding that the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution be implemented in Ladakh and it be protected from being handed over to corporate interests for so-called Development projects. Wangchuk’s hunger strike was withdrawn but the movement continues with women continuing their sit-in and other sections of the population, especially youth, preparing to join in soon. The movement is not about one person’s hunger strike but to prevent Ladakh meeting the same fate as Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Sikkim. – AN]

  1. STRENGTHEN REGULATION, MONITORING AND PLANNING OF LAND USE, LAND-USE CHANGE AND FORESTRY (LULUCF)
  1. GRANTING COMMUNITIES CONSTITUTIONAL, LAND AND FOREST GOVERNANCE RIGHTS
  1. TRANSPARENCY, KNOWLEDGE BUILDING, SHARING AND EXCHANGE
  1. BUILDING RESILIENT, EQUITABLE AND SUSTAINABLE MOUNTAIN SOCIETIES

regulated collectively by communities respectful of the region’s carrying capacity

  1. PUT IN PLACE A ROBUST DISASTER RESPONSE  

– Provide time bound exemptions under the Forest Conservation Act 1980 for treatment of disaster affected private lands and rehabilitation of disaster displaced to safe areas (a land swap policy) and scrap

– like stone crushers, sand-gravel mining, river training and dredging, river front development projects, debris dumping and every commercial construction work.

PEOPLE FOR HIMALAYA – CAMPAIGN DECLARATION FEBRUARY 2024. This declaration comes in the wake of the irreversible impacts of increasing frequency, scale and intensity of climate disasters in the Himalayan region.

  1. On the one hand are frequent extreme climatic events – landslides, intense rainfall, floods, GLOFs, cloudbursts, heatwaves and on the other creeping slow onset events of decreasing snowfall, snow cover, rising temperatures and glacial melts. As result of these we see falling crop yields, drying of springs and streams, altering floral and faunal habitats, growing invasive species. We understand these disasters are not one time events but cascading and compounding disasters that are disturbing the local geology, ecology and livelihoods, dispossessing nature based communities.
  2. We understand that these disasters which appear in the natural environment – are actually systemic and policy induced disasters and result of historical processes of exploitation and governance failure at various levels – from global to local. Thus these disasters are political, economic and social not just environmental disasters. We refuse to call them ‘natural’ disasters. We understand that those who are the least responsible for these disasters are in fact the worst impacted by these disasters – and have been further rendered powerless and resource less in the process of disaster-making. These include marginal farmers, landless dalits, forest dwellers, adivasis, women, migrant workers, pastoralists, minorities, persons with disabilities and those living in conflict zones.
  3. We believe that those who are the most responsible for these disasters are those in power and extracting resources for profiteering. Those sitting at the helm of decision making from the countries and financial institutions of the global north, to the national and state governments and governance institutions, corporates and contractors – we hold them accountable for the growing commodification of the Himalaya. The Himalaya have been viewed as either ‘exotic’ places or ‘strategic’ borderlands, resulting in resource extraction since the colonial era. This exploitation has gained greater momentum in the last few decades of capitalist greed in the name of development – mindless infrastructures like mega dams and four lane highways, railway projects, commercial tourism and rampant urbanisation have caused unprecedented land use change damaging Himalayan rivers, forests, grasslands and mountains.
  4. Local societal and livelihood resilience has been destroyed and replaced with top-down, market dependent and techno-managerial solutions implemented through international loans and maldesigned climate finance projects. These structural and policy changes have disabled the building of financial resilience and autonomy of the Himalayan states. Over the last decade the growing centralisation of power has compromised the constitutional rights of the mountain regions and its peoples. We are seriously concerned about the growing ethnic conflict and social unrest being triggered by divisive government policies, majoritarian communalisation and believe that the resource extraction led ecological crisis has further compounded these conflicts.
  5. In the last decade and a half several environmental laws and regulatory/ protective policies have been diluted or eliminated in the name of national security, national interest and ‘green’ growth endangering our ecology and putting under threat the very survival of our people. On the other hand, progressive laws for land allocation, housing rights, forest rights, rehabilitation and relocation of development/disaster affected people and labour laws stand non-implemented. We condemn the repression of voices who have questioned this mindless destruction and the use of labels as anti- national and anti-development to create false narratives.

The ‘People for Himalaya’ campaign will work in solidarity for the wellbeing and sustenance of our Himalayan natural heritage – glaciers, rivers, alpine pastures, forests and lands and diverse inhabitants whose identity and survival depend on the Himalaya. We stand in alliance with organisations that support and advocate for democratic and decentralized governance in the Himalaya based on the principles of – sustainability guided by balancing science and indigenous knowledge; gender, caste, ethnic and intergenerational equity; and climate justice.

List of endorsing organisations:

  1. Affected Citizens of Teesta, Sikkim
  2. AIPWA, Uttarakhand
  3. Appiko-Chipko Movement, Karnataka
  4. Beej Bachao Andolan, Uttarakhand
  5. Bhumi Heen Bhumi Adhikar Manch, Himachal Pradesh
  6. Chamba Van Adhikar Manch, Himachal Pradesh
  7. Climate Front India, India
  8. Climate Front Jammu, Jammu Kashmir
  9. Council for Civic Democratic Engagement, Sikkim
  10. Devalsari Paryavaran Samiti, Uttrakhand
  11. Dibang Resistance, Arunachal Pradesh
  12. Disom Foundation, Nagaland
  13. Ecotourism and Conservation Society of Sikkim, Sikkim
  14. Friends of Ladakh, Friends of Nature (FOLFON), Ladakh
  15. Green Circle, Sikkim
  16. Gene Campaign, Uttarakhand
  17. Himal Prakriti – A Trust for Nature, Uttarakhand
  18. Harela, Uttarakhand
  19. Himalaya Niti Abhiyan, Himachal Pradesh
  20. Himdhara Environment Research and Action Collective, Himachal Pradesh
  21. Him Pragati Foundation, Himachal Pradesh
  22. HimRRA Network, Himachal Pradesh
  23. Indigenous Perspectives, Manipur
  24. Indian Community Activists Network, India
  25. Interweave, Sikkim
  26. Jagori Rural Charitable Trust, Himachal Pradesh
  27. Jammu Kashmir RTI Movement, Jammu Kashmir
  28. Joshimath Bachao Sangarsh Samiti, Uttarakhand
  29. Jaladhara Abhiyan, Rajasthan
  30. J&K Chopan Association, Jammu Kashmir
  31. J&K Forest Rights Coalition, Jammu Kashmir
  32. Jol Jongol Jomi (জল জঙ্গল জমি), West Bengal
  33. Kashmir Hikes and Treks, Jammu Kashmir
  34. Kalimpong Krishak Kalyan Sanghathan, West Bengal
  35. Katho Students Union, Manipur
  36. Khoj, Himachal Pradesh
  37. Koshish, Jammu and Kashmir
  38. Kosi Nav Nirman Manch, Bihar
  39. Kyang, Himachal Pradesh
  40. Kalpavriksh, Maharashtra
  41. Local Futures, Ladakh
  42. MAUSAM, India
  43. MKSS, Uttar Pradesh
  44. Mool Sustainability Research and Training Center, Jammu and Kashmir
  45. North East Dialogue Forum, Assam
  46. National Alliance for People’s Movements, India
  47. Nature-Human Centric People’s Movement, Jammu and Kashmir
  48. Parvatiya Mahila Adhikar Manch, Himachal Pradesh
  49. Parvatiya Tikau Kheti Abhiyan, Himachal Pradesh
  50. People for Himalayan Development, Himachal Pradesh
  51. People’s Campaign for Social and Economic Equity in the Himalaya, Himachal Pradesh
  52. Save Lahaul Spiti, Himachal Pradesh
  53. Sambhaavnaa Institute, Himachal Pradesh
  54. South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People, India
  55. Shimla Collective, Himachal Pradesh
  56. Sirmaur Van Adhikar Manch, Himachal Pradesh
  57. Spiti Civil Society, Himachal Pradesh
  58. Save the Hills, West Bengal
  59. South Asian Solidarity Collective, Delhi
  60. Tandi Sangharsh Samiti, Himachal Pradesh
  61. The Rainbow Comrades, Himachal Pradesh
  62. Thma U Rangli – Juki (TUR), Meghalaya
  63. Van Gujjar Tribal Yuva Sangathan, Uttarakhand
  64. Un Paso Mas (UPM), Delhi
  65. Uttarakhand Lok Vahini, Uttarakhand
  66. Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, Telengana
  67. Wullar Bachao Front, Jammu and Kashmir
  68. Youth for Himalaya, India

For more information: peopleforhimalaya@gmail.com

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