Tourism should also benefit wildlife and local communities ©Bivash Pandav
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Some wildlife conservationists welcomed it as ‘the move’ to
save tigers; a few called it ‘ridiculous’; the media termed it as a ‘ban’ on
tiger tourism carried out in India’s 41 tiger reserves. These fragmented reactions
were in response to the recent Supreme Court orders that caught extensive
attention the world over. Few closely looked at the court’s order before assumptions
were made. The court is perhaps not on its way to restrict public access to
appreciate tigers in the wild; it is possibly a temporary holdup to achieve a
conservation goal.
I speculate that the court wants to ensure that some of the
states such as Madhya Pradesh, Uttaranchal and Rajasthan, which hold poster boy
reserves attracting tourists to spot the elusive cats but under immense
pressure from tourism, to delineate buffer zones. Till 2006 no legal category
as tiger reserves existed in the country’s strong wildlife legislation. An
amendment to the law brought in the concept of ‘core zones’ that were to be
kept inviolate, and ‘buffer zones’ encompassing multiple use forest areas. But
some states ignored this part of the law and ignored delineating buffer zones.
Returning to the current situation; the tourism industry has
hit back at the ban saying that it would take away the extra sets of eyes
protecting tigers from poaching, would impact local economies and the vital
investments it brought to tiger conservation. However these tall claims are only
partially true. In most Indian tiger reserves tourism is carried out in small parts
of the reserves while larger portions are continued to be protected by the
barefoot soldiers of the forest department despite the hardships they face. Tourism
gains momentum only after industriousness of the forest staff brings back
animals so that they are available for tourism. It is certainly not the other
way round.
Yes, tourism industry does benefit communities but in a miniscule
way. I studied the benefits of such an activity in the celebrated Periyar Tiger
Reserve in southern India and the study results are very strikingly different
than the advertised claims. Only 0.8% of the beneficiaries of a large World
Bank funded project benefited from the tourism industry as a primary source of
occupation. However there is no argument that atleast a few families have been
profited.
But the indirect costs tourism has put by way of fragmenting
corridors through establishment of luxury lodges with blaring wedding
receptions, New Year Eve’s parties at the edges of tiger turfs, unethical safari
practices and other environmental pressures, have had serious impacts on tiger
conservation.
The challenge has also been the elitist model of tourism
where local people stand and watch the large benefits filched away by operators
while they bear the brunt of conservation through human-wildlife conflict and
reduced access to resources. The crux is that the industry has only looked at
short-sighted ‘profit only’ motives by green washing using the term
‘eco-tourism’. It has failed to demonstrate the spirit of eco-tourism in its
real meaning. There could be a few exceptions that exist, but surely minority
in numbers.
Some western based tour operators claiming rights over the country’s
tiger pastures have little understanding of Indian protected areas which are
specks of landscapes unlike in the African parks where land set aside for
wildlife conservation is colossal, hence experimentations on tourism is not a
luxury there. One of the best tiger reserves
in the country, Bandipur (890 sq km) home to about 80 tigers, one of the
highest densities of tigers anywhere in the world, has a good model of
protection, has no human habitation but is less than the size of Delhi
Municipal Corporation area (1,397 sq km). We need to tourism that is
complimentary of all these aspects rather than one size fits all model.
I am confident the court would permit tourism, when the
issue comes up in a few days, that is largely focused on education rather than
a marathon, chaotic, mass tourism approach. Pragmatic conservationists are
supportive of controlled tourism. We need tourism as an education tool. The
current sensationalisation and panic about the issue should die down while the
court would meet again as the newly constituted committee considers various
options to be submitted to the court in a few days.
My experience says that tourism will continue in tiger reserves;
however the industry should have foreseen a situation like this and have taken up
self-motivated corrective measures to avoid circumstances like these.
An edited version of this article was published in Deccan Herald on 26-09-2012
Sir I think if Buffer zones are developed propoerly by FD then tourists will have more sightings there and pressure on core area can be reduced.
ReplyDeleteYou are right. The long-term goal should be to shift tourism to buffer areas (wherever buffers have forests and are contiguous with tiger reserves). Hence a careful understanding of the landscape will be very helpful in delineating a buffer that would help wildlife, tourism and of course people who can benefit (in the real meaning) out of tourism.
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