A group of temporary frontline forest staff carryout preventive fire management activities |
In India, within the frontline staff there are people who
are permanently employed through the regular government service process. They
are part of the administration system and receive their salaries and benefits
as any government employee would. They face a plethora of complications
compared to their counterparts in other government departments carrying out
similar duties of protection and law enforcement. However, there is an
additional group of frontline staff who are largely neglected and face a even
more uphill task but slog and sweat to protect wildlife with no benefits or
welfare measures except a rudimentary salary structure. These are the temporary
staff, and when employed in protected areas, mostly work at anti-poaching camps
(APCs). These APCs are small outposts within remote areas of the forests where
their basic duty is to carryout patrolling efforts against poaching, timber
smuggling and to ward off other threats to wildlife.
These temporarily employed staff (though many have worked
for years and decades) are given a short break in the records during the end of
the financial year to show discontinuity in their services so that they cannot legally
claim to be employed on a long-term basis. They are employed on an ad-hoc basis
with no official formalities and are termed as the ‘daily wage staff’. They
receive a basic per day pro-rota salary and receive no benefits of salary hike,
daily allowance, assured pay at the end of the month or other benefits that a
regular government employee would draw.
They sweat during hot summers dousing forest fires, walk
their patrol areas facing risk from wild animals as well as from those who try
to illegally benefit from forests risking their lives in the line of duty.
However they have little amenities at their ‘work places’ (APCs) but wildlife
benefit a lot from their labor. Not wildlife alone, but wildlife biologists,
forest officials, government and the society as a whole benefits due to their
industrious work.
The government takes no any active steps to improve their benefits,
as they fear that it would be applicable to all temporary staff employed in
various government departments. Though the working conditions, job profile are
much severer for those who work within the wildlife sections of the forest
department, the government does not make any distinction based on the
hardships. Although some officials have taken positive steps to enhance their
working conditions they themselves are in super minority.
If this pathetic situation continues it could be hard to get
these positions filled in the future. As the country heads towards an economic
progress labor wages have been increasing. In some parts of the country daily
wages in cash crop agricultural sector is reaching over 600 rupees a day.
Despite higher wages, of course justified due to price rise, there is a severe
shortage of manual labor in the agricultural sector. Coupled with higher wages,
popular governmental welfare schemes such as the MGNREGA, that aims to enhance employment
security for people, provisioning of highly subsidized food grains and other
similar benefit policies have had both positive and negative impacts on labor
availability.
Under these circumstances it could be extremely difficult to
find people to be employed in wildlife protection sectors. Low wages, delayed
payments, salary cuts, life in inhospitable conditions, away from families for
long periods, zero health benefits all makes it less and less attractive to
take up temporary employment opportunities within the forest department. If the
government does not take this issue seriously there could be large-scale
vacancies at the frontline protection arena in the near future. The issue of
on-ground foot protection, which is one of the key aspects of defense against
illegal activities, would become obsolete in wildlife conservation if issues of
these staff are not addressed immediately.
Assured medical benefits, support to families during
accidents, assisting children’s education, special allowance are some of the
socio-economic amenities that need to be compulsorily given to these staff. Ensuring
that the legally prescribed wages are paid on time directly to their bank
accounts is an important step to encourage people working in these posts.
Ad-hoc dismissals should also be curtailed and formal process needs to be
implemented for taking them
out of their jobs. Many of these temporary staff come from tribal or socially oppressed communities hence do not poses the social skills to voice against unfair treatment meted against them. Many perhaps are even unaware of the wages they are entitled to.
out of their jobs. Many of these temporary staff come from tribal or socially oppressed communities hence do not poses the social skills to voice against unfair treatment meted against them. Many perhaps are even unaware of the wages they are entitled to.
The world looks at India for its conservation leadership on
saving some of the endangered species. It would be well worth for the country to
take similar course in enhancing the welfare of its wildlife protectors, who
struggle to protect our wildlife from orchids to the mammoth elephant. Or else,
the strong foundation of wildlife protection will crumble, perhaps crumble
quite fast.
An edited version of the article was published in Deccan Herald on 09-10-2015
An edited version of the article was published in Deccan Herald on 09-10-2015
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