Losing of land and livelihood because of "poor" implementation of the Forest Rights Act is one of the prime reasons for the surge of Maoist insurgency in different parts of the country, according to Union Tribal Minister Jual Oram.
Seeking active cooperation of states to ensure effective implementation of the act to curb Left-wing extremism, Oram says his ministry has asked at least 10 states inclduing Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha, Telangana, Maharashtra, West Bengal and Bihar to review all rejected claims for land titles since the legislation came into force on December 31, 2007.
"In the coming year, we will strive to ensure that states implement the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act effectively so that forest dwellers get the rights to the forest land and resources, where their forefathers settled centuries ago and also to prevent them from getting influenced by Maoists," Oram told PTI.
Observing that there were "a high number rejections" of land titles, he said scrutiny had revealed that "majority of those (rejections) were based on invalid and trivial grounds".
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The ministry has identified 163 priority districts: 94 of them having more than 50 per cent of tribal population and 69 districts having at least 25 per cent of tribal population.
"The Ministry will focus on development of health, education, skill development, agriculture and employment in these districts in the coming year. Improvement in these spheres will also prevent them from getting influenced by Maoists.
The ministry will also aim at ensuring that money
Post-matric scholarships for ST students will be released through DBT mode to ensure transparency and fast delivery.
The minustry is also reviewing the Ekalavya Model Residential School (EMRS) scheme, says Oram.
"One of the bottlenecks has been availability of teachers in these schools. This issue has been taken up with states and we will see whether to expand the progrmme or not," he says adding that during the current financial year 20 new Ekalaya Model Residential Schools were opened and their total number has reached 227.
Oram, however, points out that availability of doctors, paramedics and equipment is much less in tribal areas as people do not want to work there due to lower levels of comfort.
Tribal communities comprise over 8 per cent of the country's population of 1.25 billion. There are over 80 million tribals and non-tribals dependent on the country's resource-rich forests, which make up 65 million hectares.