The sonaha and the
environment
Kamala Sohana is
from pathabhar of Rajapur in Bardia. Although Patabhar is famous for rice production
there is hardly any land for farming here. Kamala's family depends on the
Karnali River for their livelihood.
We don't have a
house. All we have is one kattha plot. What can we grow on this small plot of land?
She says as she sifts the sands on the riverbanks.
Besides Kamala,
there are some 12, 00 other people called Sonahas in Rajapur who eke out their
living by collecting gold particles from the sands or fishing in the Karnali
River.
A few generations
ago the Sonahas gold people were considered nomads who lived near rivers
abundant with fish and gold dust. Now times have changed. The places where they
used to moved around freely are now fenced for conserece into a crisis. Says
Sudeep Jana, a doctoral researcher. It would be wrong to have a notion of biodiversity
conservation by keeping them off from their natural habitats as they don't
consider themselves separate from nature.
Nowadays, their
brooks and forest areas have either been brought into the territory of the
designated national parks or community forest. Boundaries have been fixed and
these areas are governed by strict regulations.
Earlier we used to spend
most of our time in the river. Now we're afraid of the national parks. We hear
there are rules to follow and that the rules keep on changing. We don't even
know what they are. Say Kamala.
The Sonahas, who
depend heavily on rivers and forests, are barred from entering these very
areas. Mahendra Sonaha of Golagaun says the forests have turned dangerous for them.
I was born and grew up on these riverbanks. How are we going to survive if
we're barred from going to the river? He questions.
With things getting
increasingly difficult, the Sonahas have started looking for alternative means
of making their living. Kamala's husband works in India. She says it has become
a compulsion for Sonahas to take up other jobs.
The river where we
used to go fishing it now the property of the national park. We can't survive
if we don't find other jobs.
Sonahas live with
very little income. Kamala's family, for example, has four persons who can work
for living. But even if all of them go to work they can hardly collect gold
particles worth rs 300. So the family can only make rs 3000 a month.
There are rivers
where they can find more gold and fish then in Karnali. But these rivers too
are restricted. If they are found inside, they will be arrested by the national
park authorities.
Last year, Ghumlal
Sonaha's brother was arrested while fishing inside the Bardiya National Park
and was Detained for a month. Additionally, he had to pay a fine of Rs 5000, an
amount his family had never seen or earned at one time.
It was very hard
for us to arrange such a big amount of money. We borrowed money from neighbors
and paid it to the it to the National park recounts Ghumlal.
The Sonahas leave
the sand as it is after sifting the gold particles and the sand heaps come to
their previous from on the banks, causing no harm to the natural course of the
river. Mahendra Sonaha complains that the national park and the community
forest authorities have never considered their point. Why only sift the sand.
We don't take it with us.
The only
possessions of the Sonahas are the tools they use for sifting sand to collect
gold, fishing nets and wooden boats.
The indigenous
people have never destroyed nature. The Sonahas have been living in the jungle
for a very long time, but they were never found making homes in the forest
areas, Jana's research says.
The regulations
introduced by the national parks do not address them. Advocate Rajkumar
Chaudhary says such a regulations have encroached upon their right.
Rules and
regulations that make things difficult for people who traditionally depend on
forests, land or rivers for a living should be changed. He says.
In his view, such
problems need to be addressed now as Nepal has become a part to the ILO treaty
four years ago which guarantees the rights of indigenous nationalities.
The Nepal
government has an obligation to implement this treaty, which clearly states
that the indigenous communities who depend on forests, water and land shall not
be displaced from their original places. But Sonahas have been restricted from
fishing or sifting the sand to collect gold (In their native land) Chaudhary
says.
The Sonahas did
convey their concerns to the national park officials, who provided licenses to
allow them to collect gold and go fishing only during the day. But once
somebody from the Sonaha community was cought assisting rhino poachers by the
park authorities, their licenses haven't been renewed since then.
A villager got
caught. We heard that the other two arrested were soldiers. We don't know what
happened to them, but none of us got our licenses renewed. What kind of rule is
this? Asks Ghumlal. We don't have anybody to speak for our right.
Some of the rules
introduced by the authorities for conservation of biodiversity have made things
difficult for so many indigenous communities. Their cultures and traditions are
getting lost because of these interventions. The Sonahas are obviously going to
be one of them if things continue like this.
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