Endangered seem
to be the so-called Protected Areas (PAs), as huge cultivations, attempts at
land-grabs, cutting of public roads and sand-mining are carried out sans
consideration for the drastic consequences not only for Sri Lanka but also
the world. Reports from
across the country are flowing in fast and furious about the massive
destruction of PAs. Taken in isolation, they seem like sporadic instances but
as a whole they sound a red alert for our very survival, said a
conservationist, a view underlined by many others.
The tragedy is
that it is in breach of the law, another perturbed environmentalist pointed
out, explaining that the PAs come under the Fauna and Flora Protection
Ordinance (FFPO), the forests under the Forest Ordinance and Sinharaja alone
under the National Heritage Wilderness Areas Act.
The PAs come
under the stewardship of the Department of Wildlife Conservation (DWC), while
forest areas are under the Forest Department.
No one, stressed
many a conservationist, is against development. But development must
encompass conservation, and respect laws enacted to protect the environment,
for ill-planned development will end in disaster, they said.
Conservationists
also pointed out that Sri Lankans seem very proud that the country is a
“biodiversity hotspot”. Although it means there are many endemic species, it
also means that there is an exceptionally high level of danger to them. Some countries
have landmasses that are more diverse, but they are not “hotspots” because
they are not under threat. Did you know that to be a “hotspot” more than 70%
of the landmass should have faced destruction in the past few years, a
conservationist asked. As many conservation
activists and groups such as the Environmental Foundation Ltd., (EFL),
Wildlife and Nature Protection Society (WNPS), Environment Conservation
Trust, Wilderness and Protected Areas Foundation (WPAF), Wildlife
Conservation Forum, Young Zoologists’ Association, Ceylon Bird Club and Galle
Wildlife Conservation Society spoke up against the degradation and denudation
of Pas and forests. The Sunday Times turned the spotlight on them and the
very first World Nature Heritage Site in the country to uncover what ails
them. The Sunday Times
has taken this major destructive strand running throughout the Pas and the
forests to weave the big disastrous picture that will toll the death knell
not only for Sri Lanka’s animals and plants but also for its diverse eco-systems.
Somawathie
National Park
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| Banana
cultivation at Somawathie National Park. Pic by Vimukthi Weeratunga of EFL |
A commercial
banana plantation is being set up on a large parcel of land in this National
Park, alleged environmentalists, providing satellite images as proof of park
encroachment. It has a very sensitive flood plain area, stressed others,
while an EFL spokesperson was perturbed that a large acreage seems to have
been “written off” for bananas under a memorandum of understanding signed
between the Army and ‘Letsgrow’, the local partner of the international
company, Dole Food Inc., based in the US.
Many
environmentalists disclosed that ‘Letsgrow’ established in 2009, is managed
by the brother of a well-known Sri Lankan bowler along with another
cricketer. As of July 2011,
nearly 500 acres of the National Park are under banana, the EFL spokesperson
pointed out, adding that the story being spread is that it is the abandoned
Kandakadu farm of the National Livestock Development Board (NLDB) on the
park’s boundary. However, the EFL showed the Sunday Times satellite maps
which indicated that part of the clearing and cultivation is within the park. When Somawathie
sanctuary was declared a National Park and expanded, a part of the NLDB’s
abandoned farmland fell within its boundaries, said environmental lawyer
Jagath Gunawardena, adding his voice to the outcry against PA destruction. “This is very
much a part of the park and should not be touched under the law,” he said.
Delving into the demarcations, the EFL spokesperson said that it was in 1966
that the Somawathie Chaitiya sanctuary was first declared. In 1986 it was
upgraded to National Park status, due to the importance of the animals and
plants in the area. Once again in 1987, more land was added to the National
Park, as Block 2. The serious issues with regard to boundaries need to be
addressed urgently, she said, refuting claims that the eastern park boundary
is the Mahaweli Ganga. “No it’s not. The boundary is the Kandakadu ela,” she
said. While the flood
plains (flat land beside the Mahaweli Ganga that becomes flooded in the rainy
season) of Somawathie are home to over resident 200 elephants, the National
Park is also the epicentre of other PAs such as Kaudulla, Minneriya,
Chunnakkadu and Wasgamuwa and should be treated and maintained as a
contiguous habitat, was the view of many.Small human settlements are also
being set up within the park, another activist pointed out.
Flood
Plains National Park
The flood plains
along the Mahaweli Ganga within the park are falling victim to mechanized
sand-mining, which ironically is prohibited, raising questions about the
DWC’s abilty and willingness to take action, was another grouse of
conservationists. The authorities
are turning a blind eye to the mining with backhoes, a source said, adding
that squatters in the area are also engaging in this illegal activity.
Hakgala
Strict Nature Reserve (SNRs)
One of only three
SNRs in the country, Hakgala which is of immense value with regard to
biodiversity, is threatened by potato, leek and cabbage cultivations and
settlements continuing to encroach on the SNR, the EFL spokesperson said. Two cases filed
by EFL against the DWC for inaction against encroachers were settled on the
basis that certain terms laid down by court would be met. A major challenge
is also the encroachment into Hakgala by the Ambewela farm, EFL sources said,
adding that the DWC was dragging its feet by excluding the farm in its
demarcation of the SNR’s boundaries. This was while the farm had taken the
law into its own hands and electrically fenced itself in.
The EFL is
considering initiating legal action once again to get the DWC to evict
encroachers, the Sunday Times learns.
Wilpattu
National Park
World famous in
the past for startling images of leopards on white sands, in recent times
what has been highlighted is the rape of the pristine Wilpattu National Park
to cut two 60 foot roads, one close to its unique villu system and the other
hugging the coastline. Wilpattu’s plight
is being fought in the Supreme Court, with the case against the DWC, the Navy
and the Ministries of Economic Development and Tourism, filed by EFL, WNPS
and WPAF, going in for argument next January.
There was
large-scale felling of valuable timber trees such as weera, palu and karuwala
to make way for the “interior” road from Eluvankulam to Mullikkulam, while
the road cuts across the Kala Oya flood plains, an activist lamented, adding
it has harmed the villu system and led to many road-kills of animals. Attempts have
also been made by the military to fence off certain areas of Wilpattu, he
said. Many visitors to
Wilpattu informed the Sunday Times that the coastal road has collapsed
destroying many archaeological treasures. Yearly flooding of the interior
road for nearly nine months makes it impassable, a fact that those clamouring
for “right of way” have not taken into account, a source pointed out, while
another added that the Kala Oya flood plains are the largest in the country
and should not be decercrated by a public road. Meanwhile,
large-scale sand-mining has also dogged the Moderagam Aru on the park’s
northern boundary, with the matter being brought up in Parliament and
Wildlife Minister S.M. Chandrasena denying allegations and explaining that
dredging of the waterway is done to prevent flooding.
Ruhuna
(Yala) National Park
Development of
the buffer-zone activity prohibited under the FFPO, is taking place at this
National Park. The one-mile buffer zone is meant to ward off the effects of
untoward development activity close to the parks, said activists.
There are also
serious concerns about military activity within Yala, with many sources
pointing out that especially during the Pada Yatra, stalls had been erected
along the devotee-trail within the park. It was like a
circus with much pollution, a source said, stressing that nobody including
the DWC had thought about the consequences on the animals and plants. “People
forget that these National Parks are meant for the protection of fauna and
flora,” a disgusted animal rights activist said.
Sinharaja,
the World Nature Heritage Site
It may not be in
the heart of Sinharaja, but this World Nature Heritage Site considered the
“jewel” in the crown, is facing imminent danger with the latest attempt being
to cut a road on its boundary connecting Ilumbakanda village to
Suriyakanda.Twice started and twice stopped, if a road is cut on the eastern
side of Sinharaja known as Morning Side, it will spell disaster to both fauna
and flora, stressed EFL’s Vimukthi Weeratunga, showing the repercussions of a
“new but bad frontier” being opened up. The argument that
the villagers of Ilumbakanda are isolated doesn’t hold water as they already
have an access road, a conservationist pointed out. First will come a
road, followed by local politicians either ignorant or those looking for
quick votes, grabbing land for distribution, Mr. Weeratunga said harking back
to the past when Sinharaja became the experimental toy of high-level politicians
who first attempted to feed a white-elephant plywood factory by stripping
this natural wonder and later allowed large-scale mechanized logging here. Once again, the
plea is that Sinharaja, home to many unique and endemic species couldn’t and
shouldn’t be taken in isolation but as a contiguous habitat and protected as
such. Roads,
settlements or tea and cardamom cultivations in any of the 14 forest areas
identified as the 11,000-hectare Sinharaja Adaviya, which includes the
National Wilderness Heritage Site, will lead to fragmentation and loss of
both animals and plants, said another conservationist. Another explained
that Sinharaja is the most vulnerable hotspot and any dabbling with it or its
environs, where the critical mass would be reduced, could lead to the
extinction of many “point endemic” species. Point endemism is when a species
is confined to one local area within a site, he said, adding that there may
be many more undiscovered species within Sinharaja. Many were the
questions raised why it has taken so long for the authorities to acquire the
areas around Sinharaja coming under the Land Reform Commission (LRC). The Sunday Times
learns that under Articles 9 and 10 of the World Heritage Convention (WHC),
it requires the evolutionary process to continue for a site to be considered
of “natural” importance globally. Once a Natural
Heritage Site is declared due to its “uniqueness and universal value” with
world biota being identified there, after competing heavily with many other
sites, the authorities of the country where it is located have to abide by
the WHC. It no longer
belongs to the government of that country but to the global community and
nothing should be done to endanger it, a source said.
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