BMC. Under Rule 22 (6) of the Biological Diversity Rules of 2004 the main function of the BMC is to prepare a Peoples Biodiversity Register in consultation with the local people which shall contain comprehensive information on availability and knowledge of local biological resources and their associated TK. The Biological Diversity Act under Sec 21 envisages that the NBA will base its approval regarding any application for access to biological resources or associated TK on the whether a mutually agreed terms and fair and equitable benefit sharing has been negotiated with the local community that provides such resource or associated TK (benefit claimers according to Sec 2 (a) of the Biological Diversity Act). The local community or benefit claimers in question will be identified according to the Peoples Biodiversity Register under the territorial jurisdiction of the local BMC. The Biological Diversity Act and Rules therefore provides us certain rights: These include: • The right to consultation and public participation prior to any project that may affect our livelihoods, biodiversity and associated TK; • The right to conservation and sustainable use of our biodiversity; • The right to give prior informed consent and negotiate mutually agreed terms when any biodiversity or associated TK is accessed and share fairly and equitable in any benefits arising from the utilization of our biodiversity and associated TK; • The right to a Peoples Biodiversity Register that will document our biological diversity and associated TK; • The right to a BMC to advise the NBA on how our biological resources and associated TK can be conserved and sustainably used; and • The right to carry on our traditional lifestyles which involves continued access to the forest in order to conserve the biological diversity and associated TK. The Scheduled Tribes and other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 The preamble of the Forest Rights Act in accordance with Art 8j of the Convention on Biological Diversity recognizes that the forest dwelling scheduled tribes and other traditional forest dwellers are integral to the survival of the forest ecosystem. The Forest Act seeks to address the long term insecurity of land tenure and of these communities and therefore recognizes the rights of forest dwelling tribes and other traditional forest dwellers, which include nomadic or settled pastoralists, on all forest lands. The Forest Rights Act therefore provides certain rights to the Raika community: They include: • The right of ownership, access to collect, use, and dispose of minor forest produce which has been traditionally collected within or outside village boundaries (Section 3c); • The right to protect regenerate or conserve or manage any forestry resource which we have been traditionally protecting and conserving for sustainable use (Section 3i);

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