RAIKA BIO-CULTURAL PROTOCOL APPENDIX We have been historically provided with grazing permits At the same time, we are unable to act as custodians of which have over the last few years been revoked and all the forest, so illegal logging, poaching and crimes are being grazing in the forest has been banned without due process committed in areas that we once managed according to by the Forest Department. We were neither consulted about our customary laws. The continual work we undertook to the decision, nor compensated in any way. eradicate harmful or invasive species has ceased, and with it precipitous increases in plants that are either harmful We respect the need to conserve the Kumbhalgarh to animals or risk destabilizing the local ecology. Sanctuary’s biodiversity. Better than anyone, we understand the importance of the ecosystem because it is has sustained The reduction in available prey for wild predators has led to our livestock and our communities just as we have their encroaching on villages, causing conflict between contributed to its conservation. Our exclusion from the forest communities and the wildlife. At the same time, we are has deeply affected our livestock numbers and is having a unable to assist members of other communities who need negative effect on the forest ecosystem. to access the forest, which is reducing the ability of communities to benefit from the forests. B. Gauchar and oran Animal genetic resources: due to the significantly decreased We have experienced the same fate regarding the shrinkage amount of grazing lands available to us, we have been forced of gauchar (village communal grazing lands) and oran to sell significant numbers of our livestock over the last (sacred groves attached to temples). These areas have 5 years. We are literally being forced to sell our livelihoods become increasingly diverted for other economic to feed ourselves. Our camel stocks have been hardest hit, development projects. It is ironic that we - the very people suffering a 50% decrease in the last 10 years, and this drop who for centuries have been the custodians of biodiversity represents a significant threat to the survival of the breed. and whose traditional lifestyles have developed and sustained the biodiversity of the region - are now being With the sale of our livestock goes our traditional knowledge. denied access to it based on a limited understanding of As our herds diminish, so does the transmission of breeding the complex relationship between us, our livestock and techniques, medicinal practices and ecological understanding the local ecosystem. of the areas we used to graze on. The potential loss of the important animal genetic resources that we have C. The combined effect on our animal genetic resources and on the region’s biological diversity We are deeply concerned about the impacts that our exclusion from previously accessible communal areas for grazing our livestock is having on areas’ biodiversity, our animal genetic resources and our future. developed, in co-evolution with the Rajasthani ecology is significant for a world that is suffering from climate change and food shortages. Our future: the continuing exclusion from areas for grazing raises serious doubts about the viability of our way of life. With it will disappear our livestock, our culture and the virtuous relationship between our herds and the Rajasthani landscapes we have sustained. We require grazing rights and Biodiversity: Our exclusion from forested areas is changing the ecosystem and leading to a degraded ecology. The reduction in grazing is resulting in an excess of grass and foliage on the ground that is leading to an increase in the prevalence and severity of forest fires. The pits that are dug to inhibit the spread of forest fires are proving to be ineffective in combating this serious issue due to the dry grass that has begun to grow in these pits. The excess ground fall is leading to disequilibrium in termite numbers that can affect the health of the trees. a corresponding increase in the market for our products to continue to sustain our livelihoods and keep our unique breeds, including the camel. Our children no longer want to carry on our traditional way of life because of the hardships associated with the lack of grazing but at the same time are returning frustrated from low paying jobs in cities where they went as unskilled labourers. We are caught in a no man’s land of being unable to carry on their traditional occupations and unwilling to suffer the indignities of life as unskilled labourers. 80

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