Aug 28, 2018

Sindh: Local NGOs Protest Deforestation and Environmental Damage to Region


Several non-governmental organisations in Pakistan’s Sindh region came together to protest outside the Hyderabad Press Club on Monday, 27 August 2018. They criticised the environmental damage caused by local politicians’ willingness to deal with the waderas (wealthy landlords) and open the forest up to land degradation and deforestation. Such decisions have severely reduced the forest’s total land area, which contributes to climate change and environmental pollution as well as a worsening of conditions for forest-dwelling communities and small farmers. This in turn only increases Sindh’s high unemployment and poverty rates.

The below article was published by the Daily Times (Pakistan):

The Sindh-based non-governmental organisations (NGOs) including the Sindh Agriculture and Forestry Workers Coordinating Organisation (SAFWCO) and the Voice of Missing Persons of Sindh (VMP-Sindh) on Monday 27 August 2018 organised a demonstration in front of the Hyderabad Press Club against ‘devastating’ deforestation and land degradation caused by cultivation by feudal lords (waderas) and landlord-compradors, backed by influential politicians in Sindh.

In terms of legal viewpoint, the Sindh Forest Department has a control over 2.782 million acres out of the total land area of 34.81 million acres of Sindh, which makes 8 percent of the total area of the province.

Reportedly, SAFWCO founder and president Suleman G. Abro, convener of VMP-Sindh Punhal Sario and Prof Mushtaq Mirnai expressed profound concerns over the situation, and said that the land grabbing by feudal lords has caused reduction of the forest land to less than 2.5 percent of the total area, thus causing adverse climate changes, global warming, environment pollution, less rains, and leaving people, the forest communities and their livestock in a ‘helpless’ situation.

They stated that massive losses to the forest economy have turned hundreds of people vulnerable to joblessness and poverty.

Furthermore, they accused the Pakistan Peoples Party’s (PPP) provincial government of giving the forest land on lease to landlords and ‘jagirdars’ for political gains, and informed that instead of tree plantation, they chopped down trees and cultivated the land for agricultural crops.

They appealed to the concerned authorities to take notice of the matter, formulate and implement concrete measures to halt deforestation and carry out comprehensive tree plantation drives in Sindh.

Photo courtesy of Daily Times