Pakistan's forests fall victim to the Taliban
The
forests of northwestern Pakistan have become the latest victim of the
Taliban's increasingly desperate quest for resources to sustain and fund
its military program
Ashfaq Yusufzai for IPS
part of the Guardian Environment Network
The
landscape of Swat, an administrative district in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Province and once a luscious valley, is now dotted with thousands of
tree stumps as militants decimate acres of forest for timber revenues.
"Nearly
all the forested areas have been mercilessly stripped of trees but the
Swat in particular has borne the brunt of the Taliban's atrocities over
the last two years," Jamshaid Ali Khan, secretary of the Sarhad Awami
Forestry Ittehad (SAFI), told IPS.
SAFI
was founded in 1997 in the hopes of conserving, managing and developing
forests, providing income for local workers, reducing air pollution and
minimising soil erosion during floods but its operations were severely
restricted between 2007 and 2009, when the Taliban exercised full
control over Swat.
Despite
all its best efforts, the organisation has failed to stop the lopping
of trees to fund the Islamic movement. Jamshaid lamented the Taliban's
tactic of enlisting the services of the 'timber mafia' to fell forests
and sell the wood for throwaway prices.
Rahim
Gul, a researcher at the University of Peshawar, says the Taliban
frequently 'clean their hands' on natural resources, whenever they are
short of funds.
"The
Taliban finance their movement by (extracting timber) or imposing harsh
taxes on the transportation of marbles from the northern Federally
Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)," he said, adding that the Taliban's
crude methods of tree cutting cause permanent damage to the environment.
"A
tree takes 100 years to mature before it can be cut for construction
wood. The government cuts the trees after evaluation and planting
sapling as substitutes," Jamshaid said. The majority of trees felled by
the Taliban have not yet reached their full state of maturity, he said.
Citing research conducted by the Pakistan Forest Institute of Peshawar,
Gul claimed that the Taliban also employs methods such as kidnapping for
ransom, growing poppy crops and harbouring criminals as
income-generating schemes. They also mine and sell precious stones,
including fine quality emeralds.
However, timber extraction remains the most popular, and arguably most destructive, activity by far.
Wide-scale deforestation
Mohammad
Jawad, a forest officer for the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, explained that
before the onset of militancy in 2005, the province accounted for 40
percent of the country's forest resources.
Although
no fresh research has been done since, "it is largely believed that the
Taliban have destroyed 80 percent of those forests," he said.
The
Malaknd Division of northwestern Pakistan, renowned for its vast
expanses of pine, dewdar, cedar and byar trees, now wears a deserted
look.
"Fewer
forests mean less money for the more than 20,000 households in Swat and
adjacent districts in the Malaknd Division, all of which considered the
forests to be their 'lifeline', since it provided them an income and
royalties from the sale of trees," he added.
Ameer
Muhammad Khan of SAFI told IPS that local communities had traditionally
relied on forests for firewood, construction wood and grazing pastures.
"The
government is responsible for protecting these forests but it has no
authority to stop the Taliban from the ruthless laceration that has
deprived 80,000 people of royalties from the sustainable sale of trees,"
he stressed.
According
to SAFI, every resident of the forest-rich areas of Malaknd used to
receive about 100 dollars in annual royalties before the Taliban's
onslaught against the forests began but now that amount has plunged to
just 10 dollars. People are cursing the Taliban for bringing about such a
swift cut to their meagre income.
Not
only the residents of Malaknd but the government too has suffered
losses of up to 350 million dollars according to a report by the Forest
Development Corporation.
Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Forest Minister Wajid Ali Khan told IPS that his ministry
had launched a programme aimed at mobilising local communities to plant
more trees and hopefully make up for the losses wrought by the Taliban.
"We
have also begun consultations with lawmakers, bureaucrats, local
communities and the media to promote good plantation habits in the
affected areas," he said.
The
programme further seeks to mobilise, organise and empower forest
owners, rights holders (anyone owed royalties from the sale of
government-owned trees) and non-owners in order to influence policy
reforms, the minister added.
"We
have embarked on reforms in collaboration with the rights holders to
carry out plantation drives and prevent further cutting of trees. More
than 20 forest checkpoints have been established, which are managed by
the local communities in collaboration with the government," he said.
SAFI is also asking the government to enhance royalties, since the militancy has damaged local business.
Forest-dependent
communities are the hardest-hit victims of the Taliban's tirade against
forests, which has also caused enormous damage to the entire forest
ecosystem, necessitating integrative and interactive methods such as
farm forestry.
"To promote farm forestry we have distributed 1.5 million plants among the local residents," Jamshaid told IPS.
SAFI also planted 100,000 saplings on 2000 acres of land in Malaknd after the Taliban's defeat in 2009.
In
another effort to counteract the effects of rampant deforestation, SAFI
hosts an annual People's Forest Assembly, where methods of conservation
and management are discussed, Ameer Muhammad Khan told IPS.
Yet
Jamshaid warned a lot more needs to be done to create an environment
conducive to sustainable and participatory forest management.
Militants
have not only deforested the Malaknd district but also felled 6,000
acres of forest in the surrounding region. Abdul Rasool, a forest
officer at the FATA secretariat, told IPS that the militants have so far
chopped down roughly 50,000 big trees.
Of
the Malaknd's seven districts the Swat, Dir and Buner have suffered the
most; their hills, which used to be covered with tall trees, now stand
deserted.
Em: http://pakagri.blogspot.com.br/2012/01/pakistans-forests-fall-victim-to.html
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário