City
Epaper

J-K to hand over rights to tribals under Forest Rights Act

By ANI | Updated: September 12, 2021 03:50 IST

For the first time in history, Jammu and Kashmir government will roll out handing over of rights to tribal communities under the Forest Rights Act on Monday.

Open in App

For the first time in history, Jammu and Kashmir government will roll out handing over of rights to tribal communities under the Forest Rights Act on Monday.

Lieutenant Governor of Jammu and Kashmir Manoj Sinha on Saturday interacted with a delegation of the Gujjar-Bakerwal community along with members of the Gaddi-Sippi community.

With the commitment of social equality, the government has taken a slew of decisions in the last few months to bestow the due rights to all tribal communities.

Addressing the delegation, Sinha said, "For the first time in the history of Jammu and Kashmir, the government on Monday will roll out handing over of rights under Forest Rights Act. To implement an overarching plan for the development of tribal communities, a two-month-long survey has been conducted for effective policy-making based on ground realities."

"The UT government has decided to develop transit accommodations at 8 places at an estimated cost of Rs 28 crore for accommodating seasonal transitory population, besides provisions for medical camps, animal yards. Tribal Bhavans to come up at Jammu, Srinagar and Rajouri," he added.

Sinha further informed that 1500 mini sheep farms will be established here for the sustainable livelihood of tribal youth.

"For the sustainable livelihood of tribal youth, we have decided to establish 1500 mini sheep farms, besides setting up 16 milk villages worth Rs 16 crore. Further, 500 youth initially will be linked to specialised skill development programmes such as Commercial Pilots, Management etc," the Lieutenant Governor said.

He further said, "Scholarships worth Rs 30 crore has been given to tribal children; this year 42,000 additional children will be provided with this scholarship. 1,521 seasonal schools for migratory children, besides two residential schools on the migratory route and 8000 tablets for 7th and 8th-grade students."

The Lieutenant Governor said that the tribal communities are getting rights over minor forest produce.

"The UT, in coordination with TRIFED, will establish infrastructure for collection, value addition, packaging and distribution. To empower the youth and women a cluster of 15 tribal self-help groups (SHGs) will be established," he said.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalPakistan's crackdown on Ahmadis exposes deep-rooted institutional persecution: Report

International"A whole civilisation will die tonight": Trump claims "total regime change" in Iran as deadline looms

NationalSkill as source of livelihood: PM Vishwakarma Yojana changes fortunes of Damoh youths

InternationalUS has largely achieved military objectives in Iran: JD Vance

NationalEast Champaran hooch tragedy: Major disaster averted due to timely seizures of 1,500 litres of methanol, says Bihar DGP

National Realted Stories

NationalTronglaobi bomb attack case to be handed over to NIA: Manipur CM Yumnam Khemchand Singh

NationalPadma Shri Chutni Mahato extends support to women reservation bill, questions Congress’s silence

NationalRapper Badshah apologies in NCW over ‘Tateeree’ song, vows to empower women

NationalMP: Pravin Togadia joins Bhojshala satyagraha, demands restoration of Goddess Vagdevi idol

NationalAkali Dal to help farmers for crop damage in Punjab rains