The regulation of forest
resources by the state is normally dictated by the condtion of
resource, degree of conflict, institutions and their capacity of
conflict resolution, external pressures, and enforceability of
regulations. This chapter attempts to provide information on legal
regulation of forest resources in Bangladesh. To provide a broader
picture, this chapter includes other laws that are in some way
related to forests and different international conventions which are
operative in Bangladesh.
8.1 General
The fundamental legal
document is the constitution of Bangladesh that empowers the
government to make laws and regulation. It has several provisions
with implications on the authority, control and management of public
and private forest resources in Bangladesh. It empowers the courts
or the judiciary to enforce the judicial implementation of different
laws and regulations. Bangladesh shares with the majority of the
subcontinent the British legacy of legal and centralized control of
natural resources like forests. In addition to the forest and
wildlife acts, Bangladesh has many acts and international
conventions that affect her forest and wildlife resources.
In this chapter, the
presentation of the forest Act follows the decription of Acts other
than the forest Act and it precedes the wildlife Act. The chapter
then deals with the environmental Act, international coventions and
institutions (other than forest department) that are empowered to
look after forests within their admininstrative boundaries.
8.2 State
Acquisition and Tenancy (SAT) Act, 1950
Prior to SAT Act,
1950, the tenants were subject to the will of a pyramid of landlords
(Zamindars). This act abolished the landlord system and vested all
the land in the constitution (State). It provided title of the land
to its tillers and set limits on extent and kinds of private land
holding. The act allowed for retention of the homesteads and
agricultural lands, up to a specified limit but did not entitle a
tenant to retain forested lands. Therefore, during the period SAT
Act became operative, many people illegally cleared their forests
and hastily erected settlements so that government is not able to
claim that land.
The private forest
lands acquired by the government under the SAT Act are called
"acquired forests". The Forest Department manages about 9,600
hectares of acquired forests. This figure is far smaller than the
amount of land historically acquired. The government has reserved
many of these acquired lands under the Forest Act, 1927 and those
areas are now counted with the reserved forests.
Under the SAT Act,
the government has also acquired full ownership of many of "vested
forests" (under Private Forest Act) and reserved them. The small
area that is still managed as "vested forests" are largely lands
that the government could not acquire under the SAT Act.
8.3 The Acquisition
of Wasteland Act, 1950
This Act authorizes
the government to acquire private lands that have not been
cultivated during last five years, for any public purposes including
afforestation. The government has not applied this law widely to
acquire lands for forestry purposes, since under the Private Forest
Act, 1959 the Government has the alternative of temporarily vesting
lands lying idle for more than three years and not paying outright
for the title to the land.
8.4 Brick Burning
(Control) (Amendment) Act, 1992
Brick making is a
major domestic industry in Bangladesh and it uses considerable
amount of fuelwood. The Brick Burning (Control) Act, 1989 as amended
in 1992 outlaws the use of wood fuels in brick making. It provides
for fines, imprisonment, and loss of license to make bricks for
breaking its legal provisions. However, fuelwood is being commonly
used as fuel for brick making. Currently, there is no substitute
either for bricks in construction industry or for fuelwood as a
source of energy in brick making. Under such circumstances, the act
has become mostly unenforceable.
8.5 Other Relevant
Laws
Land laws are very
important because they directly affect forest resources. However,
the efficiency of land laws depends on the completeness and
reliability of land records. The land records in Bangladesh are
incomplete and often unreliable. This condition has lead to quite
conflicting claims to both the government and the private lands and
forests in Bangladesh. Further, when land laws limit the size of
land ownership, they also affect spatial and temporal patterns of
private forests. In Bangladesh, much of the private forests are in
form of small lots or homesteads. Such land related laws that have
direct bearing on private forests in Bangladesh include the
Limitation Act, 1887, the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, the East
Bengal Government Land (Recovery of Possession) and Building Act,
1952, and the Land Reforms Act, 1984.
Another very
important legislation having direct bearing on open access forests
is the Cattle Trespass Act, 1871. It deals with stray livestock and
control of their damage to public areas.
Country tax laws
provide incentive to maintain the tree cover. The tax rate is lower
on uncultivated lands that support forests on somewhat larger
holdings. This benefit does not have a significant impact on the
landscape, as most of the tree growers are rural poor, small and
marginal farmers who pay no property or income tax.
Some laws affect the
implementation of the Forest Act itself and the efficiency of forest
management. For example Penal Code, 1860, the Evidence Act, 1871,
the Criminal Procedure Code, 1898, and the Civil Procedure Code,
1908 define the way judiciary deals with different forest offences.
Similarly, the Contract Act, 1872 and the Sale of Goods Act, 1930
control the sale of forest produce. The Social Welfare Act, 1961,
and the Foreign Donation (Voluntary Activities) Regulation Act, 1978
guide and control NGOs, who are key to the success of social and
community forestry in Bangladesh.
8.6 Forest Act
(Amendment), 1989
The Forest Act of
1927 as amended in 1989 has its roots in Indian Forest Act, 1878.
The Forest Act grants the government several basic powers, largely
for conservation and protection of government forests, and limited
powers for private forests. The 1927 version of the act was amended
in 1989 for extending authority over "any [Government-owned] land
suitable for afforestation".
Forest department is
the main agency to implement the provisions of the Forest Act. The
Act, however, does not specify any sort of institutional structure
for the forest or other land holding agencies. It also does not set
out any specific policy direction for managing the forests.
Bangladesh has formulated a series of eleven rules for delegating
legal powers to Forest Officers, from the Chief Conservator down to
Forest Guards for implementing certain parts of the act.
Most of the forest
lands under the management of forest department are areas declared
to be reserved and protected forests under this act. The available
figures for the current total area of reserved or protected forest
are not consistent (Table 4 at Appendix). The areas in Bangladesh
that are referred to as "village forests" are actually privately
owned land covering about 270,000 hectares. Under the Forest Act the
government may establish village forests by assigning parts of
reserved forest to particular villages for their use. However, this
provision has never been used in Bangladesh.
The act empowers the
government to regulate the felling, extraction, and transport of
forest produce in the country. The process to get permit for felling
trees and transporting the material is quite bureaucratic and time
consuming. The level of competent authority increases with the
number of trees in question. Forest department limits the routes for
transportation of forest produce, inspects and marks the material
for transportation. The government has made many rules for this
purpose including the following:
Sylhet Forest Transit
Rules, 1951;
Dinajpur and Rangpur
Forest Transit Rules, 1954
Chittagong, Cox's
Bazar and Comilla Forest Transit Rules, 1959
Control of Transit of
timbers and other forest produce for transit in the Sundarbans, 1959
Dacca Forest Transit
Rules, 1959
Mymensingh Forest
Transit Rules, 1959
East Pakistan General
Forest Transit Rules, 1960
Chittagong Hill
Tracts Forest Transit Rules, 1974
The government has
promulgated regulations both for some specific category of forests
like Prohibition and Rules affecting Protected Forests in Sundarbans
Division (1959), and for some specific purposes like Rules for the
Preservation of Trees and Timbers belonging to the Government in the
District of Chittagong, Sylhet Forest (Protection from Fire) Rules,
1954, and Chittagong and Chittagong Hill Tracts Reserved Forests
Fire Protection Rules, 1958).
However, under
current social conditions and existing institutional structure, the
forest department finds it difficult to enforce many of the rules
and regulations issued under the Forest Act. For example, forged
claims and encroachment are common due to rough and incomplete
records of land and moving people from encroached forest land is
socially and politically sensitive (SMPFS, 1998). Bangladesh is
seriously considering improvements to improve enforceability of the
legal provisions through changes in acts, rules, regulations, and
institutional structures of the forest department. The efficiency of
change will however be defined by the development of local
institutions and human resources for conservation of natural
resources.
8.7 The Bangladesh
Private Forest Act (PFA), 1959
The Private Forest
Act of 1959 allows the Government to take over management of
improperly managed private forest lands, any private lands that can
be afforested, and any land lying fallow for more than three years.
The Private Forest Ordinance was originally enacted in 1945, as the
Bengal Private Forest Act, and was re-enacted by the Bangladesh
(then East Pakistan) in 1949 before being issued as an Act in 1959.
These government managed lands under this act are called "vested
forests". The Forest Department manages approximately 8,500 hectares
in the country as "vested forests" (Table 4 at Appendix). This area
is relatively small, but the area historically affected by this law
is much larger.
PFA, 1959 empowers
the government to require management plans for private forests and
to assume control of private forests as vested forests. Government
has broad powers to write rules regarding use and protection of
vested forests, and apply rules to "controlled forests," which
include all private forests subject to any requirement of the Act.
The Bangladesh (The East Pakistan) Private Forest Management Rules,
1959 provide a format for preparation of such management plans of
private forests. The format follows outline of the traditional
forest timber management plans that does not deal with other forest
produce, wildlife, or environmental amenities.
After finalization
and approval of the management plans by the government, the private
owner becomes bound to implement the plan and in case of the
default, the government may take over management of the land as a
vested forest. The government can also impose a "cess", a per
hectare fee, to cover its administrative costs for implementing the
management plan. Private owners of such vested forests are entitled
to the net profits from the sale of forest produce from their lands.
8.8 The Bangladesh
Wildlife (Preservation) (Amendment) Act, 1974
The 1974 Wildlife Act
consolidates and improves the older legal provisions to conserve the
wildlife in Bangladesh. The Forest Department has the primary
responsibility for implementing the Act. The Act allows the
government to declare any land to be a wildlife sanctuary, a
national park, or a game reserve. Bangladesh currently has fourteen
Protected Areas (nine wildlife sanctuaries, four national parks, and
a single game reserve). The Act, however, does not contain any
provision for establishing and managing buffer zones. Under current
social, economic and institutional conditions the forest department
faces many problems in enforcing different provisions of this act.
8.9 The Protection
and Conservation of Fish (Amendment) Act, 1984
The Protection and
Conservation of Fish Act, 1950 was amended to update and consolidate
provisions under different laws. It now defines conservative methods
for catching fish throughout the country. The fish, when caught in
the forest, are forest produce and also subject to regulation under
the Forest Act, 1927. The fish collection makes significant
contribution to the forest revenue, particularly in the Sundarbans
Forest area.
8.10 Bangladesh
Environment Conservation Act, 1995
Although
environmental laws are in an embryonic stage in Bangladesh, the
country has recently enacted a good legislation, the Bangladesh
Environment Conservation Act, 1995. This Act has direct as well as
indirect bearing on the welfare of the forests and other natural
resources in the country. It allows the government to declare any
areas as ecologically critical area and to define what operations
shall and shall not be done in such areas.
8.11 Forest Related
International Conventions
International
convention to which Bangladesh is signatory demand more control over
forest resources than is provided in the current forest related
legislations. The government of Bangladesh is considering a proposal
to make some amendments in her laws that will improve satisfaction
of the signed conventions. The following describes some of the
important forest related conventions signed by the government.
The "Ramsar"
Convention
It is also known as
the Convention on Wetlands of International Importance especially as
waterfowl habitat. Bangladesh has signed this binding agreement in
1971 that requires her to designate at least one site as a wetland
of international importance, to discharge international
responsibilities for wildfowl conservation, to develop wetlands
nature reserves, and to train personnel for wetland management. For
this purpose, Bangladesh has identified "Sundarban wet lands " as a
wetland of international importance.
Convention on
the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage
Bangladesh signed
this binding agreement in 1972 that asks Bangladesh to identify,
protect, and conserve her natural and cultural heritage, and
integrating such protection and conservation into their national
planning. Bangladesh has selected West Wildlife Sanctuary of the
Sundarbans for this purpose.
Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna
Bangladesh is a
signatory to this convention commonly known as "CITES" that demands
Bangladesh to place control on the international trade in specified
endangered species. Bangladesh currently manages this international
obligation through Wild life Act of 1974 and may have to amend this
for full satisfaction of the convention.
United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
Bangladesh has
accepted this binding convention that desires her to conduct
national inventory of sources and sinks of green house gases,
develop national and regional programs like afforestation to
mitigate climate change, promote sustainable management of
greenhouse gas sinks like forests, and include climate change
considerations in her policy making and impact assessment.
Source: http://www.fao.org/documents/show_cdr.asp?url_file=/docrep/007/ad104e/AD104E08.htm |