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How Manmohan Singh safeguarded environment and tribal rights

December 27, 2024 18:33 IST

Manmohan Singh, often hailed as the architect of modern India's economic reforms, also championed environmental conservation and climate action during his decade-long tenure as prime minister (2004-2014).

IMAGE: Vice President Jagdeep Dhankar pays his last respects to the mortal remains of former Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh at his residence in New Delhi, December 27, 2024.Photograph: ANI Photo

Under his leadership, India launched the National Action Plan on Climate Change, passed the landmark Forest Rights Act to protect the rights of tribal communities and established the National Green Tribunal to safeguard the environment through swift legal action.

For centuries, India's tribal communities were sidelined from decisions about their own land.

 

The UPA-1 government under Singh flipped that script.

His government passed the Forest Rights Act in 2006, handing back the control of forests to the people who lived in and protected them.

Around 25 lakh land titles, including more than 23.7 lakh individual titles, have so far been granted to the Scheduled Tribes and other traditional forest dwellers under the FRA.

In July 2008, Singh urged all chief ministers to act swiftly to grant tribals their rights over forest land.

"It is primarily the responsibility of the state governments to ensure that a very vulnerable section of the population of our country finally gets its basic rights over the land which has historically been in its possession," he wrote in a letter.

In 2008, the Manmohan Singh government delivered the NAPCC, an eight-fold strategy to tackle global warming.

The NAPCC's eight core missions include the National Solar Mission, which laid the groundwork for the country to emerge as a global clean energy leader, and the Green India Mission, which focuses on improving biodiversity, restoring degraded lands and enhancing climate resilience.

"Greater use of clean energy obviously contributes to sustainability.... This issue will become more important in the years ahead," Singh said at the 4th Clean Energy Ministerial in 2013 in New Delhi.

The veteran Congress leader was also aware that "the impact on the global climate would be simply unsustainable" if developing countries follow the industrialised countries in meeting their energy requirements through fossil fuel-based energy.

He strongly advocated for climate justice.

Speaking at the Washington office of the Council on Foreign Relations on November 23, 2009, he made it clear that India would not accept unfair carbon shackles.

"India was a latecomer to industrialisation. And as such, we have contributed very little to the accumulation of greenhouse-gas emissions that cause global warming. But we are determined to be part of the solution to the problem. We are willing to work towards any solution that does not compromise the right of developing countries to develop and lift their population out of poverty," he said.

Singh also attended the Copenhagen Climate Conference in 2009, the first one to be elevated to the heads of government level.

Under Singh's watch, India set up the NGT in 2010 to fast-track environmental justice.

Over the years, the NGT became the watchdog the country needed for delivering speedy judgments on critical issues like pollution, deforestation and wildlife conservation.

Unassuming, erudite, soft-spoken and a consensus builder, Singh died at Delhi's All India Institute of Medical Sciences on Thursday.

He was 92.

The Congress leader, who steered India for 10 years from 2004 to 2014 and helped set up the country's economic framework as finance minister before that, was a renowned name in the global financial and economic sectors.

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