Why in the News?
The Allahabad High Court’s ruling striking down the District Level Committee’s (DLC) rejection of forest rights claims is significant because it reaffirms that the Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006 overrides inconsistent court orders and administrative actions. This is not a routine judicial review; it exposes a recurring pattern where authorities have issued eviction orders and denied grazing rights despite FRA protections. The ruling is a corrective intervention against institutional non-compliance.
What is the whole case?
This Allahabad High Court ruling, delivered by the Lucknow Bench in April 2026, is a landmark judgment reinforcing the legal supremacy of the Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006, over previous laws and inconsistent administrative decisions.
The case centered on the Tharu community in Uttar Pradesh’s Lakhimpur Kheri district, whose forest rights claims were rejected by the District Level Committee (DLC) in 2021.
Context of the Case
- The Petitioners: 107 members of the ‘Tharu’ community, a designated Scheduled Tribe, filed for individual and community forest rights (including rights to collect minor produce).
- The Impugned Order: The DLC in 2021 rejected these claims based on a 2000 interim order from the Supreme Court (issued under the old Forest Conservation Act, 1980), ignoring that the FRA was enacted later in 2006 to rectify historical injustice.
- The Ruling: The bench quashed the 2021 rejection order and directed a fresh, fair, and prompt rehearing of the claims.
Which rights are recognised under the Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006?
- Individual Forest Rights (IFR): Recognises land rights for cultivation (up to 4 hectares); ensures livelihood security for forest dwellers.
- Habitation Rights: Recognises rights over homestead and habitation areas; ensures protection from displacement.
- Community Rights (CR): Recognises access to minor forest produce (MFP), grazing grounds, water bodies; ensures economic sustenance.
- Ownership of MFP: Grants ownership, collection, use, and disposal rights over non-timber forest produce; ensures income generation (e.g., bamboo, tendu leaves).
- Community Forest Resource (CFR) Rights: Empowers Gram Sabha to protect, regenerate, conserve, and manage forests; ensures decentralized forest governance.
- Grazing and Pastoral Rights: Recognises traditional grazing routes and seasonal migration; supports pastoral communities.
- Habitat Rights (PVTGs): Recognises habitat and territorial rights of Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups; ensures cultural and livelihood protection.
- Rights over Traditional Knowledge: Protects intellectual property and cultural practices related to biodiversity; prevents exploitation.
- Development Rights: Allows diversion of forest land (up to 1 hectare) for basic infrastructure (schools, roads, anganwadi); ensures rural development.
- Rights against Eviction: Prohibits eviction until recognition process is complete; ensures due process and tenure security.
- Rehabilitation Rights: Recognises rights of displaced forest dwellers; ensures resettlement and compensation.
- Governance Rights (Gram Sabha): Recognises Gram Sabha as authority for claims verification and forest management; ensures participatory democracy.
Why was the Allahabad High Court’s ruling significant for FRA enforcement?
- Judicial Supremacy of FRA: Reaffirms that FRA overrides inconsistent laws and prior court orders; ensures statutory protection of forest dwellers.
- Invalidation of DLC Decision: Nullifies rejection of Tharu tribal claims; exposes procedural violations in claims adjudication.
- Systemic Non-Compliance: Highlights repeated disregard of FRA across states; indicates institutional failure in implementation.
- Legal Clarification: Reinforces that rights recognition must precede eviction; prevents arbitrary displacement.
- Precedential Value: Establishes enforceable precedent for similar disputes nationwide.
What legal principles govern eviction under the FRA, 2006?
- Recognition Before Eviction: Ensures no eviction until claims are fully adjudicated; protects tenure security.
- Due Process Requirement: Mandates transparent verification of claims through Gram Sabha and committees.
- Statutory Protection: Recognizes forest rights notwithstanding conflicting laws; strengthens tribal safeguards.
- Penal Consequences: Provides punishment for officials violating FRA provisions.
- Judicial Reinforcement: Uttarakhand High Court (Jan 2026) ordered halt on eviction till claims resolution.
How have administrative and judicial actions diluted FRA provisions?
- Eviction Orders: Authorities issued eviction notices under forest laws despite pending FRA claims.
- Misinterpretation of Law: Courts and officials overlooked FRA’s overriding clause; applied older conservation laws.
- Case Evidence: Madras High Court dismissed claims in Asaripallam (2014) citing encroachment, ignoring FRA eligibility.
- Repeated Violations: Similar dismissals in Perambalur (2017), Tuticorin (2020), Sivagangai (2021), Theni (2022).
- Institutional Bias: Preference for conservation-centric approach over rights-based framework.
Does the FRA allow grazing rights in forest areas?
- Recognition of Grazing Rights: FRA explicitly recognizes traditional grazing rights in forests.
- Conflict with Wildlife Laws: Tamil Nadu Forest Act invoked to restrict grazing citing wildlife protection.
- Judicial Contradictions: Madras High Court initially banned grazing; later restricted it to protected areas.
- Legal Hierarchy Principle: FRA, as a central law, overrides conflicting state provisions.
- Recent Clarification: Allahabad HC reaffirmed that grazing rights cannot be arbitrarily denied.
Has the FRA been effectively superseded in practice?
- De Facto Dilution: Administrative actions have overridden FRA despite its legal supremacy.
- Contradictory Orders: Eviction and denial of rights continue despite statutory protections.
- Weak Enforcement Mechanisms: Lack of accountability for violations undermines implementation.
- Gram Sabha Marginalization: Reduced role in decision-making weakens community participation.
- Governance Gap: Persistent gap between legal framework and field-level execution.
Conclusion
The ruling underscores the tension between conservation governance and rights-based legislation. Effective FRA implementation requires administrative accountability, judicial consistency, and empowerment of Gram Sabhas.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2016] Rehabilitation of human settlements is one of the important environmental impacts which always attracts controversy while planning major projects. Discuss the measures suggested for mitigation.
Linkage: The PYQ directly relates to FRA provisions on rehabilitation, displacement safeguards, and rights over land and habitat. It highlights the rights vs development/conservation conflict, central to FRA implementation.





