It was January 2018. For over a month, a large fleet of Hitachi extraction machines and tractors illegally plundered more than 4 square kilometres of pristine mangrove forest by blocking creeks, leveling the ground, and making bunds. They created bunds by enclosing small portions of land to keep tidal water from coming in, so that the mangroves would slowly die off, and it would get easier for their machines to uproot them. They would have destroyed the entire mangrove forest if Adambhai had not raised an alarm and brought attention to this destruction.
Adambhai lives in the village of Wand in the taluka of Bhachau, about 50 km from the Deendayal port or Kandla, as it was known previously, in Gujarat’s Kutch district. His family has lived in the area for the past eight generations. Adambhai is a breeder of Kharai camels. These camels are unique. Why? Because they have the special ability to survive on both, dry land and in the sea. They swim in seawater and feed on saline plants and mangroves. The Kharai was recognised as a separate breed in 2015 by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR).
Adambhai and 8 other breeders together own 350 Kharai camels. He is part of the Kutch Unth Ucherak Maldhari Sangathan (KUUMS), or Kutch Camel Breeders Association. The body has about 380 members, and they are pastoralists.
It was while he was grazing his camels that Adambhai saw the destruction wrought by the men in the Hitachis on the mangroves. And who were they? Employees of private companies who had been leased the land on which the mangroves stood, between Kandla and Surajbari, owned by Deendayal Port Trust. This was in violation of Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Act, 2011. The private companies’ depredations were confirmed by an investigation carried out by a government committee set up by the Kutch district collector. It was again reconfirmed by a report prepared by the forest department later.
Following Adambhai’s blowing of the whistle, several concerned groups, organisations, environmentalists, and citizens came together from around Kutch on February 24, 2018, at the site of destruction to protest against the salt-making industries and in support of the communities that are going to suffer due to the loss of the mangroves. Coverage of the protest in the media ensured a temporary halt in the destruction. However, it soon began again.