logo
Workshop highlights Integrated Landscape Management to achieve sustainable development goals

Workshop highlights Integrated Landscape Management to achieve sustainable development goals

The Hindu04-08-2025
Integrated Landscape Management (ILM) is one of the most practical ways to localise the UN Sustainable Development Goals said Madhuri Nanda, Director - South Asia, Rainforest Alliance, at the inaugural of a four-day Global Environment Facility (GEF) ILM workshop here on Monday (August 4).
The workshop is being held under the SABAL Project (Sustainable Agricultural Biodiversity Across Landscapes), supported by the Global Environment Facility (GEF), International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and led by the Rainforest Alliance, in close partnership with Rythu Sadhikara Samstha (RySS), Foundation for Ecological Security (FES), and the Government of Andhra Pradesh.
Ms. Madhuri said that by bringing together communities, institutions and ecosystems into a shared planning space, ILM helps move beyond siloed solutions, towards landscapes that were productive, equitable and resilient in the face of climate and ecological challenges.
She said that ILM was a multi stakeholder approach that encourages joint planning and action across sectors such as agriculture, forestry, water and rural development. It brings together diverse players from farming communities, forest departments, women's collectives, civil society groups and state agencies to agree on a shared vision for how land and resources were used and restored.
Delegates from Ghana and Indonesia are also attending the three-day event, which highlights efforts to restore degraded lands, protect biodiversity and improve rural livelihoods through a landscape-level approach.
The workshop is particularly relevant for regions such as the Alluri Sitharama Raju (ASR) district, where land degradation, forest loss and climate change were deeply affecting tribal communities and small landholder farmers.
Through SABAL, several local initiatives from natural farming and nursery development to women-led processing units and eco-restoration models were already demonstrating the potential of ILM on the ground.
P. Mallikarjuna Rao, Advisor to Government of Andhra Pradesh on Environment and Forests, said that the stakeholders must ensure that while planning interventions, a balanced and inclusive approach was maintained.
The participants of the workshop will visit project sites in ASR district to see how ILM is taking shape in Andhra Pradesh. The agenda includes experience sharing from India's project landscapes, technical sessions on sustainable land practices, and insights from visiting delegates from Ghana and Indonesia.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How villagers fought for an elephant
How villagers fought for an elephant

The Hindu

time4 days ago

  • The Hindu

How villagers fought for an elephant

The rains in August bring joy to Kolhapur, a part of Maharashtra's sugarcane belt. The fields thrive and people get respite from the heat that parches land and spirit. This year, the villages in the area are in mourning. Madhuri, 36, also called Mahadevi, was transferred from her home in Nandani village to Vantara, a wildlife rehabilitation facility run by the Ambani industrialist family, in Jamnagar, Gujarat, over 1,170 km away. Her mahout (elephant handler) Ismail Nidgun, 56, is no longer with her. 'It feels like I have lost my daughter. My days are empty just like this gajshala (elephant home),' Nidgun says. Originally from Davangere in Karnataka, he had been with Madhuri for seven years. Her transfer order came on July 28 after a Supreme Court directive. She was moved from the 1,300-year-old Jain Mutt, the Shree Digambar Jain Atishay Kshetra Vrishabhachal to Vantara, 'Anant Ambani's dream project,' as per information on the website. Anant is one of three children of Reliance chairperson Mukesh Ambani, one of the wealthiest men in the world. On August 3, images began pouring in of thousands of people marching early in the morning, in protest, from Nandani to the Kolhapur District Collectorate, about 40 km away, appealing to get Madhuri back. 'Did Ambani get only our Madhuri to take?' asks Mahavir Jugale, 56, a Nandani-based farmer. Shopkeeper Vijay Teli, 51, in the Gandhi Chowk area, a bustling market in the village, says, 'Mate pasun mula la vegla kela ahe,' (They separated the child from her mother). Whenever the bell rings, we still think she is coming.' Madhuri wore a bell around her neck which would ring each time she ambled along. 'Children used to line up to play with her,' he adds. Everyone has a Madhuri moment to share. Points of view On July 28, the Supreme Court upheld the July 16 Bombay High Court order to transfer the elephant to the Radhe Krishna Temple Elephant Welfare Trust (RKTEWT), a part of Vantara, registered in 2019. Vantara, which describes itself as being committed to 'rescuing, rehabilitating, and protecting endangered species' spans 998 acres. The affidavit filed by Vantara indicates that the facility houses 238 elephants. In the lane adjoining the Mutt, Sushila Kambhoje, 70, says, 'They called Madhuri dangerous and ailing. How could she be dangerous? On the day of her farewell, 2,000 people surrounded her. Did she even hurt a single person? An ailing animal can never be active. They used all the means to take her away.' Sushila, a homemaker, remembers Madhuri from when she was three years old. The elephant, locals say, was brought to the Mutt from the Sakrebailu elephant camp, Shimoga in Karnataka in 1992. The Mutt, which makes decisions on the socio-religious affairs of the Digambar Jain community of a few villages in Maharashtra and Karnataka, has a history of domesticating elephants for the last 400 years, say leaders in the community. Elephants have been part of religious processions, and participate in festivals like Ganeshotsav and Muharram. 'We have treated her as a family member. PETA's (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) claims that she is distressed are false,' says the financial manager of the Mutt, Shirish Herwade. He says PETA officials visited the Mutt in 2020 and proposed moving Madhuri to Vantara. 'They offered us a robotic elephant. When the Mutt refused, PETA offered us money and infrastructure development,' he adds. PETA claims that the elephant had 'untreated ailments including foot rot, overgrown nails, abscesses, arthritis and behavioural distress' says an SC-approved high-power committee (HPC) report. The HPC had been set up by the Tripura High Court in November 2022, after a lawyer, Sudipta Nath, had filed a public interest litigation seeking an inquiry into past transfers of elephants to RKTEWT. After the public outcry, the Maharashtra government intervened, holding meetings with a delegation from Kolhapur and the Vantara team. On August 6, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis announced publically, 'Vantara has offered to set up a satellite rehabilitation centre in Nandani and join the Maharashtra government's application in court, requesting the return of Madhuri.' Vantara put out a statement on social media saying, their 'involvement in this matter has been limited to acting strictly in accordance to the binding directions issued by the Supreme Court and Bombay High Court.' It said Vantara's role was simply as a caretaker to the animal. Vantara proposed a centre in Nandani, which will include a hydrotherapy pond for joint and muscular relief, a larger water body for swimming and natural movement, laser therapy and a treatment room for physical rehabilitation, a covered night shelter, an open space for unrestricted movement without chains, a sand pit, and an on-site veterinary clinic, among other facilities. 'From the beginning these people should have used their specialists in the village itself instead of relocating the elephant,' says Sagar Shambhushete, one of the Mutt's trustees. The Mutt alleges that after the 2020 meeting, PETA started documenting pictures of Madhuri while socialising with the villagers. Between the Mutt and the HPC The Mutt's top authority says on condition of anonymity, 'PETA is less of an animal rights organisation and more of a mediator for big people.' He alleges that PETA joined hands with Vantara, who has collected animals from all over the country. The Jain Mutt had an ownership certificate under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. PETA dismisses the claims, saying it was the decision of HPC. They also say the Mutt has disregarded wildlife protection laws on several occasions. 'The temple was provided an in-person opportunity to make their case at all levels of the process, but failed,' says Khushboo Gupta, Director of Advocacy of PETA, adding this was not the first elephant taken to Vantara from Maharashtra. An elephant from Sangli district's Vita was taken too.  The Mutt's stone building, with wooden interior, sees thousands of devotees from across the Kolhapur-Sangli region and from some parts of Karnataka. 'When nothing worked, PETA approached the HPC; they just wanted our elephant at any cost,' says Shambhushete. Former Judge Deepak Verma led the HPC and issued the first order on December 28, 2023. The HPC's June 3 report suggests that PETA India highlighted the need for Madhuri's transfer to a 'scientifically managed sanctuary' such as the RKTEWT, Jamnagar. The Mutt has also alleged that HPC's sub-committee report findings are 'biased' and 'exaggerated', and that PETA's photographic and veterinary material 'lacks context'. The sub-committee, comprising officials from the Forest Department, visited the Mutt premises on June 12, 2024, inspected the facilities, and recommending improvements, including an opportunity for socialisation. The committee also confirmed that the elephant's physical well-being, diet and nutrition were being maintained. After three months, Vivek Khandekar, Additional Principal Chief Conservator of Forest (Wildlife), inspected the facility, making observations that the 'elephant's back and toenails are showing good improvement and she is walking properly'. He noted other improvements as well, including a daily walk of 5 to 10 km and a weekly bath in the Panchganga River. A representative of the Mutt says, 'Within three months of the first inspection in June 2024, we implemented all the recommendations made by the team.' Protests echo through the village The hoardings outside Nandani read: 'One signature for Madhuri'. Every corner of the village is plastered with such banners. MLC Satej Patil launched an online signature petition, which received 2,04,421 signatures from across the country. 'We have sent the hard copies to President Droupadi Murmu via post,' he says. Meanwhile, a 'Boycott Jio' movement intensified in Kolhapur with as many as 743 villages participating. The movement, which started on social media, was later spearheaded by former MP and a farmer leader Raju Shetti. He claims, 'At least 2 lakh people ported their Jio numbers to other networks.' Shetti claims PETA offered him ₹2 crore to help convince the Mutt to transfer the elephant. Meanwhile, a letter Shetti had allegedly written in 2018 went viral. It had asked that the Madhuri be shifted to Gadchiroli animal centre until they found a mahout. Shetti says, 'The Mutt approached me then to do something. But we found a mahout in a month. At the time no one was bothered, so why now?' Vantara's involvement The locals and their representatives have also raised concerns over similar notices sent to several mutts in Maharashtra and Karnataka. The villagers ask whether PETA and the HPC are in the business of transferring elephants to Vantara. In Kolhapur's neighbouring district of Sangli, the Ganpati Panchayatan Devasthan Trust in Tasagaon say they received a phone call from a man, who claimed to be a vet with a government facility, offering to provide an unfit certificate to transfer the trust's elephant Gauri to Vantara. 'I asked him to give us a proposal in writing. In the meanwhile, Nandani's issue flared up,' says Rajendra Patwardhan, the president of the trust in Tasagaon, who brought in the elephant in 1998. Patwardhan says similar complaints have been filed against the Karisiddeshwara Mutt in Karnataka's Belagavi district and Mahanteshwar Swami in Raichur. An environmentalist from Bengaluru filed a complaint with the Forest Department concerning the rehabilitation of elephants Padma from Shedbal in Maharashtra, Dhurva from Alakhnur, and Meenika from Bichale. Conservationists see this situation as a government convenience due to limited resources. The Co-Founder of Stripes and Green Earth Foundation, Sagnik Sengupta, said, 'This situation is arising because Vantara offers facilities that can aid elephants in distress, but this could be effective if there are rescue centres across the country. At the same time, the Wildlife Protection Act offers no safeguards for exotic pets. In the absence of government infrastructure, Vantara's resources could fill critical gaps.' Meanwhile, a Bengaluru-based wildlife conservationist, on condition of anonymity, says, 'For the government, private rescue centres are the first choice to save costs. However, handing over exotic animals to private players is not viable.' Edited by Sunalini Mathew

Anant Ambani's Vantara proposes to build rehab centre for Madhuri the elephant, pending court approval
Anant Ambani's Vantara proposes to build rehab centre for Madhuri the elephant, pending court approval

Hindustan Times

time7 days ago

  • Hindustan Times

Anant Ambani's Vantara proposes to build rehab centre for Madhuri the elephant, pending court approval

Anant Ambani's passion project, the 3000-acre abundant animal shelter, Vantara, has taken an affirmative step when it comes to the rehabilitation of an elephant named Madhuri, in Kolhapur's Nandani area. Intense debate has followed her Supreme Court-ordained relocation to Vantara, considering Nandani had been home to the sacred being for 34 years. Vantara proposes a high-end rehabilitation facility, contingent on Madhuri's return to Kolhapur A satellite rehabilitation centre built in close coordination with the Jain Matha and the Maharashtra government is being proposed by Vantara, for development in accordance with established animal welfare guidelines and international best practices in elephant care. Not just this, Vantara, in an official statement, has also proposed to offer full support to any application filed by the Jain Matha and the Government of Maharashtra before the Hon'ble Court requesting Madhuri's return to Kolhapur. Subject to the Court's approval, Vantara will provide complete technical and veterinary assistance for her safe and dignified return. The proposal at hand, comes in the wake of the Jain Community's rising concerns over Madhuri's displacement in context to her being a deeply integral part of their religious life. Additionally, the shelter has also offered apologies over their involvement, despite it simply being a response to legal diktats, stressing how the intent was never at any point to disregard or hurt the community's sentiments. "If our involvement, despite being carried out solely under court directions, has caused any distress to the Jain community or the people of Kolhapur, we express our sincere regret. Michhami Dukkadam - if any hurt was caused through thought, word, or deed, knowingly or unknowingly, we seek your forgiveness", read an excerpt from the statement. Coming back to Madhuri's well-being, Vantara has detailed the list of facilities the proposed centre will include — a specialised hydrotherapy pond for joint and muscular relief, a second, larger water body for swimming and natural movement, laser therapy and treatment room for physical rehabilitation, covered night shelter for rest and protection, lush open space habitat for unrestricted movement without chains, sand pit for environmental enrichment and natural behaviours, fully equipped on-site veterinary clinic for 24x7 medical care, rubberised flooring platform for safe and comfortable resting and carefully formed mounds of soft sand make up the list. Vantara's embellished proposal has been received in good confidence by Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis as the court verdict is awaited.

Vantara offers to build rehab centre in Kolhapur for elephant Madhuri after court-ordered relocation amid backlash
Vantara offers to build rehab centre in Kolhapur for elephant Madhuri after court-ordered relocation amid backlash

Time of India

time7 days ago

  • Time of India

Vantara offers to build rehab centre in Kolhapur for elephant Madhuri after court-ordered relocation amid backlash

The internet has been roaring, and not in celebration, after elephant Madhuri, also called Mahadevi, was moved from her long-time home at Kolhapur's Nandani Math to Vantara's Jamnagar-based sanctuary. The shift, triggered by a Bombay High Court order following a PETA petition, sent shockwaves across religious and animal welfare circles. But now, in a dramatic twist, Vantara has spoken up, and offered a potential solution. Vantara breaks their silence after uproar over Madhuri's relocation In a statement released Wednesday, the Anant Ambani-led Vantara said it was fully behind bringing Madhuri back to Kolhapur. The centre proposed setting up a satellite rehabilitation facility right in the Nandani area. And this is not just any rehab, it is the elephant equivalent of a five-star spa. After 33 years alone and in chains, Mahadevi (Madhuri) is finally receiving the care she deserves thanks to @petaindia's action! Mahadevi was controlled with weapons and forced into chaotic ceremonies. Now, she's starting a new life with other elephants at @Vantara_RF 🐘💙 A plush rehab plan for elephant Madhuri in Kolhapur The plan includes 24/7 medical care, hydrotherapy pools for joint and muscle relief, a dedicated swimming waterbody for natural movement, laser therapy zones, and a vet clinic. Add to that sand pits for play, soft rubber flooring, and chain-free open spaces for Madhuri to roam in peace. According to insiders, the land for the facility will be finalised in consultation with the Math's spiritual leaders and state authorities. वनतारा व्यवस्थापनाच्या वरिष्ठ अधिकार्‍यांसोबत मी आज मुंबईत सविस्तर चर्चा केली.महादेवी हत्तीण (माधुरी) पुन्हा सुखरुप नांदणी मठाकडे परत देण्यासाठी महाराष्ट्र सरकारने जी याचिका करण्याचे ठरविले, त्यात सहभागी होण्याचा निर्णय वनताराने घेतला असल्याचे त्यांनी मला आश्वस्त केले आहे.या… 'We never wanted to relocate her,' Vantara clarifies Amid accusations of religious interference, Vantara clarified its role, saying the relocation was purely a court-mandated decision. A spokesperson from the centre confirmed that they were only providing veterinary support and housing as per orders from the Supreme Court and Bombay High Court. At no point, they said, did Vantara request the move or push for it. Their involvement was described as 'strictly procedural.' Supporters believe she belongs with her spiritual family in Kolhapur As protests continue over Madhuri's removal, Vantara has offered full cooperation for any court application seeking her return to Kolhapur. If approved, the shelter is promising not just technical and medical assistance, but a safe, dignified journey back home for the beloved elephant. While Madhuri is reportedly recovering from years of abuse under expert care at Jamnagar, her supporters believe she belongs with her spiritual family in Kolhapur. Vantara's latest announcement could be the compromise everyone has been waiting for.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store