The tussle between the commercial imperatives of the loggers and the preservation concerns of the environmentalists is long and bitter. The pendulum has swung to and fro with a ban imposed in 1993 only to be lifted by the Musharraf regime in 2000. Logging continued recklessly until 2008 when restrictions were again imposed but the forest department did little to implement it and we now arrive at a situation that borders on the environmentally catastrophic. Forests thus stripped in a mountain landscape are slow to regenerate, likewise undergrowth that has been ravaged by unrestricted grazing of goats (to a degree reversed in recent years), and unless there is a brake put on illegal logging, irreversible damage may soon be caused. A meeting in Chilas on January 27 aimed at reviving the ‘Zaito’ committees, which are designed to enable communities to protect forests under their purview, may stem the tide; but there is big money to be made in the timber trade. Trees are set for an uncertain future.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 28th, 2015.
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