Around 40,000 salt pan workers, harnessing salt in the Little Rann of Kutch area are fighting a battle of survival in the land where Mahatma Gandhi had launched his salt movement, as they have been asked not to enter the area that has been declared as wild ass sanctuary.
The recent orders of the state forest department could ruin the economy of 107 villages which surround the Little Rann of Kutch and is entirely dependent on the salt. The Little Rann has been a traditional salt producing area as it produces 21 per cent of total salt production of India.
State forest officials have sent notices to most of the salt workers in November 2006, directing them to stop their traditional vocation and vacate the sanctuary area or face three years imprisonment and a fine of Rs 25,000.
The Little Rann, which has become a bone of contention between humans and animal, was declared a wild ass sanctuary in 1978 and has a population of 3,860 wild ass, which are endangered species.
The salt pan workers, known as 'agarias,' have demanded that they be allowed to continue with their traditional occupation which their forefathers have been doing for the last 600 years.
Ambubhai Patel of Kharaghoda town of Surendranagar district, who is an agaria, said they and the wild ass have been living in harmony with each other for the last many centuries.
"The agarias are not a threat to the wild life as they are vegetarians. The wild ass poses no threat either to the agaria or their salt. So, there is no question of the community killing or harassing the wild