"The policies of the previous government encouraged a mindset that the people should do nothing and remain dependent on the government for everything. All people should do is vote every five years, was the attitude. And as a result of this approach, development work was not getting carried out on the ground," Javadekar said in a public meeting here in Chhindwara.
The government, he added, believes that it is most important to develop villages and will walk the extra mile for it. But participation of people is also vital he emphasised.
People of the villages should develop villages, he stressed.
Addressing the gathering where majority of those present were tribals, Javadekar said that his ministry too had adopted such a policy for development and conservation of forests.
The government, he said, was encouraged by the results of a UNDP supported scheme, in which tribal families plant bamboo in forest areas and then earn from its produce. This was helping help in protection of forest cover while also providing earning to local families.
"There cannot be development of forests without participation of the people," Javadekar said.
He said the government is working to ensure that tribals also get at least the Minimum Support Price for forest produce.
The minister also said that there are plans to develop an eco-tourism spot in the Chhindwara region, which would help in generating income for local families.
Javadekar said during the recently-held Paris climate
"We have pledged that development will be done while protecting the environment. But the problem of climate change which we are facing today, India is not responsible for that... We are now adopting a model of sustainable development which was not adopted by developed nations when they were at our stage," he said.
He said vultures which were the best scavengers have nearly disappeared today due to a particular drug, named diclofenac, which was administered to livestocks.
