"Conservation of environment is always our top priority but development interest should also be taken care of," Pul said during a meeting with top forest officials here yesterday.
The forest officials met him to discuss on the growing conflict between the rights of the people and the conservation created through protected areas, a CMO release informed here today.
The chief minister pointed out that many protected areas in the state were created through arbitrary demarcation of the forest reserve violating the Wildlife Protection Act.
"As a result many big towns, villages, agriculture and jhum areas have come under the protected areas limiting the scope for taking up development projects," he said noting that the scope to find possible ways for co-existence between wildlife habitats and human settlement were limited.
"Moreover, many of the protected areas are now barren lands without forest cover and wildlife. It is neither serving the purpose of conservation or development. So these are the areas where we hope to find a middle ground," said Pul.
"Arunachal cannot be looked only through the lens of environment conservation. With growing population and modernisation, there is growing pressure for socio-economic growth. So conservation efforts also has to address the developmental needs, else it will lead to conflict," said Pul.
He hoped that if a successful compromise could be made and a middle path chosen where development and conservation could go hand-in-hand, it can be used as a model to open up larger areas for conservation- conscious developments in the state.
