The Kerala High Court has taken suo motu action by filing a PIL against large‑scale tree‑felling and unauthorised construction on about 296 acres of cardamom title land in Gudanpara Estate, Idukki. The move follows a report in The Hindu that highlighted the destruction of virgin forest in the name of cardamom cultivation.
Key Developments
- Three separate cases have already been registered by the Forest Department for felling of rare tree species.
- The estate, part of the Cardamom Hill Reserve, shares its boundary with Tamil Nadu and hosts over 600 tree varieties.
- Owners have failed to produce title deeds despite repeated demands from authorities.
- Senior officials – the Chief Secretary, Forest and Revenue departments, the Chief Conservator of Forest, the Divisional Forest Officer (Devikulam) and the District Collector – have been impleaded to respond.
- A similar illegal felling incident was reported last year at Uchilukuth in Santhanpara, where over 1,000 indigenous trees were cut on 40 acres.
Important Facts
• Area affected: ~296 acres of cardamom title land.
• Location: Gudanpara Estate, Ponmudi Forest Section, Devikulam Range, Idukki district.
• Biodiversity: The forest is a virgin ecosystem, home to many wildlife species and more than 600 tree varieties.
• Legal status: The land was originally claimed by local residents and Tamil Nadu settlers, later leased out; no prior farming activity was recorded.
Relevance for UPSC
Understanding this case helps aspirants in multiple GS papers. It illustrates the role of the judiciary in environmental governance (GS2: Polity), the functioning of forest laws and the