When
India achieved liberation from
British occupation in 1947, two sections of the
Indian subcontinent were "combined" into
Pakistan, a country founded on the so-called "
Two Nation Theory". The Hindu people residing on the land of East
Pakistan (East
Bengal now
Bangladesh) that was divided into
Pakistan moved to India as refugees in three phases. In the first phase people were settled in the state of
West Bengal and then in its second-phase people were settled at
Assam and
Tripura. Eventually there was no room for more people in
West Bengal,
Assam, or
Tripura, so the
central government (union government) decided to give them rooms at others states like part of
Madhya Pradesh (which is now
Chhattisgarh),
Odisha and
Andhra Pradesh. In the third phase
refugees began being sent to places like
Andaman Islands. Most of the places where
Bengali refugees were resettled belonged to tribal people. So the union government (which is now central government) designed and put the Dandakaranya Project in place. Through the Dandakaranya Project the Bengali refugees would be resettled on tribal lands, and integrate and uplift the area belonging to the tribal people. In 1947 a high level committee known as the AMPO committee, made up of the Indian states
Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh (the part is known as
Chhattisgarh) and
Odisha, was formed to enquire about the soil conservation, forest and health departments. Later they declared that Dandakaranya Project will play a vital role to both the Bengali refugees and tribal people residing there. In 1958 the Dandakarnaya Development Authority was set up with its headquarters at
Koraput. == Existence of Dandakaranya Project==