East Africa: Forest peoples seek
compensation
UNITED NATIONS
Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
Integrated Regional Information
Network (IRIN)
NAIROBI, 7 September 2001 (IRIN)
Staff Reporter 11/9/2001
Forest dwellers from
seven African countries this week appealed for compensation for
livelihoods compromised by government activities, and for
vindication of their human rights, AFP news agency reported.
KIGALI: Meeting in the Rwandan
capital, Kigali, from 3-6 September, representatives of the Twa of
Rwanda, the DRC and Uganda; the Ogieks of Kenya, the Maasai of
Tanzania; the Bushmen of South Africa; and the Baka Bagyeli of
Cameroon, paid particular attention to the plight of indigenous
peoples living in, or displaced from, protected areas in their
countries.
"We were chased, without
control and with no sort of compensation, from the forest of
Ngorongoro [west of Arusha in Northern Uganda], AFP news agency
quoted Margaret Kaisoe, a representative of the Tanzanian Maasai,
as saying. Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA), which covers 8,000
square kilometres on the south-eastern margins of the Serengeti
National Park, has a particularly high concentration of wildlife
and is a major tourist attraction in northern Tanzania.
Pastoralism has been practised in Ngorongoro for at least 7,000
years and the Maasai have lived there for two centuries.
Today, there are over 40,000
residents with 150,000 cattle, sheep and goats, which move between
dry and wet season grazing areas.
In addition to the Maasai, small
populations of Tatoga pastoralists and Hadza hunter-gatherers live
east of Lake Eyasi in the south of the NCA. "The state could
promote tourism without hurting us," Kaisoe said in Kigali,
adding that the Maasai demanded compensation with interest for
their displacement from the crater.
"Since 1991, we have no longer
had the right to step foot in our natural surroundings, Bwindi
Impenetrable National Park [in southwestern Uganda] where we used
to hunt for wild meats and fruit, and where we used to hold rites
to worship our ancestors," said Penninhah Zaninka, a delegate
for the Ugandan Twa people (or pygmies).
"Even if our children go to
school these days, no member of our community has a paid job and
most of us live in poverty," AFP quoted her as saying.
The Kigali - organised to coincide
with the World Conference Against Racism in South Africa, taking
place this week - was co-sponsored by the Community of Rwandan
Aborigines and a British NGO, the Forest Peoples Programme (FPP)
established to promote and protect the rights of forest people in
their struggle to survive.
(IRIN)
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