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A
LOW FOG ENVELOPES
the steep and remote valleys of southwestern Uganda most mornings,
as birds found only in this small corner of the continent rise in
chorus and the great apes drink from clear streams. Days in the
dense montane forest are quiet and steamy. Nights are an
exaltation of insects and primate howling. For thousands of years
the Batwa people thrived in this soundscape, in such close harmony
with the forest that early-twentieth-century wildlife biologists
who studied the flora and fauna of the region barely noticed their
existence. They were, as one naturalist noted, "part of the
fauna."
In the 1930s, Ugandan leaders were
persuaded by international conservationists that this area was
threatened by loggers, miners, and other extractive interests. In
response, three forest reserves were created—the Mgahinga, the
Echuya, and the Bwindi—all of which overlapped with the Batwa's
ancestral territory. For sixty years these reserves simply existed
on paper, which kept them off-limits to extractors. And the Batwa
stayed on, living as they had for generations, in reciprocity with
the diverse biota that first drew conservationists to the region.
However, when the reserves were
formally designated as national parks in 1991 and a bureaucracy
was created and funded by the World Bank's Global Environment
Facility to manage them, a rumor was in circulation that the Batwa
were hunting and eating silverback gorillas, which by that time
were widely recognized as a threatened species and also,
increasingly, as a featured attraction for ecotourists from Europe
and America. Gorillas were being disturbed and even poached, the
Batwa admitted, but by Bahutu, Batutsi, Bantu, and other tribes
who invaded the forest from outside villages. The Batwa, who felt
a strong kinship with the great apes, adamantly denied killing
them. Nonetheless, under pressure from traditional Western
conservationists, who had come to believe that wilderness and
human community were incompatible, the Batwa were forcibly
expelled from their homeland.
Photograph |
John Martin / Conservation International |
These forests are
so dense that the Batwa lost perspective when they first
came out. Some even stepped in front of moving vehicles. Now
they are living in shabby squatter camps on the perimeter of
the parks, without running water or sanitation. In one more
generation their forest-based culture—songs, rituals,
traditions, and stories—will be gone.
It's no secret that millions
of native peoples around the world have been pushed off
their land to make room for big oil, big metal, big timber,
and big agriculture. But few people realize that the same
thing has happened for a much nobler cause: land and
wildlife conservation. Today the list of culture-wrecking
institutions put forth by tribal leaders on almost every
continent includes not only Shell, Texaco, Freeport, and
Bechtel, but also more surprising names like Conservation
International (CI), The Nature Conservancy (TNC), the World
Wildlife Fund (WWF), and the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).
Even the more culturally sensitive World Conservation Union
(IUCN) might get a mention. |
In early 2004 a United Nations
meeting was convened in New York for the ninth year in a row to
push for passage of a resolution protecting the territorial and
human rights of indigenous peoples. The UN draft declaration
states: "Indigenous peoples shall not be forcibly removed
from their lands or territories. No relocation shall take place
without the free and informed consent of the indigenous peoples
concerned and after agreement on just and fair compensation and,
where possible, with the option to return." During the
meeting an indigenous delegate who did not identify herself rose
to state that while extractive industries were still a serious
threat to their welfare and cultural integrity, their new and
biggest enemy was "conservation."
Later that spring, at a Vancouver,
British Columbia, meeting of the International Forum on Indigenous
Mapping, all two hundred delegates signed a declaration stating
that the "activities of conservation organizations now
represent the single biggest threat to the integrity of indigenous
lands." These rhetorical jabs have shaken the international
conservation community, as have a subsequent spate of critical
articles and studies, two of them conducted by the Ford
Foundation, calling big conservation to task for its historical
mistreatment of indigenous peoples.
| "We
don`t want to be like you," Maasai
leader Martin Saning`o told a room of shocked white faces |
"We are enemies of
conservation," declared Maasai leader Martin Saning'o,
standing before a session of the November 2004 World Conservation
Congress sponsored by IUCN in Bangkok, Thailand. The nomadic
Maasai, who have over the past thirty years lost most of their
grazing range to conservation projects throughout eastern Africa,
hadn't always felt that way. In fact, Saning'o reminded his
audience, "...we were the original conservationists."
The room was hushed as he quietly explained how pastoral and
nomadic cattlemen have traditionally protected their range:
"Our ways of farming pollinated diverse seed species and
maintained corridors between ecosystems." Then he tried to
fathom the strange version of land conservation that has
impoverished his people, more than one hundred thousand of whom
have been displaced from southern Kenya and the Serengeti Plains
of Tanzania. Like the Batwa, the Maasai have not been fairly
compensated. Their culture is dissolving and they live in poverty.
"We don't want to be like
you," Saning'o told a room of shocked white faces. "We
want you to be like us. We are here to change your minds. You
cannot accomplish conservation without us."
Although he might not have realized
it, Saning'o was speaking for a growing worldwide movement of
indigenous peoples who think of themselves as conservation
refugees. Not to be confused with ecological refugees—people
forced to abandon their homelands as a result of unbearable heat,
drought, desertification, flooding, disease, or other consequences
of climate chaos—conservation refugees are removed from their
lands involuntarily, either forcibly or through a variety of less
coercive measures. The gentler, more benign methods are sometimes
called "soft eviction" or "voluntary resettlement,"
though the latter is contestable. Soft or hard, the main complaint
heard in the makeshift villages bordering parks and at meetings
like the World Conservation Congress in Bangkok is that relocation
often occurs with the tacit approval or benign neglect of one of
the five big international nongovernmental conservation
organizations, or as they have been nicknamed by indigenous
leaders, the BINGOs. Indigenous peoples are often left out of the
process entirely.
Curious about this brand of
conservation that puts the rights of nature before the rights of
people, I set out last autumn to meet the issue face to face. I
visited with tribal members on three continents who were grappling
with the consequences of Western conservation and found an
alarming similarity among the stories I heard.
KHON NO,
MATRIARCH OF A REMOTE MOUNTAIN VILLAGE, huddles next to
an open-pit stove in the loose, brightly colored clothes that
identify her as Karen, the most populous of six tribes found in
the lush, mountainous reaches of far northern Thailand. Her
village of sixty-five families has been in the same wide valley
for over two hundred years. She chews betel, spitting its bright
red juice into the fire, and speaks softly through black teeth.
She tells me I can use her name, as long as I don't identify her
village.
| "The
government has no idea who I am," she says. "The
only person in the village they know by name is the 'headman'
they appointed to represent us in government negotiations.
They were here last week, in military uniforms, to tell us
we could no longer practice rotational agriculture in this
valley. If they knew that someone here was saying bad things
about them they would come back again and move us out."
In a recent outburst of
environmental enthusiasm stimulated by generous financial
offerings from the Global Environment Facility, the Thai
government has been creating national parks as fast as the
Royal Forest Department can map them. Ten years ago there
was barely a park to be found in Thailand, and because those
few that existed were unmarked "paper parks," few
Thais even knew they were there. Now there are 114 land
parks and 24 marine parks on the map. Almost twenty-five
thousand square kilometers, most of which are occupied by
hill and fishing tribes, are now managed by the forest
department as protected areas. |

Photograph
| Jeremy Horner / Corbis
|
"Men in uniform just appeared
one day, out of nowhere, showing their guns," Kohn Noi
recalls, "and telling us that we were now living in a
national park. That was the first we knew of it. Our own guns were
confiscated . . . no more hunting, no more trapping, no more
snaring, and no more "slash and burn." That's what they
call our agriculture. We call it crop rotation and we've been
doing it in this valley for over two hundred years. Soon we will
be forced to sell rice to pay for greens and legumes we are no
longer allowed to grow here. Hunting we can live without, as we
raise chickens, pigs, and buffalo. But rotational farming is our
way of life."
A week before our conversation, and
a short flight south of Noi's village, six thousand
conservationists were attending the World Conservation Congress in
Bangkok. At that conference and elsewhere, big conservation has
denied that they are party to the evictions while generating reams
of promotional material about their affection for, and close
relationships with, indigenous peoples. "We recognize that
indigenous people have perhaps the deepest understanding of the
Earth's living resources," says Conservation International
chairman and CEO Peter Seligman, adding that, "we firmly
believe that indigenous people must have ownership, control and
title of their lands." Such messages are carefully projected
toward major funders of conservation, which in response to the
aforementioned Ford Foundation reports and other press have become
increasingly sensitive to indigenous peoples and their struggles
for cultural survival.
Financial support for international
conservation has in recent years expanded well beyond the
individuals and family foundations that seeded the movement to
include very large foundations like Ford, MacArthur, and Gordon
and Betty Moore, as well as the World Bank, its Global Environment
Facility, foreign governments, USAID, a host of bilateral and
multilateral banks, and transnational corporations. During the
1990s USAID alone pumped almost $300 million into the
international conservation movement, which it had come to regard
as a vital adjunct to economic prosperity. The five largest
conservation organizations, CI, TNC, and WWF among them, absorbed
over 70 percent of that expenditure. Indigenous communities
received none of it. The Moore Foundation made a singular ten-year
commitment of nearly $280 million, the largest environmental grant
in history, to just one organization—Conservation International.
And all of the BINGOs have become increasingly corporate in recent
years, both in orientation and affiliation. The Nature Conservancy
now boasts almost two thousand corporate sponsors, while
Conservation International has received about $9 million from its
two hundred fifty corporate "partners."
Photograph |
Tim Graham / Getty Images |
With that kind of
financial and political leverage, as well as chapters in
almost every country of the world, millions of loyal
members, and nine-figure budgets, CI, WWF, and TNC have
undertaken a hugely expanded global push to increase the
number of so-called protected areas (PAs)—parks, reserves,
wildlife sanctuaries, and corridors created to preserve
biological diversity. In 1962, there were some 1,000
official PAs worldwide. Today there are 108,000, with more
being added every day. The total area of land now under
conservation protection worldwide has doubled since 1990,
when the World Parks Commission set a goal of protecting 10
percent of the planet's surface. That goal has been exceeded,
with over 12 percent of all land, a total area of 11.75
million square miles, now protected. That's an area greater
than the entire land mass of Africa.
|
During the 1990s the African nation
of Chad increased the amount of national land under protection
from 0.1 to 9.1 percent. All of that land had been previously
inhabited by what are now an estimated six hundred thousand
conservation refugees. No other country besides India, which
officially admits to 1.6 million, is even counting this growing
new class of refugees. World estimates offered by the UN, IUCN,
and a few anthropologists range from 5 million to tens of millions.
Charles Geisler, a sociologist at Cornell University who has
studied displacements in Africa, is certain the number on that
continent alone exceeds 14 million.
The true worldwide figure, if it
were ever known, would depend upon the semantics of words like
"eviction," "displacement," and "refugee,"
over which parties on all sides of the issue argue endlessly. The
larger point is that conservation refugees exist on every
continent but Antarctica, and by most accounts live far more
difficult lives than they once did, banished from lands they
thrived on for hundreds, even thousands of years.
John Muir, a forefather of the
American conservation movement, argued that "wilderness"
should be cleared of all inhabitants and set aside to satisfy the
urbane human's need for recreation and spiritual renewal. It was a
sentiment that became national policy with the passage of the 1964
Wilderness Act, which defined wilderness as a place "where
man himself is a visitor who does not remain." One should not
be surprised to find hardy residues of these sentiments among
traditional conservation groups. The preference for "virgin"
wilderness has lingered on in a movement that has tended to value
all nature but human nature, and refused to recognize the positive
wildness in human beings.
| It
should be no surprise that tribal peoples regard
conservationists as just another colonizer. |
Expulsions continue around the
world to this day. The Indian government, which evicted one
hundred thousand adivasis (rural peoples) in Assam between
April and July of 2002, estimates that 2 or 3 million more will be
displaced over the next decade. The policy is largely in response
to a 1993 lawsuit brought by WWF, which demanded that the
government increase PAs by 8 percent, mostly in order to protect
tiger habitat. A more immediate threat involves the impending
removal of several Mayan communities from the Montes Azules region
of Chiapas, Mexico, a process begun in the mid-1970s with the
intent to preserve virgin tropical forest, which could still quite
easily spark a civil war. Conservation International is deeply
immersed in that controversy, as are a host of extractive
industries.
Tribal people, who tend to think
and plan in generations, rather than weeks, months, and years, are
still waiting to be paid the consideration promised. Of course the
UN draft declaration is the prize because it must be ratified by
so many nations. The declaration has failed to pass so far mainly
because powerful leaders such as Tony Blair and George Bush
threaten to veto it, arguing that there is not and should never be
such a thing as collective human rights.
Sadly, the human rights and global
conservation communities remain at serious odds over the question
of displacement, each side blaming the other for the particular
crisis they perceive. Conservation biologists argue that by
allowing native populations to grow, hunt, and gather in protected
areas, anthropologists, cultural preservationists, and other
supporters of indigenous rights become complicit in the decline of
biological diversity. Some, like the Wildlife Conservation
Society's outspoken president, Steven Sanderson, believe that the
entire global conservation agenda has been "hijacked" by
advocates for indigenous peoples, placing wildlife and
biodiversity in peril. "Forest peoples and their
representatives may speak for the forest," Sanderson has said,
"They may speak for their version of the forest; but
they do not speak for the forest we want to conserve." WCS,
originally the New York Zoological Society, is a BINGO lesser in
size and stature than the likes of TNC and CI, but more insistent
than its colleagues that indigenous territorial rights, while a
valid social issue, should be of no concern to wildlife
conservationists.
| Market-based
solutions put forth by human rights groups, which may have
been implemented with the best of social and ecological
intentions, share a lamentable outcome, barely discernible
behind a smoke screen of slick promotion. In almost every
case indigenous people are moved into the money economy
without the means to participate in it fully. They become
permanently indentured as park rangers (never wardens),
porters, waiters, harvesters, or, if they manage to learn a
European language, ecotour guides. Under this model,
"conservation" edges ever closer to
"development," while native communities are
assimilated into the lowest ranks of national cultures. |

Photograph
| AFP / Getty Images
|
It should be no surprise, then,
that tribal peoples regard conservationists as just another
colonizer—an extension of the deadening forces of economic and
cultural hegemony. Whole societies like the Batwa, the Maasai, the
Ashinika of Peru, the Gwi and Gana Bushmen of Botswana, the Karen
and Hmong of Southeast Asia, and the Huarani of Ecuador are being
transformed from independent and self-sustaining into deeply
dependent and poor communities.
WHEN I
TRAVELED THROUGHOUT Mesoamerica and the Andean-Amazon
watershed last fall visiting staff members of CI, TNC, WCS, and
WWF I was looking for signs that an awakening was on the horizon.
The field staff I met were acutely aware that the spirit of
exclusion survives in the headquarters of their organizations,
alongside a subtle but real prejudice against "unscientific"
native wisdom. Dan Campbell, TNC's director in Belize, conceded,
"We have an organization that sometimes tries to employ
models that don't fit the culture of nations where we work."
And Joy Grant, in the same office, said that as a consequence of a
protracted disagreement with the indigenous peoples of Belize,
local people "are now the key to everything we do."
"We are arrogant," was
the confession of a CI executive working in South America, who
asked me not to identify her. I was heartened by her admission
until she went on to suggest that this was merely a minor
character flaw. In fact, arrogance was cited by almost all of the
nearly one hundred indigenous leaders I met with as a major
impediment to constructive communication with big conservation.
If field observations and field
workers' sentiments trickle up to the headquarters of CI and the
other BINGOs, there could be a happy ending to this story. There
are already positive working models of socially sensitive
conservation on every continent, particularly in Australia,
Bolivia, Nepal, and Canada, where national laws that protect
native land rights leave foreign conservationists no choice but to
join hands with indigenous communities and work out creative ways
to protect wildlife habitat and sustain biodiversity while
allowing indigenous citizens to thrive in their traditional
settlements.

Photograph | Joy
Tessman / National Geographic
In most such cases it is the native
people who initiate the creation of a reserve, which is more
likely to be called an "indigenous protected area" (IPA)
or a "community conservation area" (CCA). IPAs are an
invention of Australian aboriginals, many of whom have regained
ownership and territorial autonomy under new treaties with the
national government, and CCAs are appearing around the world, from
Lao fishing villages along the Mekong River to the Mataven Forest
in Colombia, where six indigenous tribes live in 152 villages
bordering a four-million-acre ecologically intact reserve.
The Kayapo, a nation of Amazonian
Indians with whom the Brazilian government and CI have formed a
co-operative conservation project, is another such example. Kayapo
leaders, renowned for their militancy, openly refused to be
treated like just another stakeholder in a two-way deal between a
national government and a conservation NGO, as is so often the
case with co-operative management plans. Throughout negotiations
they insisted upon being an equal player at the table, with equal
rights and land sovereignty. As a consequence, the Xingu National
Park, the continent's first Indian-owned park, was created to
protect the lifeways of the Kayapo and other indigenous Amazonians
who are determined to remain within the park's boundaries.
In many locations, once a CCA is
established and territorial rights are assured, the founding
community invites a BINGO to send its ecologists and wildlife
biologists to share in the task of protecting biodiversity by
combining Western scientific methodology with indigenous
ecological knowledge. And on occasion they will ask for help
negotiating with reluctant governments. For example, the Guarani
Izoceños people in Bolivia invited the Wildlife Conservation
Society to mediate a comanagement agreement with their government,
which today allows the tribe to manage and own part of the new
Kaa-Iya del Gran Chaco National Park.
TOO MUCH
HOPE SHOULD PROBABLY NOT be placed in a handful of
successful comanagement models, however. The unrestrained
corporate lust for energy, hardwood, medicines, and strategic
metals is still a considerable threat to indigenous communities,
arguably a larger threat than conservation. But the lines between
the two are being blurred. Particularly problematic is the fact
that international conservation organizations remain comfortable
working in close quarters with some of the most aggressive global
resource prospectors, such as Boise Cascade, Chevron-Texaco,
Mitsubishi, Conoco-Phillips, International Paper, Rio Tinto Mining,
Shell, and Weyerhauser, all of whom are members of a CI-created
entity called the Center for Environmental Leadership in Business.
Of course if the BINGOs were to renounce their corporate partners,
they would forfeit millions of dollars in revenue and access to
global power without which they sincerely believe they could not
be effective.
| And there are some
respected and influential conservation biologists who still
strongly support top-down, centralized "fortress"
conservation. Duke University's John Terborgh, for example,
author of the classic Requiem for Nature, believes
that co-management projects and CCAs are a huge mistake.
"My feeling is that a park should be a park, and it
shouldn't have any resident people in it," he says. He
bases his argument on three decades of research in Peru's
Manu National Park, where native Machiguenga Indians fish
and hunt animals with traditional weapons. Terborgh is
concerned that they will acquire motorboats, guns, and
chainsaws used by their fellow tribesmen outside the park,
and that biodiversity will suffer. Then there's
paleontologist Richard Leakey, who at the 2003 World Parks
Congress in South Africa set off a firestorm of protest by
denying the very existence of indigenous peoples in Kenya,
his homeland, and arguing that "the global interest in
biodiversity might sometimes trump the rights of local
people." |

Photograph
| Joel Sartore / National Geographic
|
Yet many conservationists are
beginning to realize that most of the areas they have sought to
protect are rich in biodiversity precisely because the people who
were living there had come to understand the value and mechanisms
of biological diversity. Some will even admit that wrecking the
lives of 10 million or more poor, powerless people has been an
enormous mistake—not only a moral, social, philosophical, and
economic mistake, but an ecological one as well. Others have
learned from experience that national parks and protected areas
surrounded by angry, hungry people who describe themselves as
"enemies of conservation" are generally doomed to fail.
More and more conservationists seem
to be wondering how, after setting aside a "protected"
land mass the size of Africa, global biodiversity continues to
decline. Might there be something terribly wrong with this plan—particularly
after the Convention on Biological Diversity has documented the
astounding fact that in Africa, where so many parks and reserves
have been created and where indigenous evictions run highest, 90
percent of biodiversity lies outside of protected areas? If we
want to preserve biodiversity in the far reaches of the globe,
places that are in many cases still occupied by indigenous people
living in ways that are ecologically sustainable, history is
showing us that the dumbest thing we can do is kick them out.
This article has been
abridged for the web.
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MARK
DOWIE is
the recipient of eighteen journalism awards, including four National
Magazine Awards. He teaches science at the U.C. Berkeley Graduate
School of Journalism, and is the author of American
Foundations: An Investigative History from
MIT Press. His last feature article for Orion, In
Law We Trust, appeared in the Jul/Aug 2003 issue.
|