In memory of Moringe
Parkipuny who too early passed away in Karatu on 22nd July 2013. You
are sadly missed and your spirit will never be allowed to die.
A long awaited letter from the Prime Minister regarding
1,500sq km under threat contradicts the lies repeated by the Minister for
Natural Resources and Tourism, but does otherwise not have much substance.
Newfound unity among the villages around the
land occupied by Thomson Safaris.
OBC and the government’s 1,500sq km land grab
plan
In my
latest update I mentioned a delegation of traditional leaders that had
travelled to Dar es Salaam demanding to see the president about the announced
threat to their lives and livelihoods - 1,500sq km of important dry season grazing
land that also “happen” to be the core
hunting area of Otterlo Business Corporation taken away by the government for
“conservation”. The demands were not met and the delegation headed on to Dodoma to see Prime
Minister Mizengo Pinda. In Dodoma
the traditional leaders were joined by other delegations from Loliondo in what
seemed like a rather fruitless and costly wait.
The Prime Minister had on 18th April agreed that the land does indeed belong to the registered villages and he said that the announcements made by the Minister for Natural Resources and Tourism would not be implemented – but nothing of this was put in any written document. The various delegations were in
During this
wait, on 23rd May Tanzania ’s
representative at the United Nations, Ramadhan M. Mwinyi read a discouraging statement at the UN Permanent Forum for Indigenous Issues. The statement starts
by denying the concept of indigenous people in Tanzania and then not very
coherently moves on into self-congratulatory mode for having granted a
collective Community Land Certificate to the Hadzabe hunter-gatherers. While
confused, this shows some kind of positive movement, but when mentioning the
Loliondo case things become really nasty. The statement repeats the brazen lies
about the Maasai as “landless” people that have been “given” 2,500sq km while
1,500sq km are being “retained” for wildlife conservation, when in fact the
whole of the 4,000sq km belongs to the Maasai and Sonjo both through customary
tenure and as registered village land, and the 1,500sq km that the government
wants to take are extremely important dry season grazing land for all the
Maasai pastoralists of Loliondo and beyond. Fortunately Tanzanian
representatives for pastoralists and hunter-gatherers organisations were
present at the forum and could call the government’s lies into light.
On 30th
May the Prime Minister’s letter with the government statement, and the Regional
Commissioner for Arusha as receiver, was finally issued and the Loliondo
delegations started their journey home. Gone from this letter is the insane
talk about Loliondo pastoralists as landless people that are being given land. The
Prime Minister recognizes that the land belongs to the villages and that people
living in the 1,500sq km will be seriously affected, but does not seem to
understand that many more than those people will have their lives and
livelihoods destroyed. Not a word is mentioned about OBC or about the evictions
and human rights abuses of 2009, and there is no apology for announcement after
announcement and press conference after press conference full of lies about Loliondo.
The government will look into what infrastructure there is in the 1,500sq km –
and will of course not find much apart from OBC’s airstrip and other
structures, unless grass counts as infrastructure. This shows a will to
misrepresent the dilemma as weighing “infrastructure against conservation”
instead of “pastoralist livelihoods against so-called investors”.
The
intention of the government is to do the whole process all over again and this
time “involve” the people of Loliondo. At the same time they want to “keep” the
1,500sq km for “conservation” and it’s really hard to see how the people would
be “involved” in having their land taken away – but unfortunately there is a
formula for this called “Wildlife Management Area”. Frankfurt Zoological
Society that already a decade ago tried to lure the people of Loliondo into a
WMA have funds for land use plans - presumably from the German development
agency GIZ - and it’s come to my knowledge that they are currently doing
research in the villages led by Thomson Safaris’ sinister former manager Daniel
Yamat. The presumption about GIZ is drawn from Yamat's reported comment that there is funding from the Germans and the fact that GIZ not long ago was
advertising for an “advisor in sustainable management of natural resources” for
Loliondo and that one task was described as “Promotes interdepartmental
cooperation, mainly regarding preparation of spatial plans, land use plans,
village demarcation, etc.”. There were detailed requirements for wildlife
management skills, but no mention of livestock management. WMAs are presented
as letting “communities” benefit from wildlife, but does in reality mean
handing over control of the land to government authorities and so-called investors.
From what I’ve read, the creation of WMAs always involve coercion, create
conflict and in cases like Makao in Meatu the WMA (also facilitated by FZS) is
seen, by authorities and investors, as a license to commit human rights abuses.
A WMA was what the government wanted and it was rejected a decade ago. Is the
ground seen as better prepared now after the human rights abuses of 2009 and
after the threat of a protected area that would destroy thousands of lives and
livelihoods? Presenting this as some “win-win” compromise would be the height
of hypocrisy.
On 28th
June in his address closing the latest parliament session the Prime Minister
repeated much the same as is written in the letter. Some mentioned a visit to
Loliondo by the Prime Minister, but this seems now to have been indefinitely
delayed. (edit 1/8: now it does seem like the PM will visit on 19th August) Even the Ngorongoro Member of Parliament is said to have expressed his
dissatisfaction with the PM’s letter
“The land
is the pillar of the Maasai culture and the pastoralist livelihood. In
Ngorongoro Conservation Area where it’s gone the men have disappeared to all
over the country leaving women and children behind facing hunger. With the work
they find they can hardly feed themselves. This is what will happen in Loliondo
as well if the land is taken. It’s worth dying for. The life among the Maasai
is dependent on the land and without it they are no more and the question comes
how do we survive the selfish free market economy.”, says Salangat Mako a local
resident from Ololosokwan.
Update 6/8: several people are reporting that on 3rd August the MP for Simanjiro, Christopher ole Sendeka (of all people), phoned at least one Loliondo councillor asking this councillor to persuade the rest to tell people to remove cattle and bomas from the area around OBC’s camp.
Update 6/8: several people are reporting that on 3rd August the MP for Simanjiro, Christopher ole Sendeka (of all people), phoned at least one Loliondo councillor asking this councillor to persuade the rest to tell people to remove cattle and bomas from the area around OBC’s camp.
Thomson Safaris’ occupation of 12,617 acres of
Maasai land
The court case
against five herders – two of them children – that had been going on for almost
a year with delayed hearings was finally dismissed on 5th June 2013.
The people testifying on Thomson’s behalf were contradicting themselves and
each others too much and the judge established that the complainant, Thomson
Safaris, according to the prosecution itself, is not the owner of the land, so
there was no case. It is sad though that Thomson can be dragging children
through court for using their parents’ land – and that of their children once
this occupation is ended – and that this tour operator is allowed to label the
legitimate owners of the land as “trespassers”.
As
mentioned before, on 17th May the land case against Thomson Safaris was struck
out by the judge who was not following proper procedures – since Soitsambu
after village division was no longer bordering the occupied land she had already
agreed to amending the case by adding
Mondorosi and Sukenya - and the preparation of a new case immediately
started.
I was told that
in May women in Sukenya were strongly pressuring the chairman and Thomson
employee – Loserian Minis – to sign the minutes in support of the court case
against Thomson. When Minis was ready to sign Thomson got wind of it and started
working on him involving the councillor for Oloipiri, William Alais, This ward
councillor used to be the coordinator of the Laitayok dominated NGO Kidupo, but
was let go for misappropriation of funds.
Thursday 30th
May to Saturday 1st June the laigwanak, traditional leaders, of
Loliondo on return from Dodoma
met with people in Soitsambu, Mondorosi and Sukenya to strategise about how to
regain for future generations also the piece of land occupied by Thomson. The
problem is that Thomson using classic divide and rule tactics have befriended
leaders of the minority Laitayok section that’s majority in Sukenya village
council. Though the only one really opposing the court case was the chairman
and Thomson employee.
On Saturday
1st June the traditional leaders were summoned to Loliondo police
station by the District Commissioner to whom allegedly the councillor for
Oloipiri had reported. The DC, Elias Wawa Lali, argued in favour of Thomson and
talked about the “hidden interests” of the NGO Pastoral Women’s Council. In his
warped world view the laigwanak had taken sides against an investor and for an
NGO when the only thing they were doing was to defend the land of their
grandchildren.
The minutes
in favour of the court case were signed by all three villages and the following
Monday the chairmen, including Minis, travelled to Arusha to see the lawyers.
Before meeting the lawyers the chairmen were picked up by a Thomson vehicle and
taken to see Thomson’s Arusha manager John Bearcroft and former “Enashiva”
manager, Daniel Yamat, who is now working for FZS. They were told that Thomson
were ready to negotiate and that with a court case there could be no
negotiation. This was not the first time Thomson had talked about being ready
to negotiate, but it made an impression on the chairmen. Though the mandate
they had from the villagers was not about negotiation and without the threat of
the court case there can’t be any half-meaningful negotiation anyway. It’s
obviously the fear of the court case that sometimes drives them into panicked
announcements that they will “negotiate”.
Thomson
Safaris have of course had many years to “negotiate”, but have instead all the
time insisted on being the owners of the land. They could have handed back the
title deed to the villages and tried to negotiate a proper contract whereby they
could stay on some part of the land as long as not disturbing grazing. Some
people who have met Minis actually say that he has been telling people that Thomson
are about to recognize the Maasai ownership, I suppose to justify his own
position – but “negotiating” for this safari company is offering some new
charitable project that their clients will pay for. On the other hand, if it
were up to me, I would never enter any contract with such criminals that for
years have been harassing and humiliating the true landowners, and whose
closeness to authorities protects them for being investigated for other crimes
that they could have had something to do with.
The chairmen,
including Minis, were enthusiastic about the court case and quickly visited
Legal and Human Rights Centre to sign all papers.
One
worrying aspect is that not only Minis, even if he’s the worst case, but also
the current Soitsambu chairman who used to be Soitsambu sub-village chairman
have earlier been very “befriended” by Thomson. Can they be trusted?
On 2nd
July Thomson Safaris announced that they had been named one of the Top Safari
Outfitters in the World in the Travel + Leisure (a magazine) 2013 World’s Best
Awards Readers’ Survey.
Thomson
Safaris had called a meeting with the villages for 4th July, but the
Arusha manager, John Bearcroft phoned the chairmen and told them that it was
cancelled because they were meeting with Obama on his visit to Tanzania (maybe
they were, and it would be typical behaviour, but I still haven’t seen Thomson
Safaris write about this online) – and it was postponed until August. He also
said that he was ready to negotiate, but that Judi Wineland was not.
On 4th
July 2013 Land Case 26 2013 was filed:
VERSUS
Tanzania
Breweries ltd
Tanzania
Conservation ltd
Ngorongoro
District Council
The
Commissioner for Lands
The
Attorney General
On 11th
July the injunction was filed and then I had to wait for the registrar to sign
and the defendants to be “served” (receive the plaint and injunction) before
publishing this blog post. The latest I’ve been told is that it seems like a
representative of Thomson’s charitable (and propaganda) branch Focus on
Tanzanian Communities has recently without success been trying to make
communities withdraw support for the case. Maybe this could be the beginning of
the end of Thomson’s occupation.
Keng’otore
Nanyoi from Enadooshoke, Mondorosi says, “the least the government could do
would be to stop Thomson from using the land until the court has decided to
whom it belongs”. Keng’otore was one of the herders that Thomson dragged
through court for almost a year for “trespassing”. That case was finally
dismissed and it was good to see his hope that with unity the land occupied by
Thomson Safaris could be returned.
Susanna
Nordlund
(Do contact
me with questions and information. I’m always looking for new sources of
information.)
Next up on
this blog will be a brief trip report.
Update: on 30th August I published my trip report.
Update: on 3rd September a delegation from the Ministry for Lands, Housing and Human Settlements Developments started surveying villages in Loliondo and the following day this delegation was called back to Dar es Salaam.
On 10th September land rights NGOs issued a press statement.
Update: on 30th August I published my trip report.
Update: on 3rd September a delegation from the Ministry for Lands, Housing and Human Settlements Developments started surveying villages in Loliondo and the following day this delegation was called back to Dar es Salaam.
On 10th September land rights NGOs issued a press statement.
Update: on 23rd September Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda
held a speech in Wasso that was overflowing with people that had come to listen
to him. Those present reported total victory. The PM had declared that the
1.500km2 would not be taken, that it belonged to the Maasai and their coming generations,
and that the Minister for Natural Resources and Tourism, Khamis Kagasheki,
would not be allowed to bother them anymore.
1 comment:
Apprecciate you blogging this
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