Another example of the spirit of the safari
company that occupies 12,617 acres of Maasai grazing land in Loliondo,
violently harass the legitimate landowners and finds it appropriate to aggressively
present this as a model of community-based conservation.
I’m having some annoying problems getting exact
information about issues that I need to include in next blog post. Instead I’ll
first write about another issue that I’ve wanted to mention for a long time and
it’ll get its own post.
Thomson
Safaris, making a caricature of their ugly selves, have sued the website Stop
Thomson Safaris in the Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco ,
for “defamation and tortious interference
with prospective economic advantage”. The safari company has used a
subpoena to make the web host Weebly disclose the identity of the people behind
Stop Thomson Safaris (who were informed about this by Weebly in late April last
year), but they remain anonymous for now and wish to remain that way for safety
reasons since they are based in Tanzania. Unfortunately, as an interim measure while
this case is pending, Stop Thomson Safaris has agreed to delete certain words
from the website. However they state that, “By deleting these words, Stop Thomson Safaris does not accept that any
wrongdoing has occurred and will continue to defend itself vigorously against
this meritless lawsuit”. I do hope that there is some measure of
freedom of expression and right to information in the USA , and I am
of course more than willing to do anything that’s in my power to help the
people behind the website against this rather ridiculous injustice. The only
good thing about the lawsuit, apart from the dubious “entertainment value” of
seeing Thomson being Thomson and the chance of making their behaviour more
widely known, is that the safari company is spending considerable money on –
several – expensive lawyers.
And by the
way, in November 2010 a British social justice organisation that has land rights
in Loliondo as one area of interest received a letter from a London solicitors firm instructed by Thomson.
The safari company wanted to silence this organisation from mentioning them on
its website. The organisation wrote a reply and did not hear more from the
lawyers.
For my part
– as long as those with relevant information make sure to share it with me
within reasonable time – I’ll continue posting updates about Thomson and
related land threats in Loliondo (and if they don’t I’ll post delayed updates…),
as I have now been doing for almost four years, since I was thrown out of Tanzania
for asking some timid questions about this safari company.
As a
reminder, apart from Thomson Safaris Ltd, Tanzania Conservation Ltd - that was
used to buy the land - Thomson Family Adventure Ltd and Nature Discovery Ltd
are all divisions of Wineland-Thomson Adventures Inc. And they also own Gibb’s
Farm in Karatu. These are the companies that should be avoided.
I do hope
that Stop Thomson Safaris will soon be back to the part of this fight that’s
fought online. More voices are needed to counteract Thomson’s propaganda.
Susanna
Nordlund
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