*http://termitemoundview.blogspot.se/2014/06/another-delayed-update-about-land.html
The case against Ngodidio Roitiken was dismissed.
The case against Ngodidio Roitiken was dismissed.
The Minister for Natural Resources and Tourism
issued threats against pastoralists.
Tanapa rangers burned down bomas in Arash – and
no action was taken against this.
There’s a dangerous lack of unity.
Seasonal OBC worker travel to Loliondo in the
middle of the rainy season.
FZS are hard at work making top recruitments to
carry out their plans for Loliondo.
Thomson Safaris continue occupying Maasai land
and the court case against them is ongoing.
The American organisation EarthRights lends a
hand to the struggle.
Update 22nd April: on 18th April the 1782 application in Massachusetts to get access to documents about Thomson was granted and on the 22nd there was a press release. http://www.earthrights.org/media/tanzanian-maasai-villagers-win-fight-information-about-land-grabs-and-forced-eviction-against
Update 22nd April: on 18th April the 1782 application in Massachusetts to get access to documents about Thomson was granted and on the 22nd there was a press release. http://www.earthrights.org/media/tanzanian-maasai-villagers-win-fight-information-about-land-grabs-and-forced-eviction-against
I’ve managed to get some information after much
chasing of people in possession of it. Part of it is very serious news, but
almost without debate and apparently totally without action taken.
OBC and the 1,500km2
I did not
know when I wrote the latest blog post, but on 4th February the case
against Ngodidio Roitiken and three other herders was dismissed for lack of
evidence. In 2009 during the evictions and human rights abuses to empty OBC’s
core hunting area of people and cattle Ngodidio lost an eye when he was hit by
a tear gas canister in a clash between herders grazing their animals on their
own land and the police at Mambarashani in Soitsambu. In a too common case of
blinding injustice Ngodidio was charged with “trespassing, environmental
destruction and threatening the police”. The court has not yet issued a written
statement (as far as I know).
On 11th
March at a ceremony in Dar es Salaam where Frankfurt Zoological Society - an
organisation known for its hostility towards Maasai land rights - handed over
11 vehicles for anti-poaching to Tanzania, the Minister for Natural Resources
and Tourism, Lazaro Nyalandu, took the occasion to issue threats (at 2:36 min.)
against pastoralists saying that neither they nor their animals would be spared
if found in protected areas during next phase of Operation Tokomeza (I’ve
mentioned this anti-poaching operation in earlier posts). Then Nyalandu went on
to mentioning Game Controlled Areas. A protected area under this definition
does not exist in Loliondo (but was used to create confusion for last years’land grabbing attempt) and as far as I’ve understood, neither has such a thing been
gazetted in any other area.
Around
mid-March a delegation of councillors from Ngorongoro district made a tour of
Arusha, Dar es Salaam and Dodoma . The main issue was the situation in
Ngorongoro Conservation Area, but land in Loliondo was also touched upon. The
delegation got the reassurance from the Prime Minister that Loliondo would be
surveyed according to known borders, and that only the villagers could decide
about Wildlife Management Areas (FZS’s long-held wish). The councillors also
met Nyalandu who did not say anything about land in Loliondo.
I have not
been able to get much more information about the outrageous fact that the
Germans are providing funds for land- and natural resource use planning for
Loliondo, and that this is supposed to be implemented by Tanapa in cooperation
with FZS! A case, if ever there was one, of putting a pack of hyenas in charge
of guarding calves. The only thing I’ve heard is that FZS have employed Dr.
Karaine Kunei - who just last year retired as District Executive Director - as
their Senior Technical Advisor in Loliondo. This former DED has been described
to me as very knowledgeable and convincing (for a government person) and FZS’s
recruitment can only be described as quite worrying indeed.
The Recent Crime: this information could be incorrecct. http://termitemoundview.blogspot.se/2014/06/another-delayed-update-about-land.html
The evening
of Sunday 6th April I got unconfirmed reports that Tanzania National
Parks Authority (Tanapa) would have burned down bomas in Arash. Some people had
said that the bomas would have been inside the national park, which did not
make sense and even in that case previous notice would have been required. Next
day there were detailed reports that this happened in the Nyorri area of Arash village (Nyorri, Olochoki, Irpalakika, and Olekushini) –
not in the national park - already on Tuesday 1st and that Tanapa
carried on with their crime for 3 days. Nyorri and Olekushini are far from the
park boundary while the other two areas are close to it. The arsonists arrived
wearing Tanapa uniforms and in Tanapa vehicles claiming that the bomas were
inside the national park which the pastoralist denied and then Risye Lilash and
Nguchuk Turuni, residents of Arash, even accompanied the rangers to have a look
at the boundary. The rangers said that Serengeti National Park ’s
new boundaries had been drawn by Tanapa’s plane a week earlier and then they proceeded
to burning down people’s homes leaving children and elderly people without
shelter. The land is part of the 1,500km2 so-called corridor (or Osero) that’s
the core hunting area of OBC, the high level hunting organiser from the United
Arab Emirates – and the government has made several attempts at grabbing this
land, the latest just last year. It should be noted that the borders of a
national park can not be altered before this has been debated and passed in
parliament – and the change has to be published in the Government Gazette.
Something has to be done to speed up information sharing so that rapid action
can be taken as soon as people in Loliondo are being attacked. The people that
lost their homes have established a new settlement not far from the one that
was burned down.
Emanuel
Saringe, activist from Oloirien says, “The government should respect human
rights and rule of law. The issue of boundaries always involves two sides and
Tanapa itself cannot review boundaries without full involvement of neighbouring
villages. Also negotiation means could be used to settle disputes instead of
use of force. Action should be taken against the game scouts engaged in burning
bomas which are out of the park. Also the national parks act has to be reviewed
to amend some provisions which are unconstitutional.”
On 8th
April residents of Arash and Maaloni held a meeting. For several days I could
not get any information at all about what happened there. Then I heard that the
burning of people’s homes had not been much dealt with and instead there was
discussion about how to evict cattle from other villages (like Enguserosambu). This
behaviour obviously goes against the argument used in the fight against the
land grab attempts – that this land is important far beyond the actual village
limits and depends on the ecosystem and not manmade boundaries.
On 9th
April seasonal OBC workers from Arusha travelled to Loliondo for a 3-week job
preparing for a highest level visit from Abu
Dhabi . Workers preparing for a visit from Dubai had already been
there for two weeks waiting for the sheik to arrive. It’s not hunting season.
It’s the middle of the rainy season and the visits are supposed to be for
“relaxing” and not hunting.
On 15th
April the Minister for Natural Resources and Tourism, Lazaro Nyalandu, pre-celebrated
the 50th anniversary of the union between Tanganyika
and Zanzibar with the UAE Minister for
Environment and Water, Sheikh Rashid Bin Fahad at Le Meridien hotel in Dubai .
Thomson Safaris’ Land Grab
I’ve unfortunately lost one of my best sources
of information to a hate campaign against a minority group more vulnerable than
the Maasai, but I have still got some not very detailed news about Thomson’s
land grab.
An
injunction hearing – to stop Thomson from using and damaging the land while the
main case takes place - was scheduled for 21st February, but on that day the lawyers
of the defendants, with the exception of Thomson’s lawyers, did not show up.
I’ve been told that the judge did not seem to mind the contempt of court and
the hearing was postponed to 17th March. The hearing finally took place on 17th
March and the verdict came on 4th April – and sadly the judge did not admit the
injunction. The main case continues.
On 26th
February a press release was issued by Minority Rights Group and the
organisation EarthRights International that has helped the villagers file a
court action under 28 U.S.C. § 1782, a law that allows people in other
countries to obtain documents and information from individuals or companies in
the United States to support foreign legal proceedings. At last there’s some
positive action in the USA
and EarthRights looks like an organisation without any ties to TNC, Monsanto,
tour operators or anything of the kind.
On 6th
March villagers refused to attend a meeting organised by the committee
appointed at the meeting on 3rd February (see last blog post) since
this committee was lobbying for Thomson and wasn’t legitimate.
On 8th
March Judi Wineland arrived for a visit at the occupied land. She got great
assistance by the traitor William Alais, councillor for Oloipiri. However all
sources I’ve asked stress how most other people, not least Loserian Minis,
chairman of Sukenya and former Thomson friend stood up for the people against
this half of the land grabbing Thomson-Wineland couple.
Things are
not good, but the struggle continues. People in Loliondo need to step up
coordination and information sharing – and everyone, including international
organisations, has to stop supporting the land grabbers… Above all, those that
think they can own or manage Maasai land in Loliondo should start packing.
Susanna Nordlund
sannasus@hotmail.com
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