I was locked up two nights at
Loliondo police station and one night at Arusha police station.
Not allowed to contact anyone.
My computer was destroyed.
Instead of a court case I was
deported to Kenya.
Then the usual journalist wrote an
article full of lies about me.
Updated below.
Last week my latest trip to
Loliondo – a part of the world that’s always on my mind - was cut short in a
quite abrupt way when someone reported me to authorities. I wanted to meet some
of the people who are not online, but who have information about the land
threats caused by “investors”.
I arrived in Wasso by
bus on 20th June and did not get much done while looking for a vehicle to
go to the villages. I had one good offer, but then the owner announced that his
driver could not go to “those villages” during daytime. On the 23rd finally
I got a vehicle to go to Kirtalo for a half-day. On the way there I
got a message that one of Thomson Safaris’ drivers had phoned a young man
telling him that he had seen me together with my friend at Domel guest
house. I met some people in Kirtalo, my friend had to stay there and I
returned to Wasso together with the driver. On the way we met a
vehicle carrying the “investor-friendly” councillor for Oloipiri. William Alais.
My plan was to go to Mondorosi and Sukenya the following
day.
Back at the
guest house I was on my computer writing down what people had
told me, but instead I fell asleep. When I woke up it was dark and I went for
dinner at Honest guest house since I’d been seen too much at Domel.
A vehicle arrived and those inside it got out and walked straight up to me.
Immigration officer Angela asked me what I was doing in Tanzania and wanted to
see my passport. I told her my itinerary and interests leaving out the interest
in grabbers of pastoralist land. I had only a copy of my passport and was asked
to follow the immigration officers and a policeman to Oloip where I
was staying, and where there were memories of Moringe Parkipuny.
I tried to send some messages to friends, but my phone was taken away before I
knew if I had succeeded. I was told that immigration knew everything about me
from the internet, which was a kind of relief since from then I could start
telling my exact opinion about things. I was informed that I was under arrest
and had to pack all my belongings. The DC for Ngorongoro, Hashim Shaibu
Mgandilwa, whom I recognised from media, was around in the background, without
introducing himself, talking with the immigration officers. On the way out to
the vehicle the immigration officers took the hotel register of Oloip, and
then I was driven to Loliondo police station.
At
the police station I was informed that the reason for my arrest was that I had
entered Tanzania as a prohibited immigrant.
In 2010 I visited Loliondo as
a tourist to ask people if what Thomson Safaris – an American safari company
that claim ownership to 12,617 acres of Maasai land and have beaten
and harassed “trespassers” - were writing on their website corresponded with
reality. I had become interested in this issue after discussions on the
internet. Hardly anything of the company’s writings was true, but I also made
the mistake of asking the ward executive officer of Soitsambu who
phoned the DC at that time, Elias Wawa Lali, who would reply to my
questions the following day. This was a lie and the following morning while
waiting for transport I was instead approached by the police and taken to the Ngorongoro Security
Committee and the DC who was not in Soitsambu. I was accused of different
things, like working, until the committee decided that I had been doing
“research” without a permit. My passport was confiscated and I had to go to
immigration in Arusha to retrieve it where I was also declared a
“prohibited immigrant” and had to leave the country. After this I started a
blog – View from the Termite Mound - about the “investors” in Loliondo that
are a threat to land rights – Thomson Safaris and the more widely known OBC
from the UAE that repeatedly has tried to influence the Tanzanian government to
declare 1,500 km2 next to Serengeti NP a protected area, and removing the Maasai from
this area of great importance to their livelihoods. In 2009 this even led to
violent evictions of people that eventually moved back. I have since returned
to Loliondo in 2011 and 2013 without any problems, but I do get most
of my information from the many people from Loliondo that are active
in social media. My blog is an important resource since not only the
government and “investors” are spreading misinformation, but also supportive
people and organisations often mix up their facts. Local people in Loliondo that
speak up against the land threats often become victims of intense harassment,
not least being accused of being “Kenyan”, and sadly the biggest threat often
comes from other local people that for personal benefit have seen it fit to
befriend the “investors”.
At Loliondo police
station I was asked to list all my belongings and I listed part of them,
not knowing if it was a good or bad thing to do. I clearly stated that everyone
present knew that my arrest was because of dirty politics in Loliondo and
that it was those that endanger livelihoods by grabbing land that should be
arrested instead. I had to phone family and friends, but was told that I was
under arrest and didn’t have any rights. Angela said I would be given my phone
next morning at the immigration office. All my belongings were locked up in a
room and I was taken to a cell in the clothes I was wearing without even having
brushed my teeth. In the cell my kikoi, that could have served as a
blanket, my shoes and a blanket that was already there were taken away. I had
to sleep on concrete in short jeans and a very thin long shirt in the pitch
dark cell. After a while I was given my bottle of water that I used for trying
to clean my mouth and not too much for drinking since there was no toilet in
the cell. Later I saw that there were some buckets. In Loliondo town
it’s quite cold at night and the highly situated window had no glass, only
bars. There were also many mosquitoes and I did not have my repellent. I was a
political prisoner. I shivered with cold, but words from Kirtalo about
my blog kept me warm inside. The insanely disproportionate treatment
of a blogger almost made me laugh. Some people at the police station
showed discreet signs of support.
The
following morning I got breakfast and was allowed a brief visit to the bathroom
and some water for washing my face and then back to the cell again. From the writings
on the walls I could see that other prisoners had stayed in the cell for both
five and seven days without food. After some unknown time since I did not have
my watch I was driven to the immigration office where Angela took my statement.
She was friendly and gave me candy, but I still had to wait for my phone. I
stated exactly what I do in Loliondo, but without mentioning any names,
and I suggested who really should be arrested (the managers and owners of
Thomson Safaris and OBC). Angela said that I would be taken to a guest house to
stay and wash completely, before in the morning be taken to Arusha. She
showed a surprising lack of knowledge about the land issues and I had to
explain virtually everything.
Back at the
police station I could brush my teeth. Followed a long wait while the
immigration officers met inside the locked room with my belongings and also
outside the police station with the DC. I got food, got back my kikoi, and
waited even more. Now I was told that I would get my phone back at the
immigration office in Arusha. I discreetly got a phone number and put it
in my back pocket. Angela smiled with the DC and he showed her something on his
phone. I was told that I was going back to the cell. I asked the DC if he
thought he was doing a good job, but he just smiled, and continued smiling when
I was taken away.
The former
DC, Elias Wawa Lali. did his corrupt job working for central
government – and investors – against the people, but did not seem to have any
personal wish to make things worse. The current DC, Hashim Shaibu Mgandilwa, has “strange ideas” like that of making
leaders walk 8 kilometres from Wasso to Loliondo to be
locked up after a corrupt policeman was beaten up by other people, as happened
on 6th May this year.
I could keep
my kikoi the second night, could have my mosquito repellent and
after a while an angel came with a foam mattress. Some came to my end of the
corridor, shone a torch at me and uttered words of solidarity.
It was dark
when I was woken up. Angela came with her boss, a driver and another man, and we
were off to Arusha, via the crater route, but first photos were taken of
me. At Oldupai prehistorical site I could have some toiletries
and then there was a stop for a luxury breakfast at Serena Lodge on the crater
rim. I don’t know if this was paid for by Tanzanian tax payers or by Serena
Lodges. I considered approaching some Swedish or Spanish looking tourist, but
they were out on game drives and I thought that someone in Loliondo must
have contacted the embassy.
I did not
get my phone back at the immigration office in Arusha, and I had to go
through my belongings again. Angela now found a list of names in the pocket of
my laptop cover and her face lit up. It was a list of those I email when I have
a new blog post, which does only mean that I would like those people
to get more involved.
Then
followed a long wait locked up in a room at immigration that had a bathroom. I
had a sore throat and around a hundred mosquito bites. My hair, that
I normally wash every night, was kept in the same bun as the day I was arrested
and I was wearing the same clothes. I fell asleep on the wooden bench. Keys
were heard and the door opened. Lawyers sent by Onesmo Olengurumwa of Tanzania
Human Rights Defenders Coalition that were I contact with the Swedish
ambassador entered. I was confused and did first not understand that one of the
lawyers was Shilinde Ngalula , whom I’d heard a lot about in Mondorosi 2013.
The other one was Elibariki Maeda, both from Legal and Human Rights Centre. I
explained what had happened and was told that it would be looked into how I
could be bailed out, if it was possible, as a foreigner. I had been
arrested too long and it was illegal not to allow me to contact anyone. There
would be a court case that I started to look forward to.
Then I
continued sitting, locked in, waiting. I was told that I could wash completely
and change clothes and that’s what I started doing until I was suddenly told
that I had to go to the police station, so I dressed and went there half-washed
with my hair lose not knowing that I would be put in a cell again, which I
should have been able to guess. During the whole time I was arrested there
was very little information, few people introduced themselves and when there
was information it mostly consisted of lies. My limited Swahili could of course
also have added to the confusion. I was not allowed my brush, hairpins and
elastics in the cell at Arusha police station. My kikoi and
shoes were also taken, but I was later given a jacket. I was sleeping on
concrete in this cell too, but there was a bathroom, and I had company of the
self-confessed thieves Saidamu who specialised in ATMs and Mary who
had stolen water for her crops with a pump. Some of the male thieves
opposite our cell – that had not yet been found guilty in a court of law, but
said they were thieves, or in some case “real criminals with guns” – talked a
lot the whole night. Saidamu braided my hair, but when I found that
there was running water I washed it. It was less cold that in Loliondo and
there were fewer mosquitoes. Instead of pitch darkness like in Loliondo there
was too harsh light the whole night. At an unknown time, but hours before
daybreak, Saidamu and Mary were let out to mop the corridor floor. I
was asked if I could mop and was ready to get out to have a look, but the girls
said that I was sleeping and they didn’t want me to mop, which was just as well
since there was no mop, but some kind of back-breaking exercise.
Some
hours after daybreak I was again taken to the immigration office and then
followed many fingerprints and photographs. In the afternoon I had to go
through my belongings again and was declared a prohibited immigrated. It was
explained that I could never again enter Tanzania. The only thing I could try
was to write to the minister for home affairs. I asked for my list of people to
send emails to, but did not get it back – and I did not get my phone, even
though I explained that I had the right to contact people.
I
was escorted to Namanga, as always in the middle of the backseat between two
people. At the border followed more waiting and more photos. I asked for a copy
of the notice to prohibited immigrant, but did not get one. I said I would be
back and one of the immigration officers told the border personnel, “haogopi
kitu” (she doesn’t fear anything). At the Kenyan border control I got my phone
back and a sympathetic person drove me to a hotel where I on my phone saw what
had been said on social media about the arrest and I contacted people to say I
had been released. My family had not got any information at all. The embassy
was not allowed to contact them without my consent that was impossible to get
when I was not allowed to communicate. My computer that I’m normally glued to
was to my frustration impossible to switch on.
The
following day a local IT specialist in Namanga opened the computer and found
that a ribbon that connects power to the motherboard was missing, which I would
have to go to Nairobi to repair – and in Nairobi it was found that it was worse
than that. Samsung in Nairobi are currently having a look at it.
On
Wednesday 30th I was informed that Manyerere Jackton had written about me in
the Jamhuri. The following day I could read the article online and it was full
of the most insane lies. As expected, Manyerere uses the occasion to incite
against Tina Timan whom I’ve never met. She’s the only one of the supposedly
“Kenyan” activists in Loliondo that was actually born in Kenya, even if she’s
lived in Tanzania for many years and has several Tanzanian children – but
Manyerere uses any little thing he can find – and many things that only
exist in his mind - to stir up
xenophobia. His incitement in the
Jamhuri against the people of Loliondo is well known and has often been
reported about in my blog.
Manyerere
– or his source - lies that I would have said that I’d make sure that Sweden
cuts its aid to Tanzania if the government does not stop persecuting me. Not
only do I obviously not have any such influence, but anyone who knows me also
knows that I would never say such a thing. The only thing I said about my
country was that, as in any half-serious democracy, anyone with a tourist visa
can talk politics with any person - this
was after the usual nonsense at the police station that, “in no country is a
visitor allowed to talk politics with people”. With the most nauseating
hypocrisy the perpetrators of neo-colonialism pretend to be victims of the
same.
In
the article Immigration Commissioner Abdullah Khamis Abdullah lauds
the work of DC Hashim Shaibu Mgandilwa bringing peace to the district. Not only
is the existence of district commissioners a colonial relict, but this current
one has taken “controlling the natives” to new levels as could be seen in the
operations earlier this year.
I
wish Manyerere would have mentioned my blog by its name View from the Termite
Mound, but instead he says that Just Conservation that publishes some of my
posts is my website.
With
great “imagination” Manyerere writes that my supposed partners and I have raised
billions of money for “abused” pastoralists and funded the NGOs so that they
can keep stirring up the conflict. I have never raised a single penny and
unfortunately not given anything to the NGOs. I am a blogger.
Worst
of all are the threats of investigating those that helped me, and with usual cluelessness
the focus is on the owner of the guest house where I was staying, and with whom
my relation is of a strictly business character. I will have to make room
payments through Western Union once at home since I did not think of that when
I was taken to Loliondo police station.
I
don’t know why the idea of a court case was dropped. It would have been a good
opportunity to expose what’s going in Loliondo, and to ask the questions: Are
tourists not allowed to ask questions in Tanzania? Do those tourists that have
a blog need a special kind of visa?
Now
my intention is to continue blogging about Loliondo for the rest of my life,
and I will be back.
Susanna
Nordlund, in Nairobi on borrowed computer
sannasus@hotmail.com
Update:
Samsung in Nairobi established that the hard drive was taken.
Manyerere
Jackton emailed me that he had read my blog post and explained that he
was defending his country against my "neocolonialism", "Tanzania
for Tanzanians" etc. The obvious reply to that was wondering why he then
worked so hard to in multiple articles incite against the
Tanzanian Maasai of Loliondo for the benefit of foreign investors. Instead of
replying Manyerere rapidly revealed an informant by sending photos telling
me how every step of my "illegal activities" had been monitored. He
did not explain how meeting people could be an "illegal activity" in
a democratic country. Neither did he explain why the article did not have his
name. The informant was the driver Mangusha.
My late computer in Wasso before being arrested. |
8 comments:
That Jamhurimedia is so FULL OF SHIT!! I would like to meet the person who wrote the article. What kind of media outlet does not publish the name of the reporter, and what kind of online newspaper does not even allow for comments from the readers? I know... a fake one! Full of biased stories.
Var starkare Susanna, du är redan väldigt stark.
Amani iwe nawe.
Thank you, anonymous. Manyerere Jackton often writes his articles about Loliondo without having his name published – and worse than that: once an article of his was published under the fake Maasai-sounding name “Adam ole Timan’.
Mr Jackton did email me saying he had read this blog post and explaining that he was “after his country”, that Tanzania is for Tanzanians and being mzungu isn’t a certificate to do what I want for his country and asked me to stop “neocolonialism”. He did not quite explain the patriotism of inciting against the Tanzanians of Loliondo in so many articles, calling them “Kenyans” for the obvious benefit of foreign “investors”. Instead he started sending me photos taken be the driver – a guy called Mangusha - who took me to Kirtalo and saying that it was his duty to expose my “illegal business in Loliondo” and that every step had been monitored. Then I wonder why he had incorrect information about whom I met in Kirtalo... And he did not explain how meeting people that fight for their land is “illegal”. The credibility of the Jamhuri is indeed below zero.
Mr Jackton did not reply to the questions that I sent him in April this year that were:
“Dear Mr Jackton,
I have with increasing worry been reading your articles about Loliondo. Where does your immense interest for Loliondo, nationality and NGOs come from? Why aren't you writing about other areas with a border to Kenya? The border was an agreement between Germany and Great Britain, by the way. How can you write something as bizarre as that 70% of people in Loliondo would not be Tanzanian? Do you really believe this? Do you really know of any NGO person in Loliondo who isn't a Tanzanian citizen?
What’s your relation to OBC? Are you aware that this company participated in brutal, extrajudicial evictions in 2009, and that the evictions were for the benefit of OBC? A 7-year old girl was lost and has still not been found. Are you aware that OBC totally funded a crazy draft land use plan that would have led to the destruction of thousands of lives and livelihoods if not stopped?
Why are you doing this? Aren't you ashamed? Why don't you just apologize and stop inciting against the Maasai of Loliondo?
With grave concerns,
Susanna Nordlund”
You maintain a brave campaign. The GOT can be rough when an individual annoys them.
Michael Harrison
sfh53@aol.com
Thank you, Michael.
Wow this is an absolutely amazing thing to read, and I definitely don't mean that in a good way! That "neocolonialism" comment is ridiculous! I've always wanted to visit Tanzania, but this entire story makes me definitely want to reconsider this. I certainly hope everything works out for you Susanna! Thank you for sharing this, by the way.
Eliseo Weinstein @ JR's Bail Bonds
Thank you Eliseo. I would visit Tanzania if I could. This year I went to Kenya instead, but even this was enough to provoke the servants of those "investors", that are worse than ever, even arresting a lawyer..
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