In
this blog post:
Lake
Natron
Ngorongoro
ward
Ex-RC
Gambo
Manongi
in the press
Adjourned
hearing in the East African Court of Justice
Things
are apparently quiet on the ground in Loliondo where the 1,500 km2 Osero of
important grazing land is wanted as a ”buffer zone” not least by OBC that
organizes hunting for Sheikh Mohammed of Dubai and that has used this land as
their core hunting area since 1993. The Maasai have been able to fight off
OBC’s intense lobbying, and keep their land, even though there have been
several illegal operations (ordered by representatives for the central government)
with mass human rights crimes. Maybe even more dangerous is the local police
state in which all government officials have participated in harassment,
threats, and illegal arrests of those speaking up against “investors” that want
to manage, or own, Maasai land, and which has worsened considerable the past
years leading to almost complete silence. Though since late February 2019 OBC’s
Tanzanian director finds himself in judicial vacuum in remand prison while
being investigated for mostly unrelated crimes, and OBC are keeping a lower
profile, while instead a basically genocidal zoning proposal for more than the
whole of Ngorongoro district is being pushed by various ugly characters in and
around the Ministry of Natural Resource and Tourism.
In
September 2019, a Multiple Land Use Model report - prepared at the insistence
of the UNESCO World Heritage Centre – and proudly presented by NCA chief
conservator Manongi - proposed not only to annex the 1,500 km2 Osero in
Loliondo to the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, that in itself would be an
obvious disaster, but to do the same with extensive areas at Lake Natron GCA,
and turn most of those areas into no-go zones for herders and livestock,
together with most villages in Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA). In Ngorongoro Division/NCA most of
the land will be lost, while the proposed “community development zone” into
which people and livestock are supposed to be squeezed, is very dry and lacks
proper water sources, saltlicks, and grazing. After some too timid protests,
Minister Kigwangalla has allowed for more “participatory” ways of preparing the
report, but after every supposed improvement the same genocidal proposal keeps being
presented. In October 2019, a new report was finished, but it ended up being just
the same. Kigwangalla’s latest promises were issued in April after a statement and then a visit by representatives from NCA, but instead the minister has spoken
in favour of land alienation in Lake Natron.
Lake
Natron
I’ve
lost count over how many times since I got acquainted with this part of the
world, I’ve heard about plans for evicting the Maasai from areas around Lake
Natron and often to annex these areas to NCA. This is usually announced in
media as something necessary and imminent to protect the only breeding ground
for lesser flamingos in East Africa, and tourists attractions like the active
volcano Oldoinyo Lengai (its eruption in 2007 was used as another argument for eviction,
under the cover of “safety”). The genocidal proposal in the MLUM report is –
besides very extensive no-go zones in NCA and squeezing people and livestock
into areas without water or grazing - to annex Lake Natron areas of Longido,
Ngorongoro and Monduli districts to NCA. The areas in Monduli are the Engaruka archaeological
irrigation site, Selala forest, Mount Kerimasi, and the Monduli side of Mount
Lengai. In the MLUM report an important argument for annexing land in Lake Natron
and Loliondo is that when the Klein’s-Mto wa Mbu road has been upgraded to
tarmac tourists will chose that exit route where they will also find other
tourist attractions, and that this will lead to a 25% loss of revenue to NCA,
and another 25% loss through a “significant decline in wildlife”. The plan for annexation
is to keep that revenue, and to add new sources.
On
11th June, after the permanent secretary to the Ministry of Natural
Resources and Tourism, Adolph Mkenda, and director of wildlife, Maurus Msuha, once
again announced in media that there is to be a Game Reserve in the Lake Natron
basin. A few days later, the councillor
of Engaresero, Ibrahim Olesakai, and village chairman, Yohana
Meeli Laizer, in a meeting in Engaresero reminded President Magufuli of his
statement from January 2019 against evicting rural people for conservation, that
there already are land use plans, that they don’t have anywhere else to go, have
lived in the area for a very long time after being evicted from other areas, and
asked him to reject the game reserve plan.
Protest meeting in Engaresero. |
Mkenda’s
response was to say that he hadn’t declared any game reserve, since only the
president can do that, and that the ministry had a map which showed areas for Game
Reserve and for Wildlife Management Area (WMA), but that it was to be used in
participatory talks. The Ngorongoro DC and the even the district council
chairman confirmed what Mkenda was saying.
Then
on 26th June, Minister Kigwangalla threw barrels of fuel on the
flames of fear, when he after a meeting with district leaders from Longido, traditional
leaders, and Arusha Region declared in social media to have embarked on a most
important trip to ensure the sustainable conservation of Lake Natron. Kigwangalla’s
message was that Lake Natron Game Controlled Area (all of it village land) was
to be divided into a Game Reserve and a WMA, and that he had received technical
advice about how to implement this. The decision to establish a Game Reserve was
based on a cabinet decision following the recommendation of the committee of
ministers sent by the president to address land use disputes. A committee was
set up to do “ground truthing” and advice the government about the conflict resulting
from the change of land use, and this committee reportedly consists of experts
from the ministry, members from the Arusha RC’s office, the DCs of Longido,
Ngorongoro and Monduli, and representatives from the concerned villages.
Kigwangalla,
probably the most ignorant person in the room, in his usual way lectured the attendants
representing people from Longido, explaining that “conservation” (mass
evictions and the destruction of pastoralism) isn’t for wildlife, but for
ourselves so that we don’t end up without rain and with floods … This is the kind
of talk that’s been used for over a century by those who want to alienate
pastoralist land and end pastoralism. This made some wonder (in social media) if
people in Kigwangalla’s home district Nzega - where hardly one hare can be seen
- don’t want rain as well. Kigwangalla talked about a WMA as some wish that
would be granted to local people, but a WMA is a loss of land use as well, even
if the land nominally stays as village land. The Ministry of Natural Resources
and Tourism, and others, are quite open with that the plan is to end
pastoralism.
A
thought that’s often expressed, in this case in English: “Maa community: we
are facing land alienation because of our respect and honour of our wildlife
and environmental conservation. Let’s say enough is enough.” (from
Facebook).
Kigwangalla in Longido |
Still,
many people keep thinking that any other minister of natural resources and tourism
would be worse than Kigwangalla, and still many remember that in early November2017, for a few days, he seemed like a nice person. The comment on his performance
in Longido is then, “I don’t know what to say” …
I
do hope that a court injunction is being sought. Anything else would be
dangerous negligence.
Ngorongoro
ward
On
1st July, a statement addressed to President Magufuli from the
traditional leaders of Ngorongoro ward - the villages of Mokilal, Kayapus and
Oloirobi - in Ngorongoro district (and Ngorongoro Conservation Area) was read by
Njamama Medukenya and Sembeta Ngoidiko on Global tv. These leaders want the
president to hear their longstanding cry about their land that keep being
stolen for conservation and tourism, and ask him to stop the current proposal,
while reminding of that since they were evicted from Serengeti in 1959, there
have been multiple violations of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Ordinance, which
already has led to the loss of many grazing areas, and to current harassment by
rangers, not least against women collecting firewood. They added that they were
friends of both wildlife and tourism, showed the terrifying map of the proposal,
and asked the president to come to Ngorongoro to listen to their plight. Munde
Saitoti from Kayapus, who was born in Ngorongoro crater and was among those evicted
in 1975, complained about the lack of food and firewood, and of the bad quality
salt that’s provided for livestock after access to saltlicks in the crater was
lost in 2017 (following a visit by PM Majaliwa in December 2016), and which is
making them sick.
When
the Maasai were evicted from Serengeti in 1959 by the colonial government, as a
compromise deal they were guaranteed the right to continue occupying Ngorongoro
Conservation Area as a multiple land-use area administered by the government,
in which natural resources would be conserved primarily for their interest, but
with due regard for wildlife. This promise was not kept, and tourism revenue
has turned into the paramount interest, while the human rights situation has
deteriorated, which was worsened by the designation as a UNESCO World Heritage
Site. In 1975 (the Ordinance was changed in 1974), the Maasai living inside
Ngorongoro Crater were violently evicted, and the same year cultivation was
prohibited in NCA. This cultivation ban was lifted in 1992, but re-introduced
in 2009 after threats from the UNESCO. The people of NCA are living under the
colonial-style rule of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority (NCAA), are
not allowed to grow crops or build modern houses, have the past years been
losing access to one grazing area after the other – not least losing grazing
and saltlicks in Ngorongoro crater in 2017, which Manongi stretched to include the Northern
Highland Forest, Embakaai and Olmoti craters as well as the Lake Ndutu basin (through
order and without a change to the Ordinance, and without the MP speaking up) - and are suffering from high levels of child
malnutrition. They have regularly through the years been shaken by rumours and threats
of eviction.
Court
injunctions must of course be sought. In April there was some action by the
Pastoral Council, traditional leaders, and village and ward leaders from NCA,
but apparently it just led to more empty promises by Kigwangalla. I suppose
many people are working hard for action and loud statements on behalf of all areas
under threat, but if there were any normality at all, the MP would have been
screaming like a banshee since 2016 ….
Ex-RC
Gambo
On
19th June President Magufuli revoked the appointment of Arusha
Regional Commissioner Mrisho Gambo. This has been met with mixed feelings,
since Gambo – while otherwise being yet another example of a Tanzanian leader
behaving very badly indeed - has at times been most helpful to the land rights
struggle in Loliondo. In 2016-2017 when weakened local leaders were negotiating
with the government officials, conservation top shots in and around the Ministry
for Natural Resources and Tourism, and “investors” who all wanted to alienate
the 1,500 km2 Osero, Gambo was described as “our only ally”. Though, on
the other hand, when there were spontaneous protests against the WMA compromise
proposal, Gambo threatened the protestors using the same rhetoric as the
enemies of land rights use, and during the 2017 illegal invasion of village
land with mass arson, beatings, seizing of cattle, rape, blocking of water
sources, and illegal arrests, Gambo didn’t say one word. When soldiers in 2018
attacked wide areas, even razing bomas, around OBC’s camp that was being
prepared for guests, and not one single leader dared to speak up since they thought
the crime was ordered by the president, Gambo finally made a some kind statement
against the attacks, even if in a very vague way, not even mentioning the
soldiers, and two months late. Though some argue that he as chairman of the regional security committee could have
done more than making a vague and late statement.
Gambo
is credited with having managed to have OBC’s director locked up in remand
prison for well over a year while being investigated for corruption, which
actually a serious denial of justice, since Mollel – and all his accomplices – should
answer for their crimes in a court of law. Every Ngorongoro DC, and apparently every
single government official in Loliondo, have been dedicated to committing any
crime to keep up the terror against anyone who dares to speak up against “investors”
that want to manage pastoralist land (not only OBC, but also the American
Thomson Safaris), and all of them are still walking free. OBC are still in Loliondo,
even if keeping a low profile, and some say that Gambo only had a problem with
the director, not with the company as such, or with Sheikh Mohammed. Though in
NCA Gambo was completely in the pocket of chief conservator Manongi. One of his
actions was to prohibit subsidized food that had been started by PM Pinda in
2013. Gambo also participated in the ridiculous/dangerous authoritarianism that
has always existed in Tanzania, but that has worsened considerably under the
current government, like when threatening people with arrests for having shared
videos of poor roads in Ngorongoro, labelling it as “economic sabotage”. Still,
in Loliondo many people are grateful.
The
reason that the president gave for sacking the RC, and at the same time the
Arusha DC, Gabriel Daqaaro (and the DED was sacked as well) was that they were
quarrelsome and that their squabbles had delayed projects. The new RC is Idd
Kimanta about whom I don’t know much. Gambo has announced his candidacy for MP
for Arusha Urban.
Gambo picking up the form to contest for the Arusha Urban MP seat |
In
its 30 June – 6 July issue, the Jamhuri newspaper ran an article about how the
Prevention and Combatting of Corruption Bureau (PCCB/TAKUKURU) was interrogating
Gambo about having bribed CCM members in Arusha to support his MP candidacy. The
same day, PCCB issued a statement saying that it was all a lie and that they
were not interrogating Gambo. I have no idea what the truth about the matter
is. What I do know is that the Jamhuri has published over 50 articles by
Manyerere Jackton in which he viciously incites against the Maasai in Loliondo,
writes bizarre slander of anyone he suspects of being able to speak up against
OBC and the Osero grabbing plan, writes shameless and detailed fabrications, and
praises OBC, and that this “journalist” boasts about being directly involved in
arrests of innocent people.
On
10th July Manyerere Jackton announced that he’s contesting for the
Butiama MP seat. His wildly unethical behaviour is well-documented, but I don’t
know how to reach people in Butiama with the information, and I’m very unsure
about how many would care. After a decade of blogging, my conclusion is that
very few people care.
Manyerere Jackton announcing his candidacy |
Manongi
in the press
Around
7th July NCA chief conservator Manongi appeared in the press with a
novel presentation of the genocidal proposal arguing that it’s about reviewing
stringent laws that are outdated and derail people’s development … That’s how
he presents alienating 82% of pastoralist land in NCA and leaving a tiny sliver
of land without much grazing, water or saltlicks for a “human development zone”.
It would be helpful if journalists instead of reporting “he says, she says”
take a little look at what the actual proposal is.
Hearing
in the East African Court of Justice
Reference
No.10 of 2017 Ololosokwan Village Council & 3 Others (Kirtalo, Oloirien and
Arash) vs the Attorney General of the United Republic Tanzania:
On
10th July there was a hearing for further cross examination via
video conference, and it was live-streamed on the court’s website, but was quickly
adjourned, since the respondent’s counsel complained that they had not been
served the affidavit with annextures from the applicants’ geo-spatial expert
witness until the 9th, the day before the hearing, and therefore wanted
the court to disregard this evidence. The applicants’ counsel, Donald Deya,
cited COVID-19 which had delayed the processing of data from the expert's field
trip, and pleaded that, in the interests of justice, the evidence should be
allowed. The court ruled that it will adjourn the matter to allow the respondent's
counsel time to go through the evidence and prepare for cross-examination.
The
terror exercised by defendants is of course worse than any virus. It’s the reason
that there’ a case in the first place, apparently the reason that the first
expert witness couldn’t continue with the case, and in May/June 2018 the defendants
used local police in an effort to intimidate everyone and derail the case.
Fortunately,
on 25th September 2018 the court ruled on Application 15 of 2017
seeking interim orders and issued the following orders:
a)
That the Respondent and any persons or offices acting on his behalf, cease and
desist from evicting the Applicants’ residents from the disputed land, being
the land comprised in the 1500 sq. Km of land bordering the Serengeti National
Park; destroying their homesteads or confiscating their livestock on that land,
until the determination of Reference No. 10 of 2017;
b)
That the Office of the Inspector General of Police restrains from harassing or
intimidating the Applicants in relation to Reference No. 10 of 2017 pending the
determination thereof.
Though
sadly these orders were brutally violated in November and December 2018 when
soldiers from the Tanzania People’s Defence Force (JWTZ), around 8th
November, started beating and chasing away herders and livestock from areas
around OBC’s camp that was being prepared for guests. Between 14th and
19th November, they burned down bomas in several areas of Kirtalo
and Ololosokwan. The soldiers also seized cattle on village land and tried to
hand them over to Serengeti rangers. Then on 19th and 20th
December 2018, they attacked any person they came across and who wasn’t fast
enough in Kirtalo and Ololoskwan. Old men, a boy herding cattle, and a pregnant
woman were severely beaten. They also tried to seize cattle again. Then, on
21st December 2018, the soldiers burned 12 or 13 bomas in the Leken area of
Kirtalo. It was sad, and simply infuriating, to experience the silence by exactly
all leaders, of all kinds, about these crimes that they thought were ordered by
the president. Though in mid-January 2019, now ex-RC Gambo spoke up, even if in
a strangely vague manner, and after that the “explanation” was that OBC’s
director Mollel had directly contracted the soldiers … Before the RC’s vague
statement in January DC Rashid Mfaume Taka again ordered some illegal arrests
for the sake of intimidation, which also was a violation of the interim orders.
This
court exercise with geo-spatial experts seems like a somewhat irrelevant
side-issue when - as I’ve written several times before and with more detail - the
defendants themselves have so thoroughly documented their own crimes in the letter
by DC Rashid Mfaume Taka officially ordering the illegal invasion of village
land that begun on 13th August 2017, on TANAPA’s map, used during
the operation, and that so clearly shows that a majority of bomas were on village
land, in the press statement by the Ministry of Natural Resources of Tourism on
17th August 2017, in the press, and even in their first response to
being sued, in which they pretended that the 1,500 km2 would have been some kind
of “wildlife conservation area” or “game reserve”. Only later did they come up
with the lie that the operation would only have taken place in Serengeti National
Park
Now
Yesterday
evening the Tanzanian tv station ITV showed a 30-minute special report about
Ngorongoro and the genocidal proposal. I’ve been told that it wasn’t bad at all,
and hope that it will soon be available online.
It’s
time for those critical of the current MPs silence, to speak up not only against
the genocidal plan, but against losing one more square inch, and for reclaiming
land that has been lost the past years, and earlier.
Susanna
Nordlund
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