The Tanzanian
government is again preparing to grab grazing land in Loliondo for the benefit
of the “investor” and this time it’s the Arusha Regional Commissioner who’s
been sent as the messenger. Let’s stop any such plan!
The RC was
also expected to drop a terrible message about Ngorongoro Conservation Area. He
didn’t, but let’s prepare to stop that as well!
The enemies
of the Maasai are very repetitive, but don’t let that divert your focus. There
is a pattern of violence from authorities when local leaders are weak and ready
to compromise, and when the rains fail and the dry season turns terrible, like
now, but for some reason the Maasai are leavened up and ready to defend their
land, after years of lying flat.
The Osero will
never be grabbed!
Oloirien 13th January 2022 |
In this blog post:
The visit by
the RC and the threat
Community Press
statement delivered in Oloirien
The president
appoints a human rights criminal as head of TANAPA
Despite
credible information beforehand the RC was silent about NCA
Update: on 21st January the villages of
Ololosokwan, Kirtalo, Oloirien, and Arash filed an application in the East African
Court of Justice.
In Malambo there were very worrying developments.
I’ll write a new blog post as soon as I’ve got more
details.
The
visit by the RC and the threat
Arusha Regional Commissioner
John Mongella had a trip scheduled for Ngorongoro district from 9th
to 13th January with the official purpose of inspecting development
projects funded by Covid-19 money. Already in advance there were widespread
fears, and shared inside information, that the RC was sent to announce land
alienation drives in Loliondo and Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA), with most
details about the plan for NCA.
On 10th January the
RC visited Arash with much cheering about how Mama Samia delivers classrooms. For
11th December, Mongella had summoned to the Ngorongoro District
Council HQ in Wasso, Loliondo village and sub-village chairpersons, ward
councillors, and ward and village executive officers (WEO and VEO) from the wards
of Ololosokwan, Soitsambu, Oloipiri, Piyaya, Oloirien, Arash and Maaloni, and
the villages therein with land in the contested 1,500 km2 Osero (bushland).
The meeting started off with
pleasant talk about development projects, but then Mongella moved on to the “conflict”
over the land saying that it had to “end” – which is what so many before him
have said when they’ve decided to do the exact opposite, issuing threats and causing
disquiet. He told those present that the government will decide how to end the
conflict, repeatedly saying that it must be a painful decision, for the broader
interest of the nation, and that the local community must pay a price for the
sake of the nation – forgetting that he was talking to people who already lost
Serengeti.
After the shocking but not
totally unexpected remarks, RC Mongella wanted the local leaders to join his
caravan of vehicles to go and inspect the Osero – but they refused. They also
refused to sign the meeting attendance list. This is significant since the
ward councillors range from those intimidated into silence to those totally
bought and even formally employed by the worst enemies of the local
pastoralists, and the village chairmen somewhat similar, but often less
educated, while in some cases, like the Ololosokwan chairman, they appear to be
quite serious indeed. The WEOs and VEOs are government employees, generally working
for the local police state at the service of the “investors”. The RC,
accompanied by the Regional Security Committee, and by OBC and Serengeti National Park representatives, went
off to inspect the Osero, and the line of vehicles moved in a careless manner,
killing at least one goat kid on the way.
There were journalists at the
meeting, brought by the RC, and a brief clip from Loliondo was shown on the ITV evening news on 12th January. It’s not the first time ITV are in
Loliondo, but the clip just shows a few, very brief, unconnected and unanalysed
moments. The DC talks about “solving” the conflict for the broader interest of
the nation – as if he were the first person saying such things, and as if anyone
would not remember what it means (pleasing the investors). The Oloipiri
sub-village chairman, Sangoyan Tutunyo, says that people support investors, but
that the investors aren’t transparent and won’t cooperate with the community. I’ve
been told that he’s always been a good guy, but that it could be because as
sub-village chairman he hasn’t been interesting enough to bribe. Today, 15th
January, a clip from Channel 10 was published on Youtube by the reporter who,
like often happens with Channel 10, shared the view that the RC was “solving
the conflict”. In this clip the Ololosokwan councillor appears talking about
living together as good neighbours.
Reportedly, the councillor of
Ololosokwan since 2020, Moloimet Saing’eu, spoke up with seriousness at the
meeting, which while very positive is another complete turnaround by this person
who, after having been a semi-activist, in 2015 joined OBC, as their assistant
director, with the explanation, “If you can’t beat them, join them.” He did
this fully aware of all their crimes and years of lobbying for violence and land
dispossession. He stayed with them through heavily increased repression, the
illegal operation of 2017 and the soldier violence of 2018. In 2018, he represented
OBC handing over the “gift” of 15 vehicles to the Ministry of Natural Resources
and Tourism. When several people were illegally arrested in 2016, he used the occasion
to attack my incompetence (that I won’t fully dispute) and rile up his followers
about my supposed sexual orientation. Moloimet has been an extremely bad influence
for ambitious young men in Ololosokwan and some of his admirers have been truly
vicious in their threats and fabrications about me. I haven’t heard from him
directly since late-2017 - if I remember correctly – but several people, some
of his admirers included, have told me that he left OBC in 2021 to better be
able to vie for the district council chair that’s been left empty by the new MP
Emmanuel Shangai. By all means, let Moloimet speak against OBC, even if the
hypocrisy is hard to stomach, but don’t give the district council chair to such
a person! Sadly, avoiding atrocious leaders is not what Ngorongoro is best
known for …
In case there are newcomers reading
this blog post, I must remind of that the 1,500 km2 Osero is legally
registered village land and an import grazing area, the loss of which would
have grave consequences on lives and livelihoods, also beyond the directly
affected villages. (More here.)
Otterlo Business Corporation
that organizes hunting for Sheikh Mohammed of Dubai has the hunting block
(permit to hunt) in more than the whole of Loliondo Division (plus part of Sale
Division) of Ngorongoro District, but the core area, where they actually hunt,
is in the 1,500 km2 Osero, and for years they have lobbied to have
it turned into a “protected area”, evicting the Maasai. This lobbying has led
to two major, totally illegal, invasions of village land with mass arson and
various other human rights crimes, ordered by the DC’s office, in 2009 and 2017.
Around OBC (and the American Thomson Safaris) a local police state has been built,
in which basically every government official, particularly the district security
committee and always the consecutive DCs (though currently the DED has taken
this place) openly, shamelessly, and with astonishing lawlessness work for the
investors, threatening, defaming and arresting anyone suspected of being able
to speak up.
OBC funded a draft District
Land Use Plan, not by accident proposing to make a protected area out of the
1,500 km2. This proposal was rejected by the District Council in
2011. In 2013, Minister Khamis Kagasheki tried to impose the same via vociferous
lies, but the (with hindsight) exemplary unity of the Maasai at that time, who
managed to garner the support of both ruling party and the opposition, made PM
Pinda declare that the land was theirs and that Kagasheki would not be allowed
to bother them anymore. Then everything went downhill with increased divide and
rule, and shocking treason.
The past few years, the situation
has deteriorated further with heavily increased repression to the point that not
one local leader dared to speak up when soldiers from the national army,
working for OBC, in 2018 tortured people and burned down bomas in Kirtalo and
Ololosokwan. There was brief relief in 2019 when OBC’s director got into
problems with the law (or more likely with those above the law) but then a practically
genocidal proposal for NCA was presented, including plans for surrounding areas,
like the Osero in Loliondo that was proposed to be turned into a no-go zone for
people and livestock, but not for hunters, tourists and researchers.
The court case filed in the
East African Court of Justice by the villages of Ololosokwan, Kirtalo, Oloirien
and Arash during the illegal 2017 operation has been under attack several times
via threats and summons to police station. The DED that came into office in 2021,
Jumaa Mhina, has shown a particular dedication to having it withdrawn. This government
decision that the RC is threatening with is crystal clear contempt of court,
and I expect it to be dealt with for this reason too.
On 12th January,
the RC’s caravan reached Malambo where people reportedly were crying bitter
tears and refused to attend. Only some leaders went to see Mongella. The
villagers decided to hold a peaceful manifestation the following day. I have
not yet been able to find out if this manifestation was held, or if my source meant
that people were going to Oloirien (the councillor and chairman did).
Community press
statement delivered in Oloirien
A hastily prepared meeting was
held in Oloirien on 13th January, with good attendance considering
the short notice and the prevailing drought spell. Spirits were high and
everyone was determined to defend the land. It’s been a long time since that
happened. Everyone has been flattened since 2016, and even worse since 2018. Due
to logistics problems, journalists couldn’t come, and the meeting was postponed
to the following day.
On the 14th a press
statement was issued, and by the Loliondo standards we’ve got used to since 2018,
it was brilliant except for the first two paragraphs that went a little over
the top about the president (Kim Jong-Un’s praise team would blush …). I also
have some questions about the need to bring up former RC Gambo’s committee as something
worth remembering.
The statement starts by saying that the signatories
stand before the press with great sadness and long-standing concern for the
safety of their land.
RC John Mongella’s visit has caused great disquiet
after reinitiating the well-known Loliondo land conflict
At his meeting with village and ward leaders,
investors and conservationists from Serengeti National Park, the RC insisted on
that the area of 1.500 km2 inside village land will be set aside for
the interest of the nation.
The Loliondo land conflict involves 14 villages bordering
Serengeti National Park, and the investor from the United Arab Emirates who has
the permit to hunt wildlife on village land.
For a long time now, this conflict has not reached a
solution, due to a lack of inclusion of the residents who are victims of being moved
from Serengeti by the colonial government in 1959.
Knowingly, or unknowingly, the RC has re-created this
conflict that had already passed through his administrative authority. In 2016,
PM Majaliwa set up a commission to collect recommendations on how to end this
conflict, and hand in these recommendations to him.
The commission handed over the recommendations to the
PM in April 2017. However, the PM said that the government would work on the
commission’s recommendations, among which was the issue of joint management and
use of the area under conflict. Until now, the government has not been able to formalize
these recommendations and make them public. Here, I as a more than concerned
blogger, must question why some can’t stop bringing up that Gambo commission (the
PM tasked RC Gambo with it) that included local leaders at their weakest point, was met with spontaneous protest in village after village, and came up with
an impossibly sad compromise proposal, which was followed by an unexpected
illegal invasion of village land with massive human rights crimes. Can’t we
just forget about it? That kind of attitude (in the form of a MoU with OBC) was
followed by the illegal operation of 2009, so we should have learnt something.
The statement goes on to say that in August 2017, the
Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism again implemented an operation razing
bomas, arresting people and seizing livestock in the area of conflict. The
villages decided to open a case in the East African Court of Justice, so that
their rights would be defended by the court.
This case continues and is in its final stages before
a ruling. This regional court issued interim orders on 25th
September 2018, restraining the government from evicting people, destroying
property, and arresting or harassing residents of the disputed area while the
main case is ongoing.
As a blogger, I must add that these interim
orders were brutally violated in 2018 while local leaders stayed silent.
Therefore, the RC’s act of renewing the conflict by visiting
the area and saying that it will be set aside breaks the foundations of good
governance, interfering with the court and causing great disquiet among
residents of Loliondo and Sale divisions.
We councillors of the affected wards, village
chairpersons, customary leaders, and women ask our government to take the
following action:
-To recognise that the 1,500 km2 is
village land and not a protected area. There has not been any time when this land
has been set to be become a protected area with the villagers’ consent.
-To abandon the ambition of setting aside village
areas for hunting, since Loliondo residents don’t have any surplus land to move
to.
-Further, the statement asks the government to
respect the court case and stop disturbing villagers while the case continues,
according to the interim orders issued in September 2018.
-The statement ends by the signatories asking to
meet their president to explain the reality of this conflict enacted by
conservationists to protect investors without recognising the vital interests
of the villagers (there isn’t any good translation for wananchi). And this
last point is very much on point indeed.
45 local leaders have signed
the statement, and among them are those extremely close to OBC, like the
councillors of Ololosokwan and Oloipiri. Oloipiri has been targeted for divide
and rule for years, but Ololosokwan used to be at the forefront of the land
rights struggle.
A video clip from the meeting indicate that the message was much more powerful than the press statement.
“We are not leaving, we are not going, go and tell Samia we are not going, finish us all here.”Indeed, a conflict enacted by
conservationists to protect investors, without recognising the vital interests
and rights of the Maasai landowners.
The
president appoints a human rights criminal as head of TANAPA
The same day as the RC issued
his threat against the Osero, 11th January, it was announced that
President Samia had appointed the known human rights criminal William Mwakilema
as head of the Tanzania National Parks Authority (TANAPA). Mwakilema who was
the Serengeti chief park warden and in 2016-2017, together with Minister Jumanne
Maghembe, campaigned for the alienation of the 1,500 km2 Osero, telling
a co-opted standing committee that German funds would only be available if turning
this land into a protected area. He was heading Serengeti National Park (SENAPA)
during the illegal invasion of village land in 2017, an operation that SENAPA
was officially tasked with implementing, and in which his rangers committed
mass arson, tortured and raped people, seized and even in some cases shot
cattle. In between Mwakilema has served as TANAPA's Deputy Commissioner for
Conservation and Business Development.
Mwakilema replaces Allan Kijazi who was sitting on two chairs as head of TANAPA and Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism. He was first removed as Permanent Secretary, with Francis Michael, whom I don’t know anything about, as his replacement. The MNRT could also be named as ministry for land grabbing and violence, Kijazi has been an integral part of it, he too was speaking up for taking the Osero away from the Maasai before the illegal operation in 2017. Still, there are trustworthy reports that the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority, or its notorious chief conservator Freddy Manongi, has complained about the inaction of the ministry, and Kijazi in particular, in removing the Maasai from their land. Others say that he, through his late brother John Kijazi was too closely linked to Magufuli’s Sukuma gang. Kijazi has been transferred to the Ministry of Lands.
As mentioned in the previous
blog post, Manongi was supposed to retire in November 2021, but continues as chief
conservator of the NCAA. Reportedly the president has given him two more years,
which is bad news to anyone who cares about the rights of the Maasai of
Ngorongoro Conservation Area.
Both Minister Ndumbaro and
Deputy Minister Masanja are retained by President Samia, and both have shown
open anti-pastoralism and concern for “saving Ngorongoro”.
Why is President Samia this
bad? Why is cultural genocide such an acceptable idea to her? I don’t know, but
we are dealing with someone who stood at Magufuli’s side during his reign of
terror, someone who keeps the chairman of the main opposition party locked up in
remand prison on bogus terrorism charges. She has obviously received visits from
the NCAA and selling Tanzania as a tourism product seems to be a priority for
her, while human rights and land rights are not.
Despite credible information beforehand the RC was silent about NCA
A detailed plan by
the MNRT has surfaced, mostly pushed for by the NCAA, to relocate those who “voluntary” would
move out of NCA, before February 2022. For a view on what’s called “voluntary” in this
regard, the researcher Teklehaymanot G. Weldemichel published an article, “Makingland grabbable: Stealthy dispossessions by conservation in NgorongoroConservation Area, Tanzania”, in December 2021. This article explains how
people are made relocatable through long processes of marginalisation.
Reportedly, the plan was to
ask the Ministry of Finance and Planning for permission to use Covid-19 money
for the “voluntary” relocation of Maasai from Ngorongoro to the Simanjiro and
Handeni districts, or more exactly, “Kitwai and Handeni Game Controlled Areas”.
Several more details were shared, but then the RC didn’t make any announcements
about NCA during his meeting.
The RC could have wanted to first
see how his bad intentions for Loliondo would be received – and he won’t get
anywhere with that!
Susanna
Nordlund is a working-class person based in Sweden who since 2010 has been
blogging about Loliondo (now increasingly also about NCA) and has her
fingerprints thoroughly registered with Immigration so that she will not be
able to enter Tanzania through any border crossing, ever again. She has never
worked for any NGO or intelligence service and hasn’t earned a shilling from
her Loliondo work. She can be reached at sannasus@hotmail.com
2 comments:
Greetings, my friend, Susana, Thanks for your latest update on the plight of the Maasai of Ngorongoro Conservation Area. . even if it is potentially extremely bad and sad news. Your following comment expresses the current situation very well:
"Why is President Samia this bad? Why is cultural genocide such an acceptable idea to her? I don’t know, but we are dealing with someone who stood at Magufuli’s side during his reign of terror, someone who keeps the chairman of the main opposition party locked up in remand prison on bogus terrorism charges. She has obviously received visits from the NCAA and selling Tanzania as a tourism product seems to be a priority for her, while human rights and land rights are not."
I'm looking forward to reading Teklehaymanot G. Weldemichel's December 2021 article, “Making land grabbable: Stealthy dispossessions by conservation in NgorongoroConservation Area, Tanzania”, explaining how people - in this case, the Maasai of Ngorongoro - are made relocatable through long processes of marginalisation. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/25148486211052860
Susana, because you have friends with Maasai, or with acquaintances of them - I'd be interested in your thought (please keep it brief!! for your sake and mine :-) on the different self-images of Maasai - on this statement by T. G. Weldemichel: ". . . how the Maasai internalised and accepted their own place in relation to conservation . . . During colonial rule, the Maasai were presented as the “exotic other”, and a “nomad warrior race” by Europeans . . . Pressured by the above discourses and as a result of continuous desocialization, locals, accepted and brought into existence a certain image of themselves as “indigenous”, “exotic” and whose social practices are harmonious with wildlife conservation, in the process of fighting back for land control."
Keep the faith, Susanna, even when it hurts - evil looms within the shadows of night, waiting for the flickering flame of faith weakened and snuffed out. Best wishes - keep thriving and stay safe.
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