MANYARA, Tanzania
Thousands of Maasai cattle herders in northern Tanzania protested Tuesday against a government plan to evict them from their ancestral land in a bid to pave the way for trophy hunting and eco-tourism investments.
On Saturday, authorities started to demarcate a
disputed 1,500-square-kilometer (579-square-mile) wildlife corridor in the
Loliondo district of the Arusha region, resuming previous plans to create a
protected area and relocate thousands of Maasai herdsmen.
Holding placards, villagers threatened to uproot
the beacons erected by wildlife officials to indicate the demarcation line.
“We were evicted from Serengeti National Park in
1959. Today, we’re being asked to move from Loliondo. We won’t leave,” Raphael
Long’oi, a traditional Maasai leader said.
According to him, the disputed area is legitimate
village land.
“This is our land. We were born here, and we will
die here. We’re going to protect this land at any cost,” said Nuru Kitupili, a
resident of Loliondo.
In 2018, the government aborted its plan to evict
the Maasai herders from the disputed wildlife corridor due to international
pressure.
As part of the revived plan, local residents said
the government intends to give exclusive hunting rights in the disputed land to
investors.
John Mongela, the regional commissioner for Arusha,
said the government is seeking wider national interests in the project.
“Some people claim that we want to evict them
(Maasai) from their land. I wouldn’t defend individual interests. I’m defending
national interests,” he told our reporter.
The Loliondo dispute, involving 14 villages
bordering Serengeti National Park, has been raging for decades.
In 2016, Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa formed a
fact-finding committee to find a lasting solution to the dispute.
However, the government has not yet worked on the
committee’s recommendations that, according to local villagers, proposed a
participatory land-use plan.
The government has repeatedly attempted to evict
Maasai pastoralists from the disputed area, setting their thatched huts ablaze
while seizing thousands of their livestock.
Mathew Siloma, a ward leader in Loliondo, urged the
government to abandon any plans to allocate the village land to investors.
“There has never been a time when this land had
been declared protected land without the consent of the people,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment