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04/19/2005
Refugees
International has been critical of the National and Regional
governments of Ethiopia and the Africa Parks Foundation for displacing
farmers and pastoralists from Nechasar National Park without
adequate consulatation, integration of residents into the plans
for development of the park, and economic and humanitarian
assistance to those impacted. The Africa Parks Foundation has requested
that we publish its response on our webpage. You
can access it here.
We are pleased that Africa Parks
Foundation indicates its willingness to work with people now living in
national parks and that it will provide assistance to people in need
living in and around Nechasar National Park.
Contact: Larry Thompson
ri@refugeesinternational.org or 202.828.0110
On November 25, 2004, 463 houses of the Guji-Oromo people in Nechasar
National Park in southern Ethiopia were burned down by police and park
authorities on November 25, 2004. Reportedly present also were
representatives of the provincial government of the Southern Nations,
Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region (SNNPR).
The burning of the Guji-Oromo houses is the latest move in the effort
to remove the Guji and Kore people from within the boundaries of the
National Park so that it can be developed and managed by the
Netherlands-based African Parks Foundation as a wildlife viewing park
for well-heeled tourists. It is a condition of the African Parks
Foundation contract that no people be present in the Park. Included in
the development plans is a fence around part of the Park to keep local
people out and wildlife in. (See the Refugees International bulletin “The
Human Cost of Tourist Dollars.”)
Nechasar National Park features lush grasslands amidst rugged mountains
and lakes. The Park has an area of 514 square kilometers (about 200
square miles) and was established in 1962. Prior to 2004, the
park and its environs were inhabited or utilized by thousands of
Kore/Amaro and Guji-Oromo households. The Kore are farmers who grew
maize, sorghum, and teff in the eastern part of the Park. In 2004,
1,020 families were “voluntarily” relocated from their lands bordering
the Park to a place about 15 kilometers south. The Kore were promised
land, a clinic, schools, wells, and food and about $17 per person in
compensation for moving. However, the distribution of food and the
provision of social services has fallen far short of that promised.
The Guji-Oromo are pastoralists who claim a legitimate presence in the
area that dates back generations. They were previously expelled by the
government from the Park in the 1980s but came back and re-established
themselves in five villages. Facing expulsion again, the Guji-Oromo
filed six appeals to the Federal and Regional governments to allow them
to remain in the Park. However, the regional government then ordered
the Guji-Oromo to visit and choose one of two resettlement sites.
It was during the visit of their leaders to the second site when their
houses were burned without warning on November 25, 2004. Some of the
houses were occupied at the time; others were temporarily abandoned as
the Guji-Oromo typically migrate with their herds and return to their
houses during the rainy season. Following this incident some of
the Guji-Oromo were resettled near the Kore, but two groups of more
that 5,000 people have relocated to two corners of the Park. No
compensation has been paid for the property destroyed in the house
burning. The government of Ethiopia’s official position seems to
be that the Guji-Oromo were illegal settlers in the Park and thus have
no rights to compensation unless they submit to resettlement. An
electric fence to enclose much of the Park is proposed for construction
after the remaining Guji-Oromo are expelled. The fence might also
impact fisherman who depend upon access to two large lakes within the
Park for their livelihoods.
The eviction and resettlement of Kore and Guji-Oromo families puts them
in extreme danger. Ethiopia is one of the poorest, most densely
populated, and food-insecure countries in the world. Already poor and
struggling, the 10,000 or more Kore and Guji-Oromo who depended upon
the resources in the Park for their livelihoods are now threatened. In
Ethiopia, there is little margin for error in the precarious struggle
for survival.
Moreover, the precedent of inadequate consultation with residents and
users of Park lands, semi-voluntary or involuntary resettlement, and
sudden destruction of homes and expulsion established in Nechasar may
also be followed in nearby Mago and Omo National Parks, also proposed
to be developed under the management of the African Parks
Foundation. The African Parks Foundation claims that the
development of the Nechasar and other parks will provide hundreds of
jobs to local people and that grants will be provided to help local
communities. However, those benefits are still on the horizon, perhaps
the distant horizon.
Nechasar has the potential to be a magnificent park. The African Parks
Foundation and the Ethiopian Federal and Regional Governments, however,
should re-think their approach and ensure that the people of this
region are consulted fully and that their present and future welfare is
taken into consideration.
Refugees International, therefore,
recommends that:
Ethiopia: The Human Cost of Tourist Dollars
Washington Post: Cheetahs Find Rare Refuge amid Poverty of Ethiopia
October 2004 - Quiet Crises: Mission to Sudan and Ethiopia
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