LAND GRABBING IS BECOMING AN ISSUE IN AFRICA
FRIENDS OF THE
EARTH AFRICA GROUPS PUSHBACK ON EXTRACTIVE ACTIVITIES, LAND GRABS IN AFRICA
Friends of the Earth Africa (FoEA)
groups have decried the impact of extractive companies’ operations across the
African region, cautioning that if communities are not adequately empowered to
advocate for and defend their rights, more of them will be displaced leading to
conflicts.
The groups made the call during a
solidarity mission to oil host communities in Bunyoro sub-region (Albertine
Region, Uganda) currently grappling with the challenges
associated with the developing oil industry in the country. Participants in the
solidarity visit were Friends of the Earth International, FoEA member groups
from Uganda, Nigeria, Togo, Tanzania, Cameroon, Ghana, Mali, Tunisia and South
Africa. Community representatives in Uganda affected by unsustainable
development projects were also part of the team.
The FoEA team was particularly concerned that residents of Kabale parish who
have been asked by government to vacate the place to pave way for the oil
refinery have received inadequate or no compensation at all for their lost
properties.
Allan Kalangi of Friends of the Earth Uganda
who conducted the team around the so called oil region of Uganda said, “The
Government needs to open its eyes to the suffering of the communities affected
by oil extraction related activities.
Any development that does not put people first is undesirable and
unsustainable”
Affected communities in Kyapalooni and
the whole of Kabale parish in Buseruka sub-county who have not received their
compensation packages are experiencing severe food shortages after they were
asked by the government not to grow any crops while the sanitation situation
within the communities is appalling. The education of children in the affected
communities hangs in balance and Kyapalooni Primary School has now been turned
into a police post even before the government completes settling the disputes
of the affected communities. Away from the refinery area, other communities in
the region such as that of Kaiso-Tonya in the Hoima district have had their
traditional fishing activities significantly affected by the drilling of oil
wells in Lake Albert.
Stemming from the visit, the groups
observed that the increasing extractive activities on the continent have
spurred land grabs and displacement of local communities even as they noted
that these developments have contributed largely to the food sovereignty challenges
on the continent.
Godwin Ojo, executive director of
Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) said: “What
is happening in Uganda is a mirrors similar occurrences in communities of the
Niger Delta here in Nigeria where the oil industry has spurred a five-decade
long despoliation of the environment. Our communities must resist this and
governments on the continenet must take action to halt this vicious cycle.
The groups were of the view that extractive
companies, through their activities threaten and drown community voices in their
propaganda rhetoric in concert with governments across the continent in the
push for profits. Some of the elements of the propaganda rhetoric are misinformation and deliberately keeping communities in the dark
about projects that may have far-reaching implications on their livelihoods and
well-being.
The situation has been made worse by the fact that the profit oriented
companies and the government which is supposed to be on the side of the people
all seem to speak the same language.
The members stressed that there was a need for richer
understanding and definition of the concept of 'Sustainability' which FoEA believes
should be built upon in the needs and experiences of people at the grassroots level, this being at variance with the way corporates
and governments in Africa perceive it to be.
The FoEA groups urged that the narrative of Keeping the Oil in the Soil and investment in sustainable alternatives be
vigorously promoted in all spaces – government, communities, in the media. It
was also recommended that communities have ongoing access to information
relevant for their efforts to advocate for the respect and recognition of their
human rights.
In solidarity,
Friends of the Earth - Togo
Friends of the Earth - Ghana
Friends of the Earth - Tunisia/l’Association Tunisienne pour la
Protection de la Nature et de l’Environnement (ATPNE)
Friends of the Earth - Mali/Guamina
Friends of the Earth - Nigeria/Environmental Rights Action (ERA)
Friends of the Earth - Tanzania/Lawyers' Environmental Action Team
(LEAT)
Friends of the Earth - Cameroon/Centre pour le Développement et
l'Environnement (CED)
Friends of the Earth - South Africa/groundWork
Friends of the Earth - Uganda/National Association of Professional
Environmentalists (NAPE)
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