TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
cynexx's Blog
cynexx's Blog
Safari concession threatens Hadza tribe
Related to country: Tanzania


Hundreds of Hadza hunter-gatherers face eviction from their ancestral lands if a foreign safari company is given a hunting concession on their land.

Tanzania UAE Safari Ltd, which is reportedly backed by members of the United Arab Emirates royal families, is negotiating with the government of Tanzania for a concession of 3,975 sq kms in the Yaida Valley, where Hadzabe (‘Hadza people’) have lived for millenia.

If the hunting concession is approved, the Hadzabe will lose access to crucial food sources such as game and wild tubers. They are likely to become destitute, with devastating consequences for their life expectancy and general wellbeing.

Last month two Hadzabe activists were arrested when they attended a meeting with local officials to voice concerns over the deal and its impact on their tribe. They were later released.

The Hadzabe are reported to be trying to seek a sustainable solution with all parties concerned, which respects the tribe’s land rights and way of life.

The Hadzabe number between 1,500 and 2,000 people. They are one of Africa’s oldest tribes and speak a click language like the Bushmen.

As they are hunter–gatherers, adequate land and natural resources are essential to their survival. Until the 1950s they survived entirely by hunting and gathering. Living in small mobile camps, they had no ‘chiefs’ or formal political organisation.

Tanzania’s government has made repeated attempts to settle the Hadzabe in villages and get them to take up farming. Today, most Hadzabe people live in settlements, inside their distinctive grass huts, but they still move off into bush camps to find food.

No Hadzabe farming has been successful, unsurprisingly, since the hot, dry climate is unsuitable for it. One Hadza elder told Survival, ‘No Hadzabe ever died of hunger when we had our land. But now that so much of our land has been taken and is still being taken, many Hadzabe are hungry.’

SOurce: http://www.survival-international.org/news/2467

June 29, 2007 | 8:28 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:
You must be logged in to add tags.


cynthia's Profile

cynthia's Friends


Latest Posts
Safari concession...
Aborigines threaten...
The Ayoreo FACTS
Indians’ heartland...
New wave of dam...

Monthly Archive
September 2006
October 2006
December 2006
January 2007
March 2007
April 2007
June 2007

Change Language


Tags Archive
humanrights indigenouspeoples

Filter By Type
News
Travel
Topics

Friends
A Better Community for All (ABC4All)
Adam Clare
Altman
Amy
Ángela
Angela S. Damas
ankag
Cam
Cecilia Iglesias
Damian Profeta
faruk aydin
Franziska Seel
Hanna
Iris Lea
Isa
Joel Kalpram
Joya Banerjee
Leon Kukkuk
lorena torres
Madelaine Hamilton
María
Mariana Ballestero
Michael Furdyk
Norvan Vogt
Ocean
Tchekwie
Víctor M.
YaHyA MeKkAWi
zutique

Links
Amnesty International
Forced Migration Online
Harvard International Review
Oxfam
Ser indígena
Survival International
United Nations Volunteers
Unrepresented people and...
Working to empower


11986 views
Important Disclaimer