Indigenous
people are in trouble all around the world and it’s something
that does not make it into the news very often, but a new report
published by an agency of the United Nations has reported that the
very survival of indigenous Africans is at stake.
Although
the plight of the world’s indigenous people is not regular fare
on the mainstream television news or in most newspapers, anyone who
is fighting for human rights anywhere should be aware of the
condition of native peoples and the overwhelming forces, usually
economic, that are sweeping them from their homes and territories
with little regard for what happens to them once they are run off.
The
release of the report last month by the International Working Group
for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA) noted that Africa is home to about 50
million indigenous peoples. They are among some 350 million
indigenous peoples around the world, who speak an untold number of
languages and dialects and live in groups ranging from groups of
hunter-gatherers in central and southern Africa to large populations
in East Africa, West Africa, and North Africa.
IWGIA’s
report was released in this 10th
anniversary year of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples. The question of what to do with or for indigenous peoples
apparently was a thorny issue, since the world body began
deliberating on the issue 25 years before the declaration was
adopted. Even at that, some of the large, developed nations voted
against and a number of nations abstained, although it was adopted by
a vote of 144 nations. The four nations voting against were
Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States. Canada
reversed its position and the other three have accepted the
declaration in more informal ways, especially since it is not binding
on the governments. It’s called an “aspirational”
document.
Although
indigenous (human) rights do not seem to be honored in any systematic
way in most countries, there has been progress in some places,
according to the experts. In Africa, however, the danger to peoples
and their ways of life and their cultures are threatened by large
developments, whether they are industrial (extraction industries such
as metal mining) or agricultural to grow a cash crop on vast
acreages, which requires industrial-sized operations and requires
that the people who are there be moved somewhere else.
If
they are farmers, their lands are taken and, if they are lucky, they
might find jobs for wages on the industrial farms. But that’s
not the way they wanted or want to live. Most of them have their way
of life, possibly for hundreds of years and they wanted to keep it
that way, but they had no choice. Those groups that remain on their
lands are under constant threat of dispossession and removal, with
their human rights and traditional land and territory rights ignored,
as if they had no rights. Yet, the declaration promotes “their
full and effective participation in all matters that concern them and
their right to remain distinct and to pursue their own visions of
economic and social development.” Another goal of the
Declaration, possibly the primary one, is that the indigenous groups
are to be fully informed and consulted and to fully participate in
any discussion of a proposed development. That seems to be ignored
in most countries.
Even
after 35 years of planning and adoption of the declaration, according
to the InterPress Service (IPS), “large-scale dispossessions of
indigenous peoples’ lands remain a significant challenge in
several African states, says the report, adding that the global drive
for raw materials, agro-business and building major infrastructure
projects are pushing indigenous peoples to their last boundaries.”
Marianne Wiben Jensen, IWGIA senior advisor on Africa and Land
Rights, said that some African states have fully endorsed the concept
of “indigenous peoples in Africa,” some states recognize
and “are willing to redress the historical injustices and
marginalisation suffered by certain sections of their national
populations that self-identify as indigenous peoples,” but are
uncomfortable with the term “indigenous peoples,” and
prefer using “alternative concepts in their laws and
policies.” Third are the African states that “continue
to contest the existence of indigenous peoples.”
What
this amounts to is that, as long as indigenous peoples are on land
that the government, the head of state, foreign governments or
foreign corporations want, there will always be the suppression of
the rights of those indigenous communities. Such communities, with
few exceptions, have been marginalized and ignored in most countries
of the world. Africa is one of the prizes of agricultural
transnational corporations and foreign governments, which have run
out of the capacity to feed their growing populations. It does not
matter to them that, in many cases, the people on the land need large
amounts of it to pasture their livestock, to grow their own food, or
to hunt the forests for their sustenance.
To
most outsiders, vast parts of Africa are “wasted,” since
the indigenous peoples do not build huge tracts of single-family
housing or develop it in other ways. But that doesn’t mean
that the land is not “occupied” by the people. The Cree
in northern Quebec, Canada, for example, consider the vast lands that
Hydro-Quebec has inundated for producing water-powered electricity as
“The garden.” They pointed out over decades that, just
because the land does not have houses and barns does not mean that
the land is not occupied. When they are living in the bush, as they
have for centuries, their dead are buried throughout the millions of
acres of land. They have drawn their sustenance from it. It is not
“vacant land.” So it is in Africa.
Outsiders
do not view the land for parks, national preserves, and national
forests as sacred. Most indigenous peoples do. They are right and
the outsiders are wrong. The production of food in most countries is
coming to be in the hands of a few giant transnational corporations
and those corporations are interested in one thing: profits,
regardless of the destructive effects on the people and the planet.
In corporate agriculture throughout the world, the byword is “get
big or get out.” That is the only ethic by which they exist.
And, if you’ve used up the land in your own country, whether by
destruction of the topsoil or through intensive development, take
somebody else’s land. That’s what is happening in Africa
and on most other continents, with the exception of Antarctica. For
the powers that be, the easy pickings in their own countries are all
done and, now, they are headed for the rest of the easy pickings in
some other country for those whose land they would take are pretty
much powerless in their own country.
The
indigenous peoples of Africa should be viewed as the canaries in the
coal mine for the rest of the world. Their lands, as are the lands
of similar groups throughout the world, the last of the species, so
to speak. Earth’s people, in general, running out of room to
expand, are desperate.
Although
most in the developed world do not think in those terms, we are at
that point at which the makers of money are desperate to keep the
people in the dark. After all, the supermarkets, where they exist,
are full and the gadgets (especially electronic devices) that have
become the lifeblood of a consumer culture just keep on coming. A
quick look at the conditions of indigenous peoples will disabuse a
self-contented mind of the idea that “things are just fine and
we don’t need to do anything differently.”
Just
to show that the same thing happens in the so-called developed world,
the Standing Rock Sioux are just the latest and most publicized case
of a government and its corporations riding roughshod over an
indigenous people. American Indians have historically demanded that
the U.S. government honor its treaties with the tribes and nations.
But, despite months of protest by the native water protectors, the
mass media continued to call them activists, as if they were not
trying to protect their way of life. Under the Obama Administration,
the Dakota Access pipeline was halted and the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers were directed to conduct a full environmental review. When
Donald Trump became president, he ignored the agreement Obama reached
and ordered an expedited completion of the project, as well as the
Keystone XL pipeline, another project that was halted by the previous
administration.
Hundreds
of Indian tribes and nations came to the defense of the Standing Rock
Sioux, as well as thousands of others from human rights groups,
environmental groups, and many others. They braved the fire hoses in
sub-freezing temperatures and, finally, the authorities, federal and
local, had their way, as they usually do. The hundreds dispersed
from the encampment after it was believed that an agreement was
reached that the pipeline would not go forward to endanger the water
supply of the Standing Rock reservation. It was pointed out that the
question is not if the pipeline leaks into the river and the water
supply, but when it will.
The
Standing Rock Sioux had considerable support from many quarters of
the U.S. population and were unsuccessful in protecting their water
from the corporations and the government, and Donald Trump showed
that he cares as little, or less, about treaties with the Indians
than his hero, Andrew Jackson. But, they are just a few in a long
line of presidents, governors, and other officials who had no respect
for treaties or agreements with Indian nations. It’s a
historical habit.
A
recent Washington Post story was headlined: “We would need 1.7
earths to make our consumption sustainable.” That should be an
alarming message to those who are concerned about the future of the
planet and of humanity, because there is no 7/10 of a planet that we
can tap for our “cost overruns.” We have just this one
and the rich countries are moving into the “developing”
countries and taking over. If an aroused citizenry in the U.S. can’t
succeed in stopping a couple of pipelines, imagine the near
impossibility that indigenous Africans face, when they have little or
no support in protecting their lands and territories. Keep in mind
the most vulnerable indigenous peoples, those in African countries,
and at the same time, support indigenous peoples in the U.S., as they
fight to force the government to honor treaties and agreements.
Indigenous peoples need to know that the problems they face are
universal and the time is now to make that commitment to offer
support and help.
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