Uganda:
Thousands of Indigenous People evicted from FSC-certified Mount
Elgon National Park
In February 2008, the Uganda Wildlife
Authority and the Uganda People's Defense Forces evicted more
than 4,000 people from the Benet and Ndorobo communities living
in Mount Elgon National Park in East Uganda. People's houses and
crops were destroyed, cattle were confiscated and the people were
left homeless. They found shelter where they could: in caves and
under trees. The luckier ones stayed in a primary school or moved
in with their relatives.
The eviction of the Benet started ten
days after Annick Van De Venster, a Belgian tourist, was shot
and killed in Mount Elgon National Park. According to UWA, which
is responsible for managing Uganda's national parks, cattle thieves
were responsible. UWA's executive director, Moses Mapesa said,
"We believe the people who shot at the tourist's group mistook
it to be a rival camp of cattle thieves."
UWA used the tragedy of a tourist's
death at Mount Elgon as an excuse to evict the Benet. "Following
these incidents," Moses Mapesa, UWA's executive director,
said, "UWA found it prudent to address the issue of encroachment
in the park, which in any case is all illegal as the boundaries
of the park were redefined in 2002." Mapesa claimed that
the eviction was "being undertaken humanely". He did
not explain how evicting people from their homes and leaving them
with nothing had anything to do with acting "humanely".
In fact, the Benet have a legal right
to live in Mount Elgon National Park. In October 2005, the Ugandan
High Court in Mbale ruled that the Benet were the "historical
and indigenous inhabitants" of parts of Mount Elgon National
Park. The ruling stated that the Benet should be allowed to "carry
out agricultural activities" in the areas to which they have
historical claim.
But UWA's Joshua Masereka, chief of
Mount Elgon National Park, ignores the ruling. "We have always
given the Benet time to vacate. We do not need them in the Park,"
he said.
"Such disregard for power of courts
is what is making access to justice for the poor and marginalized
communities in Uganda unattainable," says Chemisto Satya,
a Programme Manager with ActionAid Uganda. ActionAid demanded
that the government should provide immediate relief to the evicted
people through its Disaster Preparedness Ministry.
Mount Elgon National Park is certified
as well managed under the Forest Stewardship Council system. Clearly,
the fact that the national park is FSC certified has not helped
the Benet Indigenous People.
SGS Qualifor, the certifying body which
issued the FSC certificate for Mount Elgon, is aware of
High Court ruling that the Benet are historical and indigenous
inhabitants of Mount Elgon. "UWA has accepted the court ruling
in the case of the Benet tribe and undertook not to act against
them unless alternative land can be found (thus recognizing and
respecting their rights)", states SGS Qualifor's 2007 Public
Summary of the Certification Report.
But when UWA evicted the Benet in February
this year, they did not worry about finding any "alternative
land". In May, a group of about 100 people who had been evicted
from Mount Elgon camped outside Parliament in Kampala, demanding
that the government allocate them land. A month later, Nelson
Chelimo, the district chairman of Kapchorwa, near Mount Elgon,
said that food aid was urgently need to save the lives of more
than 1,000 Benet people. "People have no food and shelter
following their eviction by Uganda Wildlife Authority and the
army," Chelimo said in a statement.
In any case, FSC's Principle 3, which
relates to Indigenous Peoples, does not give forest managers the
right to evict Indigenous Peoples if "alternative land can
be found", as SGS Qualifor suggests in its Public Summary.
Principle 3 states that "The legal and customary rights of
indigenous peoples to own, use and manage their lands, territories,
and resources shall be recognized and respected." Therefore,
UWA is only in compliance with Principle 3 if it recognises and
respects the Benet's rights to "own, use and manage their
lands, territories, and resources".
By evicting the Benet from Mount Elgon
National Park, UWA has shown that it has no interest in complying
either with FSC's Principle 3 or the significantly weaker statement
from SGS Qualifor that UWA would only evict the Benet if "alternative
land can be found". UWA booted the Benet out of the national
park and left them without neither land nor homes.
Next month, SGS Qualifor is due to carry
out an audit of Mount Elgon National Park. This time SGS Qualifor
has no choice other than to admit that the eviction of the Benet
from Mount Elgon National Park is in breach of FSC's Principle
3. For the simple reason that the management of the national park
is not in compliance with FSC's Principles on Indigenous Peoples,
the certificate must be withdrawn.
By Chris Lang, http://chrislang.org