Conservation’s devastating impact on tribal peoples
Tribal rights lawyer condemns conservation’s devastating impact on tribal peoples
British human rights lawyer Gordon Bennett, a Bushman spokesperson and a Survival International campaigner will host a press conference in Johannesburg to expose the persecution of tribal peoples in the name of “conservation.”
Date: Thursday, February 26,
2015
Time: 9-11am
Place: Ascot Hotel, Johannesburg
The conference will be held ahead of asymposium organized by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and others on “wildlife crime” in South Africa in February 2015, and a major “United for Wildlife” anti-poaching conference held in Botswana in March.
British Barrister Gordon Bennett will argue that wildlife law enforcement almost always harms tribal communities because the wrong laws are being enforced by the wrong people against the wrong people – with examples from Botswana, Cameroon and India.
In India, tribal peoples are being forcibly and illegally evicted from tiger reserves, while tourists are welcomed in. Tribal peoples in Botswana and Cameroon are accused of “poaching” because they hunt their food. They face arrest and beatings, torture and death, while fee-paying big game hunters are encouraged.
The Kalahari Bushmen’s right to hunt for food is a fundamental human right confirmed by Botswana’s High Court. President Khama has illegally banned all hunting in the country – except for wealthy trophy hunters. Bushmen caught hunting are arrested, beaten and tortured.
Tribal people and Survival International are calling on the United for Wildlife conference in Botswana to issue a statement on tribal subsistence hunting: “Tribal peoples shouldn’t be criminalized for hunting to feed their families.”
ENDS