Bushmen to take Botswana to court in July

31 May 2004

Bushman children, CKGR, Botswana 2004
Bushman children, CKGR, Botswana 2004
© 2004 Stephen Corry/Survival

The court case that could decide the future of the Gana and Gwi
Bushmen
will be held in July this year. Two hundred and forty-eight
Bushmen and
Bakgalagadi are taking Botswana to court over the
government's forced
eviction of them and their families from their
ancestral land, in what could
be a test case for Bushman rights
across southern Africa.

The case will begin on 4 July with an 'inspection in loco' of
the
resettlement centres, and of the Bushman communities in the
Central
Kalahari Game Reserve to which nearly 200 Bushmen have
returned
despite government opposition. Fearing that their voices will not
be
heard, as has been the case in previous government-led tours,
the
Bushmen are calling for observers from the local and
international
media to observe the 'inspection'.

The Bushmen want the government to recognise their rights to return
to
their land and live there without fear of further eviction, and to
hunt and
gather freely. The original case was dismissed on a
technicality in April
2002. The Bushmen appealed, and won the right
to have the case re-heard on
its merits.

Note: Wildlife department permits are required to enter the
Central
Kalahari Game Reserve. Entry to the resettlement centres outside
the
reserve is unrestricted.

Permits are also required for filming. In the past, film makers
have
sometimes been prevented from filming by the police, even when
they
had the required permit.

For further information, please contact Kali Mercier at Survival
International on +44 20 7687 8731 or email km@survival-international.org

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