Bushmen's plea on World Water Day

21 March 2005

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

As Botswana continues to deny them access to water, the Gana and Gwi
Bushmen are issuing a plea to the government to recognise their rights.
Three years after smashing their water boreholes and pouring their
supplies into the sand, the government is still preventing the Bushmen
from taking water into the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. Officials are
emptying the water containers of those returning home.

The government cut off the delivery of water to Bushman communities in
the reserve when it evicted them in 2002. Over 200 Bushmen have
returned to the reserve since the evictions, and they are asking the
government today to allow them to provide their own water supplies.

One Bushman says, ‘We can only get water when it rains and ponds form.
When it doesn't rain it's a problem. If there's no rain we will just
die because even the underground roots become dry.' The water table in
the reserve has fallen dramatically in recent decades due to boreholes
being sunk for cattle ranching in the surrounding area.

Survival's director Stephen Corry says, ‘World Water Day is supposed to
be about giving more people clean drinking water, but the opposite is
happening in Botswana. The Bushmen there are perfectly capable of
running their own borehole but the government won't let them. Denying
people their own water in a place like the Kalahari is worse than
barbaric.'

Photos and footage available. For more information contact Miriam Ross on (+44) (0)20 7687 8734 or email mr@survival-international.org

Spread the message share this story