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| Bushman elder, CKGR, Botswana 2004
© 2004 Stephen Corry/Survival |
'Why must I move? They will kill me for my land… We are oppressed
until we die, and soon there will be no one left.' Mogetse Kaboikanyo,
who died in June 2002 after being forced to move.
The last self-sufficient 'Bushmen' of the Kalahari desert have been brutally
thrown off their land and dumped in resettlement camps. Unless they are allowed
to return soon, thousands of years of Bushman culture will come to an end.
Behind the government's actions lurks a deep-seated racism – and the prospect of
riches from diamonds under the Bushmen's land.
The Gana and Gwi Bushmen and their neighbours the Bakgalagadi are the
original inhabitants of the central Kalahari. During the last 200 years,
however, their land has been increasingly encroached on by both Bantu tribes,
who now make up the majority in Botswana, and white colonists. In 1961, in an
effort to protect their land, it was declared the Central Kalahari Game Reserve,
a name chosen because it was thought too controversial to call it Bushman land.
In 1966, Botswana won independence, and soon afterwards huge diamond deposits
were discovered outside the reserve. Botswana is now a rich country and the
world's largest exporter of gem diamonds. In the 1980s, intensive exploration
for diamonds began inside the Bushman reserve. In 1986, the government stated
that its official policy was to move the Bushmen off their land to 'relocation
camps', called New Xade and Kaudwane, outside the reserve.
Life soon became difficult for the Gana and Gwi and their neighbours the
Bakgalagadi. After living by hunting and gathering for millennia, they were told
hunting was now illegal without licences, which they had to apply for in much
the same way as tour companies operating hunting holidays for rich tourists.
Persecution increased, and there were several, well-documented, instances of
torture by officials. Families came under constant pressure to move to the
relocation camps: at a typical meeting the minister of local government told the
Bushmen, 'I have not come to talk of anything else except to tell you
that you will move, because this place is for wildlife.'
Meanwhile, at least two substantial deposits of diamonds were located inside
the reserve – near the Bushmen villages of Gope and Gugama. Test mining at Gope
in 1997 revealed a deposit described by an industry source as 'the best new
target in the Kalahari'.
Towards the end of that year, officials moved out over 1,000 Bushmen by
force, loading people and their dismantled homes onto trucks. The entire
settlement of Xade, which was equipped with a borehole, clinic and primary
school, was destroyed. Many arrived in the camps to find their lives a mixture
of dependency, boredom and despair. Alcoholism and violence became rife. Many
Bushmen tried to move back to the reserve, and some succeeded.
By early 2002, less than 1,000 Bushmen remained on their land. In February,
in an operation overseen by a retired army general, trucks moved in, the
Bushmen's water pump was disabled and their water tanks emptied. (Since
surrounding cattle ranches use most of the previously available water and have
lowered the water table, the Bushmen, whose land is desert, now depend on water
pumped from boreholes.) Almost all the Bushmen were trucked out; some were
threatened with being burned in their homes if they resisted.
Survival believes the reserve's diamond deposits are the principal reason
behind the evictions. Under international law the Bushmen are the rightful
owners of their land: it is likely that in the government's eyes this puts at
risk future exploitation of the deposits. De Beers, the massive diamond company
which operates the country's major diamond mines in 50:50 partnership with the
government, claims it has no plans to mine Gope for 'the foreseeable future' –
but it presently has an abundance of supply, and it would not be in its
interests to mine another deposit at this stage. It currently claims the find is
'sub-economic': in 1997, however, it admitted it was 'moderately large'. De
Beers has not given up the concession.
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