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| Bushman woman, CKGR, Botswana 2004
© Stephen Corry/Survival |
De Beers has this week been backpedalling fast on its refusal to recognise
indigenous rights in southern Africa.
De Beers told Survival International in October 2002 that it did not have a
policy on indigenous peoples' rights in southern Africa because such a policy
would 'head down the path' to 'apartheid'.
Representatives of De Beers attending a presentation by Survival this week to
the UK All-Party Parliamentary Group on Botswana denied the October 2002
statement. Also this week, company Chairman Nicky Oppenheimer, asked by Canadian
radio whether it was true that De Beers did not support indigenous rights in
Africa, said, 'I find that quite amusing,' and suggested the company was working
on a policy.
Survival's director Stephen Corry said today, 'De Beers is decades
behind international thinking on the rights of tribal peoples. It is not
acceptable to pretend they do not exist. Mining company Rio Tinto, for example,
recently promised not to mine on the land of the Mirrar Aborigines in Australia
without their consent.'
De Beers and its subsidiaries own diamond exploration concessions and
licences on the ancestral land of the Gana and Gwi Bushmen in Botswana. The
Bushmen were evicted from their land in 2002 and forced to live in bleak
resettlement centres where they are reduced to beggars, alcoholics and
prostitutes.
For further information, please contact Miriam Ross at Survival International
on: +44 20 7687 8734 or email mr@survival-international.org
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