Tanzania govt evicting tens of thousands of Maasai: HRWWed, 31 Jul 2024 06:29:39 GMT

Tanzania is forcibly evicting tens of thousands of Maasai from their ancestral lands, Human Rights Watch said in a report on Wednesday, claiming that government rangers beat some members of the community with impunity.Long-standing tensions between the authorities and the nomadic community have sometimes resulted in deadly clashes, after the government launched a programme beginning in 2022 to relocate some 82,000 people from the world-renowned Ngorongoro Conservation Area to Handeni district, roughly 600 kilometres (370 miles) away, by 2027, HRW said.But the scheme, which the government says is to conserve the UNESCO World Heritage site from human encroachment but which HRW says will “use their land for conservation and tourism purposes”, has come under growing international criticism with the World Bank and the European Union pulling funding.HRW said it interviewed nearly 100 people between August 2022 and December 2023, including community members who had already moved to Msomera village in Handeni and others facing relocation.The report noted “government-employed rangers assaulting and beating residents with impunity”, with community members describing how they were targeted, and listing 13 alleged beatings between September 2022 and July 2023.”He was just walking, and they just punished him,” one man told HRW, describing how rangers stopped his 35-year-old friend en route to a funeral and made the man kneel before clobbering him with a stick, leaving him wounded. There was no hope of legal redress, he told HRW, as you “go to the same police who have beaten the guy, so you can’t get any aid”.”Rangers are like people who are above the law.”The report also alleged that the Tanzanian government failed to provide free and fair consent to the relocation, describing violations of rights to land, education, and health.”The Maasai are being forcibly evicted under the guise of voluntary relocation,” said Juliana Nnoko, HRW senior researcher on women and land.While the nomadic community has historically been allowed to live within some national parks, the authorities say growing populations encroach on wildlife habitats.The government has consistently maintained its relocation scheme observes Tanzania’s rights laws.