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Hadzabe celebrate land victory
6 November 2007
A safari company representing clients from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has
confirmed that it has withdrawn from a deal on the Hadza tribe’s land in
Tanzania.

A Hadza man with his hunting arrows, Tanzania
© Chris Knight/Survival
The company said in a statement, ‘The Eshkesh Safari Company has surrendered
the rights it had secured in 2006 to manage and sustainably utilise the Yaeda
Chini/Lake Eyasha region for hunting.’
The company had previously made a deal with the Tanzanian government.
The withdrawal is a great victory for the Hadza, a small tribe of
hunter-gatherers who live in northwest Tanzania. A Hadza representative said
today, ‘If it is true that the Arabs are leaving our land then I am very, very
happy.’
The deal would have allowed the company to occupy a large area of Hadza land
in the Yaeda Chini valley, and hunt game there.
Many Hadzabe had vigorously opposed the deal on their land as they feared that
the wild game on which they rely for food would have become scarcer, resulting
in hunger and hardship for many communities. They lobbied the Tanzanian
government and local council, and launched an international campaign to stop
the deal.
Contrary to claims by the safari company and some government officials, the
Hadzabe were not fully consulted about the deal. Those Hadzabe who expressed
their concerns about the deal during a meeting with government officials were
silenced and two were arrested for causing a disturbance. One Hadza faces
trial for ‘breaching the peace’.
Survival wrote to the governments of Tanzania and the UAE, the safari company
and the UN Office for Human Rights raising concerns about the deal and the way
it was brokered ,as well as the impact it would have on the Hadzabe and their
livelihood.
SOURCE:
http://www.survival-international.org/news/2579
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