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The Government has sent heavily armed wildlife guards into the Central Kalahari Game Reserve — an area promised to the Bushmen “in perpetuity”. Some 200 to 250 Gana and Gwi Bushmen live in the area, having drifted back after previous evictions.
The Government banned all outsiders, including journalists, from the area. It said a disease had been discovered in the Bushmen’s goats, which could be fatal. Vets said that the disease, sarcoptic mange, is common and poses no real threat to wild animals or humans.
The authorities’ action was timed to coincide with the start of the Bushmen’s final appeal against the evictions in 1997 and 2002.
Stephen Corry, director of Survival International, which has been highlighting the Bushmen’s plight, said: “The Government seems hellbent on finishing them off this time. The situation is very urgent. Unless circumstances change through outside intervention, this could very well be the end of these particular people.”
A Bill removing a clause in the constitution that guaranteed the Bushmen, Africa’s oldest inhabitants, the right to live in the Kalahari in perpetuity, the basis of their case against the Government, is before Parliament. Once passed, the appeal is expected to collapse.
Botswana, which has a reputation as one of Africa’s success stories, first began moving the Bushmen off the land in the mid-1990s. It said that it could no longer afford the paltry costs of providing them with basic services. It also accused the Bushmen of threatening game through hunting. Mr Corry said: “The excuses given were ludicrous, and the Government changed its arguments several times.”
Squeezed together in resettlement camps and unable to live their traditional life, many Bushmen developed serious health problems, while drunkenness and prostitution were also rife. Several hundred returned to the Kalahari.
Most people, including seve-ral government ministers who went public on the issue, said the real reason for the evictions was that deposits of diamonds were discovered in the area.
The state diamond company, which is an offshoot of the De Beers diamond conglomerate, maintains that even the richest diamond deposits, which lay at the heart of the Bushmen’s land, are currently uneconomic to mine. However, De Beers does not rule out mining them at a later date.
Many leading figures in the state mining company, Debswana, are senior ministers in the recently re-elected Government of President Mogae.
Bushmen are treated with disdain by Botswana’s farming tribes. Mr Corry, who called for British intervention, said: “There is very deep-seated racism on the part of the Government clique.”
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