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Bushmen face agonizing wait for right to water

A High Court judge today reserved judgement onthe Kalahari Bushmen’sbid to gain access to a borehole which they rely on for water.

The Bushmen were at the Botswana High Court to hear their application for permission to use their borehole which the Botswana government has banned them from using.

The Botswana government sealed and capped the Bushmen’s borehole in 2002 when it evicted them from their ancestral lands inside the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. The evictions were laterdeclared illegal and unconstitutional by the High Court and hundreds of Bushmen have since returned to their lands.

However, since the ruling, the government has banned the Bushmen from accessing their borehole, forcing them to make arduous 300-mile journeys to fetch water from outside the reserve. At the same time, the government drilled new boreholes for wildlife in the reserve and allowed the opening of a Wilderness Safaris lodge
complete with bar and swimming pool for tourists. It is also poised to license Gem Diamonds to open a diamond mine on Bushman land in the reserve.

Hundreds of Bushmen have languished in resettlement camps outside the reserve where they were dumped by the government, too afraid to return to their lands without access to a regular supply of water in one of the driest regions in the world.

The government’s treatment of the Bushmen has attracted international condemnation, with the UN’s top official on indigenous peoples stating that it falls short of the ‘relevant international human rights standards’. He also noted that Bushmen in the reserve face ‘harsh and dangerous conditions due to a lack of access to water’. The US State Department also criticized the government for its ‘continued narrow interpretation of the court ruling’.

Today’s decision means an agonizing wait for the Bushmen who were forced to take legal action after repeated attempts to negotiate with the government failed. It comes as Botswana’s President, Ian Khama, travels to Chicago tomorrow to attend a board meeting of Conservation International.

Survival’s director, Stephen Corry, said today, ‘It’s now thirteen years since the first evictions of Bushmen from the reserve and eight years since the government illegally forced nearly all of them out and shut their water supply. Until the Bushmen are allowed access to water, we will continue to expose this grotesque human rights violation.’ 

survivalinternational: Survival is an international human rights organization, helping tribal peoples around the world defend their lives, protect their lands and determine their own futures. We work for tribal peoples’ rights in three complementary ways: education, advocacy and campaigns. We also offer tribal people themselves a platform to address the world. We work closely with local indigenous organizations, and focus on tribal peoples who have the most to lose, usually those most recently in contact with the outside world. We believe that public opinion is the most effective force for change. Its power will make it harder, and eventually impossible, for governments and companies to oppress tribal peoples.
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