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SOS Bushmen

The row about the Bushmen - Botswana

THE village of Kaudwane may be less than 300km (186 miles) from Botswana's capital, but it is a world apart from Gaborone's smart buildings and new malls. Scrawny cows roam the sandy roadside, chewing whatever grass they can find. Thatched huts dot the scrubby, empty landscape. The school and clinic apart, brick buildings are few. Here, in Kaudwane, is the new home of people relocated from the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR), a protected area of 53,000 square kilometres (20,000-plus square miles) in the middle of the country. Their fate threatens to tarnish the image of Africa's shiniest success story.
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Les Bushmen en justice pour réclamer leurs terres du Kalahari

Le procès sur les revendications territoriales des bushmen San, qui contestent leur expulsion de la Réserve du Kalahari dans le centre du Botswana, a repris mercredi, les avocats exprimant cependant leur volonté d'un accord à l'amiable avec le gouvernement, rapporte l'Afp.

Quelque 240 bushmen San ont saisi la Haute cour du Botswana, qui siège à Lobatse, au sud de la capitale Gaborone, pour contester leur évictionde leurs terres ancestrales de la réserve naturelle du Kalahari (Ckgr), l'une des plus importantes du monde.

 

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Bushmen Back to Court

Two Bushmen clans based in Botswana, the Gana and Gwi, returned to court this week with their case against the government of Botswana, 160 days after the government sealed off the Central Kalahari Game Reserve to the outside world.

The Bushmen, through London-based NGO, Survival International (SI), claim they were illegally forced off their land for the purpose of diamond exploration by Debswana. The Botswana government claims the Bushmen reneged on a previous relocation deal, then squatted in the game reserve, and their goats carry a disease, which experts have described as a serious threat to the game in the reserve. According to SI, the Bushmen are fighting for their right to return to their land in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, and to hunt and gather freely. They first filed the case in April 2002, following the evictions in February that year, but it was thrown out on a technicality.

The Bushmen appealed and won the right to have the case heard, and it began in July 2004 in Botswana's high court. It has since faced long delays, and is already the longest and most expensive legal case in Botswana's history. On 1 September last year, the government closed the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, and placed armed guards at the Bushman settlements inside the reserve. The entire communities of Molapo and Mothomelo have been evicted, while those remaining at Metsiamenong are prevented from obtaining food and water. One woman has died of starvation and shock.

Botswana Bushmen's land claim case to drag on for months: lawyers

The legal battle between Botswana's San Bushmen and the government over rights to Kalahari land was expected to drag on for months, lawyers said Thursday, with the San expressing frustration over the pace of the process.

The Bushmen are taking the government to court to challenge their eviction four years ago from the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR), one of the world's largest sanctuaries and an area they have called home for the past 20,000 years.
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Botswana Bushmen back in court in Kalahari land claim case

Botswana's San Bushmen fighting for rights to Kalahari land went back to court on Wednesday with lawyers mooting the possibility of an out-of-court settlement.

The Bushmen are taking the government to court to challenge their eviction four years ago from the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR), one of the world's largest sanctuaries and an area they have called home for the past 20,000 years.
 (Suite)