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issue
97
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april/june 2001
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DISAPPEARING
CULTURES
Big Development and the Pygmy, U'wa
and Mirrar Peoples
It's an old hunting trick. Using powder
made from the bark of the Moabi tree, the
pygmies of the Cameroon forest make a
camouflage potion to disguise themselves
from their prey. They then disappear into
the forest.
The Baka tribe's vast knowledge of the
plant and animal life of the forest has
sustained them for centuries. The continued
exploitation of Cameroon's natural
resources via the Chad-Cameroon oil
pipeline (see LINK 94), however, will bring
an end to the indigenous people's symbiotic
relationship with their environment.
Deforestation, resettlement, pollution and
overburdened resources will force these
communities into a cultural and economic
no-man's-land. In other words, they will
become invisible.
What is the link between the
environment and human rights? According to
the United Nations Commission on Human
Rights, the environmental dimensions of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
should be acknowledged. Klaus Toepfer, the
Executive Director of the UN Environment
Programme (UNEP) recently stated “it is
time to recognize that those who pollute or
destroy the natural environment are not
just committing a crime against nature but
are violating human rights as well”. Mr.
Toepfer added that human rights “cannot be
secured in a degraded or polluted
environment”.
The Chad-Cameroon oil pipeline, as well as
many other projects that are the focus of
FoE campaigns, must be viewed not only as
environmentally destructive but also as
human rights abuses. People's right to
life, health, adequate food, housing and
traditional culture, as recognized by the
Human Rights Declaration, is being severely
undermined in many cases.
Disrupted Lifestyles in
Cameroon
In Cameroon, the last fifteen years have
been devastating for the 150,000 Baka
pygmies that inhabit the southeast. Their
troubles began when a drop in the prices of
cocoa and coffee –important export crops
for the country – during the mid-1980s
brought about a sharp economic downturn.
Desperate for foreign currency, the
government looked towards its unexploited
rainforests for a solution.
Traditionally, the Baka gathered fruit,
nuts, and honey from the forest. Bush meat
was provided by indigenous species such as
antelope, porcupine, monkey and duiker.
Trees supplied oils for cooking as well as
for making cosmetics and medicine. But
deforestation at a rate of more than
100,000 hectares per year has severely
impacted upon the forest's ability to
provide for its inhabitants. Whilst the
forest was always able to sustain the
Baka's subsistence use of local animals for
food, the arrival of itinerant workers into
the area presented a new threat to native
species as demands for bush meat increased
dramatically. The construction of the
Chad-Cameroon pipeline will cut deeper into
the rainforest, across major food producing
areas, and damage livelihoods even
further.
Cameroon's decision to allow the pipeline
to be built has had major repercussions
upon the relationship between the Baka and
their neighbours, the Bantu. While the Baka
survived thousands of years ago by hunting
and gathering, travelling as nomads
throughout the forest, most groups today
live in permanent villages for some of the
year and eat cultivated produce as well as
forest foods. The cultivated foods, such as
plantains and yams, are obtained from Bantu
villages in exchange for meat or plantation
work. The barter system also extends to
tools, clothes and pots.
Since the deforestation of the land began,
the gap between the Bantu and the Baka has
widened. Because they own land and the Baka
do not, the Bantu have negotiated some
concessions with the logging companies,
while the Baka have been ignored.
Compensation payments for people affected
by the pipeline went into effect earlier
this year, and although insubstantial, the
Bantu were satisfied with their payments.
The Baka, whose livelihood depends on the
forest, received nothing.
As the Baka's natural environment has
disappeared, so too has their traditional
clan organization. Their previous nomadic
lifestyle has given way to a more sedentary
way of life. Now, with the influx of people
seeking construction work, public health
issues, especially AIDS, are likely to
increase as bars and prostitutes appear
along the pipeline route.
The pipeline construction is likely to
contaminate groundwater systems, and the
likelihood of oil spills polluting rivers
is also great. Forest areas near the
construction site will need to be cleared
so that people can grow food and hunt.
Livelihoods will be lost along with fragile
ecological systems. The environmental and
cultural legacy will be enormous.
Fighting for Mother Earth
Another case of human rights abuse is
represented by the struggle of the U'wa
tribe against the Los Angeles-based oil
company Occidental Petroleum (see LINK 91).
Isolated in the rainforest of Columbia's
northeast, the 5,000-member tribe has lived
in harmony with nature for thousands of
years. Their belief that “the earth is
alive and is our mother” has dictated the
tribe's agricultural practices, hunting,
fishing and rituals. The U'wa practice
sustainable agriculture and take advantage
of the diversity of food afforded by the
land's varying climates. U'wa leader
Roberto Cobario explains the process: “Over
time the soil will give healthy food back
to us, without poison and dangerous
chemicals. This is how we live.” Feasts,
traditional songs and dances all celebrate
the U'wa's sense of spiritual
responsibility towards their
environment.
For the U'wa, oil is the blood of the
Mother Earth. Its exploitation represents
an assault not only against the spiritual
beliefs of the indigenous population, but
also against the entire system of
biodiversity that supports it. The cultural
identity of the tribe, which has resisted
outside intrusion for centuries, is now
under serious threat. In addition to
environmental devastation, the social
ramifications of oil exploitation in
Columbia will be significant. The
infrastructure required for exploration
will place additional pressure on food
resources and threaten water supplies.
Immigration and relocation through
increased economic activity will see the
introduction of social problems such as
crime and prostitution into previously
isolated areas. Land clearing, leading to
the desecration of the sacred burial
grounds of U'wa ancestors, will sever a
vital connection to the past.
So great is the concern of the U'wa people
for the preservation of their culture and
environment that they have made repeated
threats to walk off a 1,400 feet cliff in a
mass suicide to protect the land they say
has belonged to them for thousands of
years. This threat echoes a U'wa legend in
which members of their tribe once hurled
themselves off a cliff to avoid enslavement
by the Spanish. According to sacred law,
“If their nation was in great peril … by a
God-given law they have the right to kill
themselves”.
Human Landscape Vanishing in Kakadu
The link between human rights and the
environment has been a key component of the
campaign against the Jabiluka uranium mine
in Australia's largest national park,
Kakadu (see article this issue). The Mirrar
people, traditional owners of the proposed
Jabiluka mine and the existing Ranger mine,
have expressed repeatedly that further
desecration of their land will lead to a
breakdown of their already deteriorating
culture.
The Aboriginal culture, considered to be
the oldest on earth, has origins dating
back to at least 40,000 BC. The Mirrar
culture is inextricably linked to the land:
they have a tradition of hunting and
gathering relying on bush foods such as
plums, potato-like vegetables, fish,
turtles, snakes, geese and goannas.
Ceremonies, including dance, are vital
spiritual and cultural activities.
The Mirrar land contains many sacred sites
– existing within both the Ranger and
Jabiluka mineral leases – that are of
enormous cultural and spiritual
significance to the tribe. "Dreaming
tracks" link the sacred sites and tell the
story of creation, linking events and
important figures from the Mirrar history.
The link between Mirrar land and culture is
clearly described by heritage expert D.J.
Mulvaney: “Their traditional world is a
humanized landscape, which is indivisible
and immutable, and every natural feature
has a name and meaningful mythological
association. Place and person are
inseparable, while past and present form a
unity of ongoing creation.”
Uranium mining has taken place on Mirrar
land for twenty years, and it is critical
to address the impact that continued mining
will have on the traditions of these
people. In May 2000 it was made public that
there had been a leak from the existing
Ranger mine into the surrounding Kakadu
National Park. The leakage, of over two
million litres of liquid, contained
manganese, uranium and radium. Since mining
activity commenced, there has also been a
decline in Mirrar traditions in relation to
food collection, ceremony, social
interaction and socio-political
systems.
Although the Ranger mine is on Mirrar
land, the Mirrar no longer hunt or collect
from the area adjacent to the mine. Some
concerns have been voiced about the quality
of water in the wetlands surrounding the
mine and how this may have affected the
fish, which tribe members claim “seem
different”.
The socio-political system of the Mirrar
people has also been adversely affected,
according to the Gundjehmi Aboriginal
Corporation, the organization established,
controlled and managed by the Mirrar
people. Traditionally, senior law officials
and site custodians have managed the sacred
sites by consensus. Since mining began in
the area, the structure has been torn
apart. The Gundjehmi Aboriginal Corporation
maintains that those with direct or
indirect interest in mining, including
members of government, have created
divisions between Aboriginal people. Mining
supporters have, in several instances, been
elevated to positions of authority while
mining opponents, such as the Mirrar, have
been marginalized.
As the destruction of Mirrar land has
taken place, the tribe has experienced a
continued breakdown in its social fabric.
In a 1998 submission to the World Heritage
Committee Mission to Kakadu it was noted
that “damage or restricted access to
spiritual sites by … mining projects
contributes to disempowerment and a general
pessimism among
bininj
[Aboriginals]
that a complete loss of culture is
imminent.” Furthermore, tribal beliefs hold
that damage to sacred sites will have
catastrophic effects, including sickness
and death.
Despair over the decline of cultural
traditions is evidenced in the increase of
social and economic problems including
alcoholism, violence, diminishing interest
in education and depression among the
Mirrar. Jonathon Nadji, quoted in the
Warradjan Cultural Centre research notes,
describes how “before mining, people got on
better, they ate more bush tucker and
hunted more instead of going to Social Club
to drink. When I was young, I went with my
family to ceremony… Nowadays it doesn't
happen. They are forgetting who they are.
They are losing their culture.”
As human beings, we have the right to live
and die where we wish, to sustain ourselves
according to our traditions, to educate our
children, to honour our ancestors and to
express ourselves culturally as well as
spiritually. Environment is inextricably
linked to culture; our land anchors us to
the past, the present and the future. Our
guardianship of it is crucial.
Estelle Muller,
freelance
journalist for FoEI
With thanks for information to the
Gundjemi Aboriginal Corporation, The
Ecologist magazine and Environmental
Defense.
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