Home away from Home!
Tuesday May 22nd 2012

Interesting Sites

    Insider

    Archives

    Kenya: Landmark Ruling on Indigenous Land Rights

    African Human Rights Commission Condemns Expulsion of Endorois People for Tourism Development

    (New York, February 4, 2010) – A ruling by the African Commission
    on Human and People´s Rights condemning the expulsion of the
    Endorois people from their land in Kenya is a major victory for
    indigenous peoples across Africa, Human Rights Watch, WITNESS,
    and the Endorois´ lawyers said today. The Commission ruled on
    February 4, 2010 that the Endorois’ eviction from their traditional
    land for tourism development violated their human rights.

    The Kenyan government evicted the Endorois people, a traditional
    pastoralist community, from their homes at Lake Bogoria in central
    Kenya in the 1970s, to make way for a national reserve and tourist
    facilities. In the first ruling of an international tribunal to find a
    violation of the right to development, the Commission found that this
    eviction, with minimal compensation, violated the Endorois´ right as
    an indigenous people to property, health, culture, religion, and natural
    resources. It ordered Kenya to restore the Endorois to their historic
    land and to compensate them. It is the first ruling to determine who
    are indigenous peoples in Africa, and what are their rights to land.
    The case was brought on behalf of the Endorois by CEMIRIDE and
    Minority Rights Group International.

    “The Endorois decision, the first of its kind, can help many others
    across Africa who have been forced from their homes,” said Clive
    Baldwin, senior legal adviser at Human Rights Watch, who was co-
    counsel for the Endorois in the case while employed with Minority
    Rights Group International. “The African Commission is clear: the
    land where the Endorois historically lived is their property and must
    be returned to them.”

    Lake Bogoria is considered to have great tourism potential due to its
    hot springs and abundant wildlife, including one of Africa’s largest
    populations of flamingos. The African Commission accepted the
    Endorois´ evidence that they have lived there since “time immemorial” and the lake was the center of their religion and culture, with their ancestors buried nearby. After being evicted from the fertile land around the lake, the Endorois were forced to congregate on arid
    land, where many of their cattle died.

    They tried unsuccessfully to persuade the Kenyan government, the
    local authorities, and the Kenyan Wildlife Service to reverse their
    policy of evicting everyone, including traditional inhabitants,
    from areas the government designated national parks and reserves. They
    were also rebuffed when they soughtan adequate share ofthe tourism
    and revenues generated by the reserve. After Kenyan courts refused to
    address their case, they brought their case to the African Commission
    in 2003. As a component of the case, WITNESS and CEMIRIDE
    collaborated on a landmark use of video as evidence, demonstrating
    how conditions on the ground breached articles of the African Charter
    on Human and Peoples’ Rights, and bringing voices of the Endorois
    to the Commission.

    Violations of land rights, including the rights of the generations of
    Kenyans displaced through historic and recent evictions, are one of
    the key unresolved issues in Kenya, which former United Nations
    Secretary-General Kofi Annan acknowledged in the aftermath of
    Kenya´s electoral violence in 2007-2008. The African Commission
    found that the Kenyan government has continued to rely on a colonial
    law that prevented certain communities from holding land outright,
    and allowed others, such as local authorities, effectively to own their
    traditional land on “trust”for these Communities. The local authority
    in Lake Bogoria was able to end the Endorois trust at will and to seize
    the land.

    In the last decade there have been several attempts at comprehensive
    land reform that would allow for final and fair determination of land
    ownership and create a system to restore landto those unlawfully
    evicted or to compensate them. None of these reforms has been
    completed. While the adoption by the government of a new land
    policy in August 2009 marks a significant step forward, it still needs
    to be translated into effective protection on the ground for Kenya´s
    most marginalized.

    “This ruling is good for every Kenyan,” said Korir Singo´ei, who
    represented the Endorois while director of CEMIRIDE. “The law that
    treats some communities as children, unable to own their own land, is
    a colonial relic that needs to be changed..”

    The African Commission determined that the Endorois, having a clear
    historic attachment to particular land, are a distinct indigenous
    people, a term contested by some African governments who claimed
    all Africans are indigenous. It also found that the Endorois had
    property rights over the land they traditionally occupied and used,
    even though the British and Kenyan authorities had denied them a
    formal title. In finding a violation of the right to development for the
    first time the Commission relied on the failure of the Kenyan
    authorities to respect the right of the Endorois to consent to
    development, and the failure to provide them adequate compensation
    for the loss they had suffered, or any benefit from the tourism.

    The African Commission had ruled in 2006 against the Kenyan
    government for allowing a ruby mining company to start illegal
    mining on another part of the Endorois´ land, severely affecting their
    remaining access to water. Following that ruling, the mining company
    abandoned its activities.

    “The African Commission´s ruling makes clear to governments that
    they must treat indigenous peoples as active stakeholders rather than
    passive beneficiaries,” said Cynthia Morel, who was co-counsel for
    the Endorois as senior legal adviser with Minority Rights Groups
    International. “That recognition is a victory for all indigenous peoples
    across Africa whose existence was largely ignored – both in law and
    in fact – until today. The ruling spells the beginning of a brighter
    future.”

    The Commission requires Kenya to take steps to return the Endorois land and compensate them within three months. Comprehensive reform to bring Kenya’s land laws to the standards set by the Commission is vital before the 2012 elections, Human Rights Watch, WITNESS, and the Endorois’ lawyers said.

    For more on Human Rights Watch´s work on Kenya, please visit:

    http://www.hrw.org/africa/kenya

    http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2008/03/16/ballots-bullets

    http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2008/07/27/all-men-have-gone-0

    For more on MRG´s work on the Endorois, please visit:

    http://www.minorityrights.org/7407/trouble-in-paradise/meet-the-

    endorois.html

    To see the video evidence presented to the court and the film
    about the Endorois and the case produced by CEMIRIDE and
    WITNESS, please visit:

    http://hub.witness.org/en/RightfulPlace

    For more information, please contact:
    In New York, Clive Baldwin (English, French): +1-917-880-8756
    In Nairobi, Korir Singo’ei (English, Swahili): +254-722-776994
    In London, Cynthia Morel (English, French): +44-79-527-19484
    In New York, Bukeni Waruzi (Swahili, English, and French): +1-
    718-783-2000, ext. 307 (For WITNESS)

    Leave a Comment

    More from category

    Kenya situation: Summary of the decisions on the confirmation of charges, 23 January 2012

      Situation: The Republic of Kenya Cases: The Prosecutor v. William Samoei Ruto, Henry Kiprono Kosgey and Joshua [Read More]

    Kenya’s Samburu people ‘violently evicted’ after US charities buy land

    3 The Guardian on Facebook. The pastoralist Samburu have reported constant harassment from police with women allegedly [Read More]

    Milking the Rhino Trailer

      A ferocious kill on the Serengeti… dire warnings about endangered species… These clichés of nature [Read More]

    We’re not benefiting from the Wildlife conservation.

    The tittle should actually read something like this: Unfair distribution of natural resources, The case of Wildlife [Read More]

    My last comment, the one that made K4W to block me

    With all due respect to the host, i’m getting to experience the inability to have a balanced debate at the [Read More]