Lagos, Nigeria – The Indian Social Action Forum (INSAF) and the Oakland Institute in the US will convene a day-long
summit on 6 February at the India International Centre, New Delhi,
bringing together activists resisting land grabs across India and
Ethiopia.
In a press statement, received here Thursday by PANA,
organizers said the meeting will be a ground-breaking opportunity for
dialogue between Ethiopian small farmers and land rights activists and
their Indian counterparts, providing space for those directly affected
by land grabs to share their experiences, suffering, and collectively
strategise to challenge institutional and corporate land grabbers.
In
recent years, India has seen a massive transfer of land and natural
resources from the rural poor to wealthy investors, the statement said,
adding ‘And the country has become a leader in external land-grabbing as
well.
‘Indian companies are the second largest investors in the
Ethiopian economy, with approved investments worth nearly US$ 5 billion
and land lease agreements for over 600,000 hectares across Ethiopia.
The
deals have been facilitated by the Indian government, which supports
merger and acquisition purchases of existing firms, public-private
partnerships, and recently granted EXIM Bank’s largest single line of
credit (US$ 640 million) to Ethiopia.
Ethiopia has been the focus
of aggressive foreign agricultural investment, leasing out nearly 3.6
million hectares of land for commercial farm ventures from 2008-2010.
This
investment corresponds with widespread human rights violations. Most
egregiously, the Ethiopian government’s villagization programme will
displace 1.5 million people by 2013 — with the five administrative
regions that have the largest share of foreign investment the hardest
hit.
The forced relocation of hundreds of thousands of indigenous
people from their lands to make room for foreign investors has destroyed
livelihoods and rendered small-scale farmers and pastoralist
communities fearful of their own survival, as rapes and killings
involving security forces have been reported in Lower Omo and Gambela
regions.
Against this backdrop, the civil society summit aims to
unify struggles across continents and amplify the voices of those
impacted, thus lifting the demand for land rights and dignified
livelihoods to a new level.
The Oakland Institute is an
independent policy think tank whose mission is to increase public
participation and promote fair debate on critical social, economic and
environmental issues.
Sorce: AfriqueJet Actualité Afrique
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