The takeover of peoples’ land and water by corporations – even if they are from the global south – is a new form of colonization
Women pick pigeon pea in eastern Ethiopia, where 80% of the population are engaged in agriculture. Photograph: Picasa/Mark Tran for the |
The idea of south-south co-operation evokes a positive image of solidarity between developing countries through the
exchange of resources, technology, and knowledge. It’s an attractive
proposition, intended to shift the international balance of power and
help developing nations break away from aid dependence and achieve true
emancipation from former colonial powers. However, the discourse of
south-south co-operation has become a cover for human rights violations
involving southern governments and companies.
A case in point is the land grab
by Indian corporations in Ethiopia, facilitated by the governments of
both countries, which use development rhetoric while further
marginalising the indigenous communities that bear the pain of the
resulting social, economic and environmental devastation. It is against
this scenario that international solidarity between communities affected
by the insanity of a development model that prefers profits over people
is reclaiming the principles of south-south co-operation.
Ethiopia’s late prime minister, Meles Zenawi, welcomed India’s
expanding footprint in Africa as essential for his country’s wellbeing, a
vision shared by his successor, Hailemariam Desalegn. The Export-Import
Bank, India’s premier export finance institution, gave the Ethiopian
government a $640m (£412m) line of credit to develop the controversial
sugar sector in lower Omo. Indian companies are the largest investors in
the country, having acquired more than 600,000 hectares (1.5m acres) of
land for agro-industrial projects.
With 80% of its population engaged in agriculture, Ethiopia is home
to more than 34 million chronically hungry people. Every year, millions
depend on aid (pdf) for their survival. Amid such hunger, large-scale
land deals with Indian investors are portrayed as a win-win situation,
modernising agriculture, bringing new technologies and creating
employment.
Research by the Oakland Institute, however, contradicts such claims.
Most of what is produced is non-food export crops while tax incentives
offered to foreign investors deprive Ethiopia of valuable earnings. The
promises of job creation remain unfulfilled as plantation work at best
offers menial low-paid jobs.
Worse still, the Ethiopian government is using its villagisation
programme to forcibly relocate (pdf) about 1.5 million indigenous people
from their homes, farms and grazing lands to make way for agricultural
plantations. Those who refuse face intimidation, beatings, rapes,
arbitrary detention and imprisonment, and even death. The repression of
social resistance to land investments is even stipulated in some land
lease contracts: “[it is the] state’s obligation to ‘deliver and hand
over the vacant possession of leased land free of impediments’ and to
provide free security ‘against any riot, disturbance or any turbulent
time.’”
It was to challenge this form of south-south co-operation that the
Oakland Institute, in partnership with Indian civil society groups the
Indian Social Action Forum (Insaf), Kalpavriksh and Peace, organised an
Indian-Ethiopian summit on land investments in New Delhi in February.
Obang Metho of the Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia and Nyikaw
Ochalla from the Anywaa Survival Organisation, members of the Anuak
community of Gambela, Ethiopia, travelled to India with shocking
testimonies of how their community has been dispossessed of livelihoods,
ill-treated and subjected to misery while the Ethiopian government
leases land to Indian corporations at giveaway prices.
This coming together of Indian and Ethiopian civil society groups
marks a turning point in the struggle for land rights and livelihoods in
the two countries and beyond. For the first time, the agony of
communities who face human rights abuses as their lands are taken over
has reached the investors’ doorstep, sending a powerful message to the
investors and governments of Ethiopia and India. At the same time, it
initiated a rewriting of south-south co-operation where the takeover of
communal lands that have been homes, grazing grounds and water sources
for generations, by corporations – even if they are from the global
south – is being recognised as a new form of colonisation. It was a
starting point, and plans for further collaboration are under way.
Unlike the Ethiopian leaders who met the Indian business delegations
in person, Metho and Ochalla did not get a hearing with Indian
government officials, despite several requests. Instead, it was
activists who are challenging land grabs across India who travelled to
New Delhi to meet them. They told how control over land and natural
resources is spurring violent clashes in nearly 130 districts of India.
Meanwhile, reports came in that 12 platoons of police had moved in on
villagers in Govindpur and Nuagaon in Odisha, to forcibly clear lands
for the Korean Steel Posco project. Women and children were beaten
indiscriminately and people were arrested as they tried to prevent the
demolition of their betel vineyards – one of the most viable local
livelihoods.
We need to challenge the paradigm of development that trivialises and
ignores the human consequences of these land acquisitions by corporate
investors and governments. The idea that “some have to be sacrificed”
for the “larger national good”, which is nothing more than the
double-digit economic growth that benefits a few, must be rejected –
even if the deals are between developing countries and framed by the
rhetoric of south-south co-operation.
• Anuradha Mittal is founder and executive director of the
Oakland Institute, an independent policy thinktank based in Oakland,
California
Source: thegurdian
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