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| Native forests of Ethiopia’s Gambella region | 
Afrol News, 18 February
 – Despite opposition from Ethiopia’s President and environmental 
authorities, a rainforest area providing livelihood to an indigenous 
people has been leased out to make tea plantations.
In a seldom 
move, the Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia (SMNE) has been able to
 acquire government documents describing the struggle of the Mazenger 
and other indigenous people to protect their ancient forest-covered 
lands along tributaries to the White Nile.
According to Obang 
Metho, who has read the Amharic-language documents, “the letters reads 
like a drama; showing a game of double-talk, manipulation and 
intimidation being played by this regime with the land, lives and future
 of the people.”
The indigenous Mazenger people of Gambella only 
in early 2010 were made aware that their ancient lands and “secret 
forests” were to be leased to the Indian company Verdanta Harvests, who 
plans to clear their land and use it for a tea and spice plantation; 
destined for export. The Mazenger depend on the forests for everything; 
including hunting, gathering and beekeeping.
After hearing about this, the local people sent a team of representatives to the capital, Addis Ababa, where they were able to meet
 with President Girma Wolde-Giorgis – who mostly has representative 
powers. Telling the President that their livelihood would be destroyed 
if the lease went through, they won his support.
The documents 
include a letter from President Girma to the Environmental Protection 
Authority of Ethiopia (EPAE), recommending the lease project be stopped.
 The authority investigated the case and on 6 May sent a letter to the 
Ethiopian Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, saying that the
 short term benefit of leasing this land would not outweigh the 
long-term costs to the country and that the lease should not proceed.
Nothing
 however happened, until in November, the Governor of Gambella Region, 
Omot Obang Olum, announced that the 5,000 hectares of forests already had been leased out to Verdanta for 50 years. The Indian company had already paid government US$ 19,000 for the lands.
Governor Omot told locals not to interfere more with the project, which would provide them with roads, employment and income at the plantations. Further disagreement was labelled “anti-development”.
In
 December, the Mazenger people again contacted President Girma, who 
again lent them support. In letters directly to the Minister of 
Agriculture, with a copy to powerful Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, he 
literally ordered the Minister to stop this project from going any 
further because this land, with its abundant rain forests, should be 
protected.
However, President Girma again was ignored. In January,
 Governor Omot ordered the Mazenger villagers to change their leaders, 
appointing persons more sympathetic to the project.
Currently, the
 project is moving forward and the forests are being cleared. The Indian
 company is already in full control of the ancestral lands of the 
Mazenger people.
In current Ethiopia, which is seeking a “green 
revolution” to boost its economy, land leases to foreign companies are 
increasingly becoming a controversial issue. In the cases known so far, 
the leases have been known to benefit the national economy and further 
investments.
Little has however been known about how local 
interests and traditional land rights are affected by the “land grab”. 
The files documenting the struggle of the Mazenger people in so far are 
unique.

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