The Evil Strategies of Land Grabbing in the Southern Part of Ethiopia. Ayyaantuu.com
By Assefa
Getachew
E-mail:
assefageta@yahoo.com
The
historical impacts of land-grab in Ethiopia were characterized by brutal
conflicts, cultural extinction,
and even genocide through mass killings. The war of occupation and land-grab in
the ast
decades of the nineteenth century resulted in the death of about five million
people in Southern
Ethiopia (OSA 2013). The current problems associated with land-grab are
especially complex in
Southern Ethiopia; the local people are not represented in the government of
Ethiopia that is
dominated and led by TPLF. Mistrust between TPLF leaders who come from the
North and the
Southern peoples of Ethiopia is rampant, shaped by a bitter history of war,
occupation, cultural
domination, and inherited hostility. The non-Tigrayan population of Ethiopia
sees the decision of
the TPLF regime as a deliberate and conniving move to dismantle the cultural
fiber of the
South and expand Tigrayan cultural and economic domination. Land-grab is indeed perceived
among the Southern Ethiopian population as a hostile trap targeting their most
sacred property,
their land.
Since 1996,
the total area of agricultural land transferred to the investors is more than 5
million hectares. A
total land transferred to investors will be 10 million hectares of agricultural
land by the end of
2015 (OSA 2013). Over 94% of the land assigned to TPLF officials and foreign investors
is located in Southern Ethiopia (ibid). To seal the deal, the government developed
‘aconniving
and exploitive strategy’ and to implement this, it made policy decisions and
then signs land
lease contracts on behalf of the peoples of the Southern Ethiopia. The policy thoroughly
comes from the TPLF leaders who are ethnic group of the North. It is
discriminatory as it
applies only to the Southern regions of Ethiopia/non-Abyssinian parts of the
Empire /- such as Oromia,
Gambella, the South, the Afar and Benishangul/Gumuz. It is to be noted that Emperor
Meles Zenawi who was the head of the TPLF regime, once outlined this strategy
of land-grab
as being only focused on these areas. This strategy came to surface with five
phases that
immensely subjugated and endangered the Southern Ethiopian farmers by imposing
four major
limitations. This is discussed in two ways-- I) Phases of the Conniving and
Exploitive strategy;
and II) Impacts of the Conniving and Exploitive Strategy in the Empire.
I Phases of
the Conniving and Exploitive Strategy
TPLF‟s land
grabbing strategy falls in to five (5) manipulative phases. It claims that this
strategy is vital
and should rely upon „Leasing Land in the Southern part of Ethiopia‟ on the
pretext of increasing
investment, supply for domestic consumption and enhancing economic growth. And of
course, implementing this strategy, in the eyes of TPLF regime, is easier as it
proclaims Land is Free,
convincing farmers through ‘we work together strategy’ is not difficult, and
lobbing elites and
Diasporas is simple. Above all, the government bragged that this strategy is
capable of making huge
revenues [… which are of course taken care of by TPLF corrupted leaders].
1 Land Grab
as a reason for Increasing Supply for Domestic Consumption
The
government claims that land is leased to foreign investors to increase
production as a result the
country‟s economy will be stable and the supply for domestic consumption will be
maximized. However it is observed that the opposite happened i.e. the level of
supply for
domestic consumption drastically went down because of an enormous volume of export made
by the investors to China, Saudi Arabia, India, Italy and Japan (Economic Watch
2010). Thus this inability to supply goods for domestic consumption brought economic
instability in the society. Yet the government went on fabricating that the scarcity of
supply for domestic consumption was due to a decrease in foreign food aid and import
size thus making a false reason for its strategic failure.
However
John Vidal (2010) discloses that there is scarcity of supply [such as food] for domestic
consumption but this scarcity is not caused by lack of foreign aid. Fred (2010) added that
Ethiopia is one of the world's poorest countries that constantly receive a specified
amount of humanitarian food. Thus so far, a decreasing trend in foreign aid has never been observed.
Economic
Watch (2010) unveils Ethiopia‟s import volume is increasing since 2006. In the past
three years (2010-2012), the country‟s import size grossed over US $24 (ibid). The trade
imports include food, animals and cereals. Thus the
strategy‟s failure has nothing to do with the size of the import, lack of
foreign food aid
rather with the size of export.
2 Land Grab
as a reason for Investment and Development
TPLF regime
reports that „leasing land‟ to investors is the best strategy for economic growth of
the country. However, Lorenzo et.al, (2009) disagree that as governments [such as
Ethiopian], make land available to prospecting investors, large-scale land acquisitions
make the local people lose access to the resources on which their economic growth
depends. Hence the success of this strategy is very little as it takes the
society at large in to
consideration (Thenmozhi 2013) yet if done for the mere execution of the strategy
[grabbing land as a reason for investment and development], it will be a huge mistake.
Thus the government does not have to lease multiple millions of hectares of land.
Moreover „leasing massive piece of land‟ alone has never made any country developed,
civilized and improved the livelihood of its citizen (Lorenzo et.al 2009). This makes the
strategy unable to meet and guarantee the economic growth rather go against all types
of investment growth strategy.
3
Displacing Farmers from their Land and Declaring ‘It is an Abandoned Land’
The third
strategy is about displacing farmers and grabbing their land. The government announces
that this land is „non- arable‟. The magazine of Minnesota University under crisis
reported that 80% of the leased land was „non-arable‟ (Fred 2010). In the year 2010, only
in the month of September, the government displaced several farmers and leased
three 7.4 million acres of virgin land to foreign corporations such as Karuturi (John
2010). The representatives of the displaced farmers like Gemerchu Gebaba from Bako (West
Shoa) and another farmer from Gambella, who did not want his name be disclosed,
told that their arable and non-arable land was dispossessed by the government ibid).
They also reveal that the government denied the land grab and claimed it was an „abandoned
land‟.
4 We Work
together
This is a
subtly designed strategy which focuses on convincing farmers that the government
is willing to work in collaboration with them. According to this strategy, communicating
and working in harmony with the farmers is crucial until consensus is reached
between them. Thus the government cheats the farmers and makes them willing for the
relocation. And then displace them to other location, but this action
automatically leaves a
room for the government to turn its back, break its promise and finally abandon them. For
example, it has been observed that after farmers were displaced, the government
failed many times in several areas providing the promised medical and electric
services. In these areas, there is no water, school and infrastructure. The displaced
farmers were resettled on none productive land thus they became unable to feed themselves,
i.e. lack of food became their number one problem.
5 For
Lobbying and Reaping Huge Revenues
The last
strategy that this government uses is „lobbying‟ the elites and Diasporas and „reaping
huge revenues‟. To implement this, the government signs as many lease contracts
as possible with the so called „elites and diasporas‟ who in turn pave the way
to put „„dollar in the pocket of corrupt leaders‟‟ (Obang 2011). In other
words, this is making the farmers
lose their land ownership title to TPLF leaders and „investors‟.
II Impacts
of the Conniving and Exploitive Strategy in the Empire
The land
grab activities in Ethiopia affect not only a massive piece of land but also
the livelihood of its
inhabitants such as farmers, women, and pastoralists in many rural communities
(Tinyade 2011).
These activities dismembered them from their land, from labor, from power; from memory …the
result is destructive of the base from which people launch themselves into the world (
Ngugi 2009 in Tinyade 2011). Thus effects and shortcomings of this strategy can
at least be observed
in the following four ways. These are: Creating Citizenship Class, Lacking Economic
Justification, Causing Relocation of Farmers Forcefully, and Lack of Food.
A/ Creates
Citizenship Class
Mr. Bekele
Gerba […is imprisoned now for vividly explaining the impacts of this Conniving
and Exploitive Strategy] describes effects of the land-grab activities on citizenship. Based on
land ownership, he categorizes citizenship levels in the Empire into four classes:
the first-class citizens are those who are in power to give away land; the
secondclass citizens
are those who receive land; the third-class are those who are reduced to observer-roles
of such illicit transactions; the fourth-class are those whose land is taken away from
them by force (Bekele 2010). Describing the illegal transfer of land, Mr. Bekele
Gerba adds, "Land owners are reduced into security guards of their
previous properties."
Thus, the third-class and fourth-class citizens all hail from the historically Southern
part of the Empire.
B/ Lack of
Economic Justification
The
government could not give any viable economic justification why it enters into multiple
lease contracts. After taking the massive piece of land, the foreign investors
told that they
were surprised why the government did sign the contract at the lowest land
price in the world
while possessing a mass of land rich in organic matter (John Vidal 2010). "It's
very good land. In fact it is very cheap. We have no land like this in
India," says Karmjeet
Sekhon, project manager for what is expected to be one of Africa's largest farms.
"There you are lucky to get 1% of organic matter in the soil. Here it is
more than 5%. We
don't need fertilizer or herbicides. There is absolutely nothing that will not
grow on it.
Karuturi Global says it had not even seen the land when it was offered by the Ethiopian
government with tax breaks thrown in (John Vidal 2010). Here we can observe that there
is no economic justification for entering into multiple lease contracts (that
last for 99 years) at the cheapest price in the world while having a mass of
land with abundant organic
contents.
C/
Relocation of Farmers Forcefully
Land grab
in Oromia has already displaced millions of farmers (Land Grab 2012; OSA 2013).
According to the year 2012 International Genocide Watch (IGW) report, the Ethiopian
government has forcibly relocated approximately 70,000 people from their land with
the intention to lease the land for foreign and domestic investment. The report portrays
that the government‟s strategy has failed several times in rendering the
promised services
[providing medicine, water, electricity] for the cunningly deceived and
forcefully evicted
people. It has also failed providing better access to food, education, health
and unable to
construct infrastructures (Gregory 2012). After all, these indigenous people were not
only disrespected but also deprived of their economic right. This marginalized and exposed
them to inescapable suffering and death (OSA 2013).
D/ Causes
Lack of Food
This
strategy relies upon increasing the export size while jeopardizing the level of
supply for domestic consumption.
This strategy exacerbates food insecurity, ethnic conflict and mass starvation (OSA 2013)
thus alleviating ongoing hunger tragedy in the country.
TPLF regime
is affecting millions of Oromo farmers with manipulative land grabbing strategy
as a reason
for Increasing the level of supply for Domestic Consumption, Investment and Development.
This strategy does not stop here; it rather continues displacing them from
their land and
declaring „It is an Abandoned Land‟. It deceives the farmers with the „We Work together‟
strategy and lease their land to foreign investors. This land grab strategy
also focuses on lobbying
the elites and Diasporas to take part in the contract so that they open the
door for collecting
the huge revenues generated.
The severe
impacts of this land grabbing strategy are creating citizenship class,
relocating farmers
forcefully and causing lack of food. All in all, the strategy is condemned for
its lack of economic
justification. As a whole,
this conniving and exploitive strategy is designed to work against Oromo
farmers. These farmers need not
die from hunger for the mere purpose of putting dollars in the pockets of
corrupted ones. Thus
I say the following questions should be addressed to stop the implementation of
this strategy
thereby our people‟s right of using its natural recourse shall be respected. If
TPLF is genuine
about agro-industry and foreign investment, WHY NOT UPROOT AND DISPLACE THE
PEOPLE OF TIGRAY FROM THEIR VILLAGES and sell Tigray to India, before selling OROMIA and
GAMBELLA to India? And where are the UPROOTED AND DISPLACED PEOPLE
GOING TO SETTLE and what will happen to them? Thus who is going to stop the illegal
seizure of lands of indigenous peoples? To stop these activities, there need to
be determination,
movement and struggle. Therefore, we need to stand and say stop the use of
force and
coercion, the deprivation of resources, the denial of rights and, targeting and
exclusion of indigenous
groups in the Southern part of the country! We shall fight this injustice!
Land to the
owners!
Reference
1. Bekele Gerba, (2010). Speech on Ethiopian Election.
Youtube. Available at :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKuXdunLAOA
2. Economy Watch (2010). Ethiopia Trade,
Exports and Imports. Available at :
http://www.economywatch.com/world_economy/ethiopia/export-import.html
3. Fred
de Sam Lazaro , (2010). Ethiopia's
Abundant Farming Investments Leave Many Still Hungry 2013. Youtube.
Available at : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJHL0zfANkE
4. Gregory H. Stanton (Dr.), (2012). Genocide Watch 2012. The International
Alliance to End
Genocide http://www.genocidewatch.org/images/Countries_at_Risk_Report_2012.pdf
5. John Vidal (2010). Karuturi Global on farming in
Ethiopia. Available at :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nt22chvx_yQ
6. Lamouridia Thiombiano, (2010). UN FOOD AND
AGRICULTURAL ORGANIZATION. Ethiopia's
Abundant Farming Investments Leave Many Still Hungry.
Available at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJHL0zfANkE
7. Land grab, (2012). Ethiopia Land grab in Oromia and
displacement of people Available
at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qaqfCQolSRA
8. Lorenzo Cotula, Sonja Vermeulen, Rebeca Leonard and
James Keeley , ( 2009). Land grab or
development opportunity? Agricultural investment and
international land deals in Africa. Available at:
http://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu/dlc/bitstream/handle/10535/6178/land%20grab%20or%20dev%20opportunity.pd
f?sequence=1
9. M. Thenmozhi (Professor), ( 2013). Types of
Strategies. Department of Management Studies. Available at:
http://nptel.iitm.ac.in/courses/IIT-MADRAS/Management_Science_I/slides/9_6s.pdf
Indian Institute of Technology
Madras, Chennai 600 036
10. Obang
Metho, (2011). Land grabs deals, “dollars in the pockets of corrupt
leaders”. Available at:
http://ecadforum.com/articles/obang-metho-lang-grab-deals-dollars-in-the-pockets-of-corrupt-leaders/
11. Oromo Graduates of the New Mellenium, (2000). 2000
Oromo Garaduates of Higher Educational
Institutes/Ebbifamtoota Oromoo Bara Barnoota Sadarkaa
Ol-Aanaa Kan Bara 2000 Magaazini.
12. OSA, (2013). OSA‟s Appeal Letter to the Secretary
General of the UN on Land-Grabbing in Oromia.
Available at: http://gadaa.com/oduu/19350/2013/04/19/osas-appeal-letter-to-the-secretary-general-of-the-unon-
land-grabbing-in-oromia/
13. Tinyade Kachika, (2011). Land Grabbing in Africa.
A Review of the Impacts and the Possible Poiciy
Responses. Available
at : http://www.oxfamblogs.org/eastafrica/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Land-Grabbingin-
Africa.-Final.pdf
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