The Tanzanian government sold off ancestral land owned by the Masai to the Dubai royal family in order to make way for a luxury hunting ground for royal hunters. At least 40,000 Masai are now under threat of being evicted from their homeland
- Begüm Tunakan Published : 23.11.2014 16:48:30
The Tanzanian government's ambition to turn 1,500-square-kilometers of land into a hunting reserve for an Emirati hunting company catering to the royal family of the United Arab Emirates has led to severe criticism from some global activist groups including Avaaz. The global activist groups started a campaign in 2013 to draw global attention to the Tanzanian government's "plans to kick thousands of [Masai] families off [of their] lands so that wealthy tourists can use them to shoot lions and leopards."
"As citizens from around the world, we call on you to oppose any attempt to evict Masai from their traditional land or require them to relocate to make way for foreign hunters. We are counting on you to be a champion for your people and stop any attempt to change their land rights against their will," the petition stated while calling on Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete to stop the imminent evictions. The activists have been collecting an online petition of more than 2 million names so far to stop the government plan that would destroy the pastoral lifestyle of the people and wildlife. The activist group also claimed that the Tanzanian government offered 1 billion Tanzanian shillings ($578,000) for the ancestral lands in exchange for leaving their homes.
About 900,000 Masai of East Africa live in southern Kenya and northern Tanzania. Masai land bordering the Serengeti national park is of crucial importance for the community due to the fact that they heavily relying on cattle. As they occupy a total land area of 160,000-square-kilometers, the largely pastoral community has been subjected to lose significant parts of their land. Long before the current government plan, they were moved from the Serengeti by the British in 1959.
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