Save Africa from its ‘saviours’
Indigenous people know how to conserve biodiversity far better than any so-called experts from the capitalist Global North
Amid the unprecedented global ecological crisis, Africa still supports one quarter of the world’s biodiversity and the largest assemblages of megafauna. Indigenous Africans of the rangelands, desert and forests have always protected their fauna and flora.
Land, where they exercise traditional rights, has proven to be central for biodiversity conservation. But they are facing the threat of a land grab by Western conservation agencies and their corporate and state allies, who advocate to double the coverage of protected areas around the world by setting aside 30% of terrestrial cover for such areas.
An overlooked yet critical perspective of protected areas is their primitive accumulation function to transfer wealth and immaterial values of nature from colonies to colonisers. They start with the violent dispossession of indigenous people, followed by militarised control over the territory and commodification of lands and wildlife resources by the corporate imperialists.
The 2022 book, The Violence of Conservation in Africa: State, Militarization and Alternatives, demonstrates why dehumanisation and violence against Africans are permanent features of conservation in Africa and how Western conservation agencies wield power to assault African states’ sovereignty, in order to gain political and economic control over vast areas rich in biodiversity.
The NGO African Parks embodies the growing influence of conservation driven by Western capitalists and their allies in the African political class. Founded by a Dutch billionaire, the agency acquired and manages 14.7-million hectares of land in 11 countries in West, Central and Southern Africa.
It has been at the forefront of the militarisation of parks in Africa, recruiting rangers from local communities who receive paramilitary training from French and Israeli military personnel.
African Parks is not unique. Many conservation NGOS are led by Western capitalists who indulge their own private interests and bankroll platforms such as Capitals Coalition to push ideas about the best way to save the last remaining African wildlife. Western financiers such as Goldman Sachs and the Blackstone group are working in unison with international conservation NGOS by seizing on the biodiversity crisis to package predatory agendas under the guise of conservation.
Yet the violence and sheer pace and scale at which conservation in Africa absorbs indigenous lands to be integrated into the global capitalist system for commodification has gone mostly uncriticised.
Why is that, and what forces sustain such an enduring yet insidious image of moral high ground in conservation?
Protecting wildlife requires an understanding of what we are protecting it from. Colonialism, capitalism and white supremacy gave birth to this incommensurable ecological crisis, including the rapid decline of wildlife populations. It should also be clear that protecting biodiversity dominates the framing of the black internationalism movement, while the Convention on Biological Diversity pushes an obfuscating vision of a global society living in harmony with nature that serves little more than to maintain the status quo ushered through a colonial and capitalist order.
But the propaganda machine in the capitalist core has convinced its population that the poor Africans and their exploding population are the major drivers of wildlife extinction; that if the poor African, disgruntled by the crop-raiding elephants roaming in their village, also benefited from conservation they would be motivated to protect wildlife.
Never mind government resettlement policies and state-sanctioned land grabs by corporations that are pushing the poor African further into dangerous wildlife territory. The African is rendered poor by ongoing colonial plunder and wanton expressions of domination. The impoverished African is collectively deemed as disposable and so is the one who must bear the brunt of turning their land into Empire’s private zoo.
They use dangerous anti-african rhetorical devices including slogans such as “African chainsaw massacre” and “Every African is a poacher …” and convince us that the best ally to save wildlife is the elite class who pays $800 a night to luxuriate in the African wilderness and the trophy hunter who nearly decimated the elephant population.
They tell us that tourism can save wildlife while providing meagre employment to the dispossessed Africans.
When conservation organisations are challenged, their response is to sell their position on higher ground by arguing that biodiversity conservation is an ethical necessity even with a legacy rife with racism, dispossession and the slaughtering of wildlife central to indigenous cultures.
The appeal of most well-intentioned Western conservationists to consider indigenous rights sounds like a plea on behalf of the voiceless that falls short of calling for full restitution of land rights, stopping the expansion of protected areas and disbanding militarised conservation.
None of these accounts interrogate the entire colonial apparatus that reproduces circumstances where landscapes are emptied of people and the African villager is paid crumbs to serve tourists, while the Western-educated researcher incessantly theorises about conservation policy misfits and has Africans convinced that we have no choice but to negotiate with colonisers about issues on our lands.
Our media acculturation through movies such as The Lion King and Out of Africa cement imaginaries of benign conservation with such tenacious reign over our imagination that doesn’t allow critical analysis of who and what elephants and rhinoceroses really need protection from.
Instead, they produce self-proclaimed wildlife defenders with narrow sets of interest focusing on single species conservation. As a result, mainstream conservationists — largely dominated by middle- and upper-class liberals of the Global North — adopt as their symbolic leader white conservationists such as Jane Goodall whose image has been rendered palatable, and nonthreatening to corporate interest.
Yet they rarely contend with the forces that murdered the recalcitrant and uncompromising land and water protectors, such as Fikile Ntshangase and Berta Cáceres, who launched an assault on rapacious corporations and their state allies to protect the ecosystems that give and sustain life for humans and wildlife.
Instead, they pitch the tired narrative about empowering poor Africans and turning them into foot soldiers in their orchestrated war on wildlife.
What is most dangerous about these reductionist takes is that voracious forces are seizing on the conservation-development nexus as a way of packaging predatory agendas under the guise of conservation, to acquire and control natural
resources in areas of the Global South rich in biodiversity.
As we think about the future of conservation alongside the liberation struggles of black and indigenous peoples, privatising and militarising the commons to “protect” biodiversity have no place in our world. Instead, land should be restored to its original owners by birthright, where they can exercise traditional rights that have proven to be central in global conservation.
The struggle to protect land, water and wildlife from destructive forces is deeply entangled with the decolonial struggle.
Survival International has been at the forefront of the battle to decolonise conservation by working with indigenous people to protect their land and livelihoods and offering a vision we should all draw lessons from to save the last remaining biodiversity hotspots.
Protecting wildlife requires an understanding of what we are protecting it from
This is an edited version of an article first published by Africa is a Country. Aby L Sène is an assistant professor in parks and conservation area management at Clemson University in the US.
The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the