The Star Early Edition

Ongoing fight for ancestral land

Families claim park rangers and soldiers have repeatedly attacked their homes

- LIAM TAYLOR

THE landscape is bucolic: shoulder-high grass, patches of woodland and the occasional homestead, all sloping down to the east bank of Uganda’s River Nile.

But the charred ruins of burned huts tell of long-running tensions in the area surroundin­g Apaa village, northern Uganda, where families who claim the area as ancestral land are pitted against the government, which has declared it a wildlife reserve.

Local residents said park rangers and soldiers had repeatedly attacked their homes, stolen animals and uprooted crops to drive them from the area.

“If they get you, they can cane you,” said one man, who asked not to be named for fear of retaliatio­n. “They can tell you: ‘Keep away from here because there is a forest’.”

The disputed land, called the East Madi Wildlife Reserve, is home to thousands of people and covers about 830km², an area more than half the size of greater London.

In a conflict that has rumbled on for about a decade, more than 840 homes were destroyed between late 2017 and June 2018 alone, according to research by Human Rights Focus, a Ugandan non-profit.

“It is true we have chased people from the reserve,” Bashir Hangi, spokespers­on for the state-run Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA), said.

“As an agency of government, we have a responsibi­lity of ensuring that these protected areas are free of encroachme­nt,” he said in his office in Kampala, the capital.

Hangi denied that rangers burn huts which are still in use but confirmed that “we pull the huts down after people have left”.

The evictions sometimes turned violent: The wildlife authority has acknowledg­ed that one man was shot dead by a stray bullet during evictions in 2012.

Residents and Anthony Akol, a member of parliament, also said another man was shot by soldiers last year, which the army denies.

Apaa has a long history of forced displaceme­nt, stretching back to colonial times, when British authoritie­s ordered people to move from the area, ostensibly to control “sleeping sickness”, a tropical disease affecting sub-Saharan African countries. The land was later used for hunting.

In the 1990s, communitie­s were uprooted again, this time by war. The government herded most of the population into camps as it fought a rebellion led by Joseph Kony and his Lord’s Resistance Army.

From 2008, residents said that people began trickling back onto the land, but were told that it had been declared a wildlife reserve.

Although the Ugandan constituti­on recognises ownership of customary land, which is passed down through families and held without a title deed, the disruption caused by the war made land claims difficult to prove, say land rights advocates.

“Is it right to gazette land that was previously occupied by people in their absence?” asked Lucy Akello, a local MP who opposes the project, adding that the army has “brutalised” the area’s residents.

In recent years local protests have put Apaa – a remote area with no cellphone signal – in the national spotlight.

In 2015, a group of elderly women stripped naked in front of startled government ministers and surveyors who had come to mark out the boundaries of the districts at the edges of the reserve.

James Leku, the chairman of Adjumani district, keeps a map of the area beside his desk, mounted on a wooden board.

He said that people in the reserve are recent arrivals who “decided to settle on lands that did not belong to them”.

In 2009, Adjumani district and the Ugandan Wildlife Authority granted a concession to South African investor Bruce Martin for sports hunting in the reserve and, according to Leku, stood to gain a share of any revenues.

But Martin said he is no longer interested.

“I’m not going back where people are still fighting,” he said, adding that animals such as buffalo and waterbuck have disappeare­d from the area. “As far as the wildlife reserve is concerned, there’s nothing left.”

By contrast, politician­s in Amuru, including Akello, say the reserve lies on the ancestral lands of the local Acholi people and that residents have nowhere else to go.

Plans for further evictions are now on hold as a presidenti­al committee takes more time to investigat­e the land dispute.

This follows the work of a previous committee which examined the issue last year, led by Uganda’s prime minister Ruhakana Rugunda.

But residents said they will not leave, whatever happens.

“This is not a game reserve, this is our land,” said one woman who faces eviction from her home in the disputed area. “Where else can I go with my children?” |

 ?? AP African News Agency (ANA) ?? WOMEN and children return home with plastic containers of water. There have been tensions between residents and government amid plans to turn the Apaa village, northern Uganda, into a wildlife reserve. | BEN CURTIS
AP African News Agency (ANA) WOMEN and children return home with plastic containers of water. There have been tensions between residents and government amid plans to turn the Apaa village, northern Uganda, into a wildlife reserve. | BEN CURTIS

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