Sengwer 'hiding in forest' as Kenya pressured to stop evictions

Members of the Sengwer community at Eldoret High Court after their evictions case was postponed, February 2014. /Stanley Magut
Members of the Sengwer community at Eldoret High Court after their evictions case was postponed, February 2014. /Stanley Magut

Kenya

came under pressure on Wednesday to halt security operations in a forest where a man was killed last week.

Activists called on Finland to follow the European Union in suspending aid they said was fuelling the land conflict.

A court in the western town of Eldoret on Monday ordered forest guards and the police to stop evicting the Sengwer from Embobut forest, which they claim as their ancestral land, until February 27 when it will hear their case.

More than 100 armed

Kenya

Forest Service (KFS) guards entered the forest on December 25, firing gunshots, burning homes and killing livestock, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said.

"Most of the members of the Sengwer community are hiding in the forest, staying in caves and other highly vulnerable places exposed to the dangers of wild animals and vagaries of the weather," 21 Sengwer petitioners said in court documents.

"The assault, burning and destruction of their properties is a violation or threat of violation to their right to life."

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Their battle illustrates global tension between indigenous peoples and conservation policies excluding them from protected forests. Land is an explosive political issue in

Kenya.

The EU shelved a $35 million water conservation scheme in the forest on January 17 after

KFS guards killed a man belonging to the hunter-gatherer community, which opposes the aid project.

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The union and Amnesty International will visit the forest on Thursday, activists said.

The Sengwer petition, seen by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, said they went to court after hearing local media report on Jan. 19 that "the government would undertake air and ground operation to evict all persons in Embobut Forest".

Police and county officials were not immediately available to comment. Environment minister, Judi Wakhungu, said last week that security forces were flushing criminals out of the forest.

Almost a dozen international rights groups called on Finland on Wednesday to suspend a 9.5 million euro ($12 million) project, working with KFS to support the forestry sector.

"This is funding the ongoing human rights abuses by KFS that involve the burning of homes, forced evictions, and now their killing of a Sengwer community member," the groups, including the UK-based Forest Peoples Programme, said in an open letter.

The Sengwer have fought for more than five decades for the right to live in the Embobut forest in the Cherengany Hills, from where they were first evicted by British colonialists in the 19th century.

"It's our call to the Finnish government to suspend this project just like the EU," Sengwer activist Yator Kiptum said on Wednesday. "KFS just continued burning homes today."

Dedan Ndiritu, KFS's head of conservancy in the region, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone on Wednesday, that the situation in Embobut forest was "normal" and "not much is happening there".

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