Respect rights of Indigenous forest people - Amnesty tells government

Mau settlers move out of their homes after the government evict them in Kipchoge area of Narok South sub county, Narok county on July 10.
Mau settlers move out of their homes after the government evict them in Kipchoge area of Narok South sub county, Narok county on July 10.

The government must respect the rights of Indigenous forest people who are being forcibly evicted from their homes, Amnesty International has said.

The human rights organisation said this during the International Indigenous Peoples’ Day that was commemorated today.

Observed on the August,9, every year, the day promotes the rights of the indigenous people across the world.

It was first declared by the General Assembly of the United Nations in 1994.

In April of this year President Uhuru Kenyatta, responding to a question on evictions of Indigenous peoples from forests said, “Ours is not to interfere with traditional communities who have lived there. We have done a lot to allow people in those areas, who use those areas for traditional rights, to continue enjoying their practices.”

“Rather than respecting the land rights of the Sengwer people of Embobut Forest, and the Ogiek of Mount Elgon and Mau and working with them as partners in conservation, the Government is forging ahead with an outdated fortress conservation model. Entrusting the forests to the Kenya Forest Service alone will not keep Kenya’s forests and water towers safe” said Irũngũ Houghton, Executive Director of Amnesty International Kenya.

In April this year, a government-mandated Task Force found that the Kenya Forest Service had “overseen wanton destruction of our forests”, and “systematically executed plunder and pillaging of our water towers”.

Amnesty has repeatedly clashed with the state's violence against communities such as Sengwer.

In July, Sengwer representatives reported that Kenya Forest Service guards demolished the houses of three families, stole Sh100,000 ($1000 USD) and destroying household possessions.

These houses were located outside the designated forest area.

There is concern that the Sengwer are being targeted as a community who have objected to forced evictions in Embobut forest.

Amnesty said government agencies descended on Embobut forest last week launching an operation to tackle cattle rustling, which has claimed four lives in recent weeks.

Based on past experience, many Sengwer fear the operation could be a pretext to carry out further forced evictions living peacefully in the forest.

In January, the European Union suspended funding for a climate change mitigation project in the Embobut forest worth Sh 3.6 billion after one Sengwer man was killed and another seriously injured during an operation by the Kenya Forest Service to forcibly evict the Sengwer.

In May, Amnesty International published a report showing that widespread, sometimes deadly, force has been used against the Sengwer people.

It also highlighted significant flaws in the decision-making process that has been used to forcibly evict the Sengwer from their ancestral lands in Embobut forest.

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