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WORLDWIDE
FOREST/BIODIVERSITY CAMPAIGN NEWS
African
Baka People Crowded Out by Newcomers, Loggers
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Forest
Networking a Project of Ecological Enterprises
http://forests.org/
3/12/97
OVERVIEW,
SOURCE & COMMENTARY by EE
In the
attached photocopy, CNN reports on the impact upon Baka people
of
central Africa as their homelands are opened to logging and other
outside
influences. Allowing indigenous peoples
to practice their
traditional
lifestyles (modified as they wish) upon their traditional
lands
would be a substantial force for forest and cultural
conservation.
g.b.
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RELAYED
TEXT STARTS HERE:
Rain
forest aborigines crowded out by newcomers, loggers
March
11, 1997
Web
posted at: 11:32 p.m. EST (0432 GMT)
From
Correspondent Gary Strieker
c 1997
Cable News Network, Inc.
EASTERN
CAMEROON (CNN) -- The vast rain forest in central Africa is
the
home of countless species of plants and animals -- among them, for
40,000
years, the aboriginal people of this forest.
Many
call them Pygmies but, in eastern Cameroon, they are the Baka.
In a
nation dominated by 13 million ethnic Bantus, there are only
40,000
Bakas. And the Bakas who do live in the Cameroon rain forest
are
overwhelmed by change and the ongoing destruction of their forest
home.
Samuel
Nguiffo of the Center for Environment and Development says the
Bakas
are caught between the majority Bantu and the logging companies.
"Both
of them have claims over the forest," Nguiffo said, "and both of
them
are more powerful than the Bakas. And most of them, for the
Bakas,
are enemies."
As
timber companies push logging roads deeper into the forest,
outsiders
follow the roads to trap and hunt wild animals, and then
slash
and burn to plant crops.
After
living in harmony with the forest for thousands of years,
hunting
and gathering only what they needed to survive, Bakas now find
many of
the forest's resources are exhausted.
The
hunters say there are too few animals so that only the best of
hunters
-- or those endowed with magical powers -- can catch them. And
the
chief in one settlement says the noise from bulldozers and chain
saws
drives animals away.
And
because the forest has been so disturbed, it's hard to find the
special
plants the Bakas use for food, medicines and rituals.
The
Bakas are given little in return when they are displaced from the
forest.
They have no legal title to any land in the forest they've
occupied
since ancient times.
Government
policy refers to them as "marginal social groups," to be
made
into productive members of Cameroon's society by surrendering
their
nomadic life to clear land and plant crops.
Change,
change, and more change
In
other words, Bakas are expected to abandon the culture and
spiritual
life that connects them to the forest, and to join in its
destruction
-- a process already begun.
Alcoholism,
prostitution, unemployment and exploitation by dominant
Bantus
are common dangers confronting Bakas when they leave the
forest.
"They
are facing a very violent civilization, and from this
civilization
they tend to take only the bad aspects," says university
lecturer
Roger Ngoufo.
In
their new settlements, the Baka people are in transition, no longer
depending
on hunting and gathering in the forest -- and facing an
uncertain
future in the fast-growing towns and villages around them.
Several
residents in the roadside settlements say they are happy to be
there
-- the forest is too dangerous. But others say the forest is
paradise
lost.
The
settlements have little to offer -- no school, no health clinic,
and
only a few menial jobs on a nearby Bantu plantation.
What
they really want, and what they should have, says Noel Olinga,
who has
worked with Bakas for 16 years, is a pristine forest reserved
for
their hunting and gathering. But no one in Cameroon takes that
idea
seriously.
The
future looks especially bleak for the young.
"They're
completely lost," says Nguiffo. "They're not Baka, not full
Baka --
they're somewhere in between."
Traditional
Baka initiation rites are held every year to summon the
god of
the forest, the Jengi, to induct young boys into manhood and to
bring
good fortune. But many Bakas say they haven't seen the Jengi in
a long
time.
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