Botswana: Police Helicopter Crashes After Shooting At Bushmen

Bushman Hunters in Kalahari desert

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Botswana bushmen: “If you deny us the right to hunt, you are killing us”

A group of Bushmen who were hunting antelope to feed their families have been shot at from a police helicopter – which later crashed injuring six officers – while it was enforcing Botswana’s hunting ban. Nine Bushmen were arrested and subsequently stripped naked and beaten while in custody.

The Bushmen’s right to live and hunt for food on their ancestral land in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve has been recognized by Botswana’s high court.

Despite this, the government continues to label them as “poachers” and is now using advanced military technology to persecute them and their way of life. This militarization of conservation efforts reflects a global trend which has concerned many human rights campaigners.

Jumanda Gakelebone, a Bushman spokesman, said: “Now they are using planes it’s difficult for anyone to survive.”

Another Bushman, who wanted to remain anonymous, said: “People are very angry at the government. People have decided they will do everything now to go to court. We don’t trust the government… We strongly condemn this latest incident and call on the international community to intervene. The government is still fighting the Bushmen despite its claims.”

The new tactics are similar to those seen in Kaziranga National Park in India, where 62 people have been extrajudicially killed in nine years, and a seven-year-old boy was recently shot by park guards.

Survival has documented dozens of human rights abuses against Bushmen by wildlife officials in the Kalahari. Research has suggested that targeting tribal hunters diverts action away from tackling the true poachers – criminals conspiring with corrupt officials.

Earlier in 2016, Survival launched its “Bot50” campaign calling for the Bushmen to be allowed to return to their lands in time for the country’s fiftieth anniversary in September, rather than continuing to deny them access to it in the name of wildlife conservation. Evidence proves that tribal peoples are better at looking after their environment than anyone else. They are the best conservationists and guardians of the natural world.

Prominent figures including Dominic West, Gillian Anderson, Sophie Okonedo, Mark Rylance, Julian Lennon and Quentin Blake have joined the campaign.

Survival’s Stephen Corry said: “As if the Bushmen haven’t already suffered enough, now they face the prospect of police in helicopters shooting them on sight. Botswana’s president General Khama and his government should be ashamed of themselves for implementing this sort of above-the-law brutality, and so should the big conservation organizations who have failed to speak out against these tactics. “Shoot on sight” is immoral, it’s a con, and it’s harming conservation. Targeting tribal hunters harms conservation. How many more people have to die needlessly before conservationists realize this?”

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Michael Onas
Africa - Online Founder & Senior Editor Africa - Online.Com was founded by Michael Onas in 1997, in the years since the site has grown to become a world leader in African news sector, with millions of readers around the world and followers on social media.