THE newest Western plan to invade Africa was hatched in May 2010 by then French president Nicolas Sarkozy together with pliable African leaders he had summoned to a crucial meeting in Nice.

The minutes of the summit should offer clues to the events that followed in Tunisia, the traditional French pocket borough, and thence to Libya, Egypt etc.

Sarkozy’s essential message to the African leaders was: are we going to remain bystanders to China’s growing domination of Africa? China of course had arrived there in a big way in the 1970s, not to necessarily challenge the surviving colonial order but to disrupt the Soviet influence in the continent. The rivalry surfaced in the form of the internecine stand-off between contending militias in the birth of Zimbabwe. China won the battle with Robert Mugabe emerging the victor. The West tried hard to dislodge him, but Mugabe survived the subterfuge, which Muammar Qadhafi couldn’t.

French warplanes, supported in various ways by the United States and the United Kingdom, have recently been bombing Mali, targeting alleged Al Qaeda hideouts. Almost certainly the trigger for the new war in the heart of agriculture-rich Africa came from the food shock of 2008. That’s when the predatory hunt for arable land intensified not only in Africa, but in Latin America and Asia, including in Pakistan and India. Much like the role assigned to Pakistan in Afghanistan, Ethiopia, with its mix of facile democracy and an authoritarian exigency, was groomed as the new and reliable staging post for the coming assault on Africa.

We all know the Sarkozy project didn’t end with the dismantling of Libya’s sway over sub-Saharan Africa. In Mali, a Libyan multinational corporation, firmly under the West’s clasp, has been awarded 100,000 hectares of prime agricultural land to grow export crops and rear livestock. The indirect seizure promises to be just as rewarding as capturing a country by force.

The $25 billion project includes building one of the largest irrigation canals in Africa allowing Mali’s precious water supply to be used by Malibya, the firm mentioned above. The project is intended to develop agricultural industry through foreign direct investment — a strategy aggressively promoted by the World Bank. In reality it has already violently displaced hundreds of families and demolished entire villages. Farmers are deprived of their livelihood and the capacity of the local people to feed themselves is hampered.

Earlier this week in Delhi, we heard eyewitness accounts of “egregious human rights abuses” inflicted by the Ethiopian government on its people to make way for agricultural land investments, primarily for Indian carpetbaggers. The Oakland Institute’s findings titled Unheard voices: The human rights impact of land investments on indigenous communities in Gambella, urges Ethiopia to put an end to forced evictions of indigenous peoples in areas targeted for land investment. Besides the Chinese and the Saudis, Indians are taking the lead in the unfolding human disaster. Unheard voices, which builds on the Oakland Institute’s impressive in-country research on land investments in Ethiopia, also features testimony of two indigenous human rights defenders who travelled to New Delhi. They pleaded with Indian businessmen (in vain) to ensure that their investments respect human rights. According to the report, Indians make up the majority of private investors in Ethiopian agricultural land.

Obang Metho of the Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia and Nyikaw Ochalla of the Anywaa Survival Organisation testified to the human rights abuses against Anuak community members in the Gambella region of Ethiopia, one of several regions targeted for land investment.

“When the Ethiopian government met with [the investors], the local people were never consulted and were never compensated. The decision was made without involving the people”, said Obang Metho. “For the indigenous people, [their land,] their one identity and existence as a people for their survival has been taken away by the very government that is supposed to protect them.” The story is not dissimilar to the plunder under way in the tribal regions of India.

According to the Oakland Institute report, since 2010, the Ethiopian government has displaced hundreds of thousands of indigenous persons from their ancestral lands and has made these lands available to investors. This relocation process, which the Ethiopian government calls “villagisation,” has reportedly destroyed livelihoods, rendering small-scale farmers and pastoralist communities dependent on food aid and fearful for their own survival.

The exploitation spurs protests and organised agitations. Last August, the military responded to an April 2012 attack on a large commercial farm in Ethiopia’s agriculture-rich Gambella region with alleged arbitrary arrests, rape, and other abuses against scores of local villagers. Forced displacement, inadequate resources, and other abuses against Gambella’s population reportedly persisted in the second year of the government’s “villagisation” programme.


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Comments (15)

Sumit Mazumdar
February 8, 2013 5:04 am
The barbaric people that the French are getting rid of in Northern Mali are the radical Islamists Mr. Dinesh is talking about. These people destroyed World Heritage Sites of Timbuktu, killed and maimed people, stopped people from participating in music (Mali has been a great center of music in the immediate past - even Europeans show up). Many of them foreigners in Mali, they established so-called sharia in a country where they had no business. I say all power to the French. They liberated the Malians, who have been extremely grateful to the French. I have no clue where Naqvi get his news. Naqvi's article is full of inaccuracies and untruths which should be exposed.
krishnan
February 8, 2013 1:23 am
Agree- no need to bring Islam here..And what he has written is correct.We are always controlled by the MNCs and consumerist policies.If we are a democracy, we have to look at Sustainable Development not the Chinese way
Md Imran
February 7, 2013 7:47 pm
Jawed Naqwi sahib, you are our true hero ! You, Arundati Roy and Angana Chatterjee are among the few journalists who keep exposing the biggest threat to world peace - India. Ever since the advent of the Indian union, Indians have been raking trouble from Africa to the Americas. Time to bring their real face in front of the world alhamadillulah
Malak Yousafzai
February 7, 2013 5:30 pm
Its highly pleasing to have people, though very few, who are balanced in their judgement and would not want to avoid blaming Islam for everything that happens around the globe. The writer has the liberty to give his assessment and Dinesh the full authority to counter argue. Wouldn't it be more fruitful to get indulged in positive discussion w/o any hidden agenda. Thanks indeed
Rahul
February 7, 2013 2:46 pm
Dude - did you even read the article before writing this comment? Where is radical Islam coming into all of this.
SM
February 7, 2013 2:17 pm
Mr. Bhagwat what you have proposed here solely depends on a drive to be invoked on the basis of societal justice and moral beliefs. I second each and every aspect of your comment, which is of course the need-of-hour, but unfortunately looses its applicability without the prior consent of those, who have been articulating the present global institutions. The most important thing, that I believe, is the the higher level of participation in any kind of decision making, of those who would be affected by such measures. Who would be morally strong enough to compromise over his/her material benefits? That's the dilemma! Now, we have started realizing that, one way or an other, its going to be our moral and ethical values which could lead us toward global justice, none of the systems(capitalism, communism etc.) is implicitly capable enough!
Sandip
February 7, 2013 1:37 pm
I agree that this is always the issue with any projects including in India. Main reason is lack of education and other opportunities to for local population steeming from one single thing aka lack of education and vocational training and again problem made worst by bureaucracy who really have no clue how to handle this things properly.
Ram
February 7, 2013 1:04 pm
Here we go again!! Forever the critic with no constructive solution in sight!!
raika45
February 7, 2013 12:08 pm
You really have an open dislike for India don't you?Talking of displaced persons your friend China evicted thousands of people and inundated acres of land not mentioning towns and village when it built the 3 Gorges dams.At least in Ethiopia the displaced are offered jobs and cluster housing. Land the people could not for years cultivate due to lack of incentives by the authorities.Ever heard of the Ethiopian famines that strike the country time and again?There are bound to be some trouble creators. I t happens everywhere.Take a look at your flood affected farming people. As far as I know, hundreds are still displaced from floods that occurred more than a year ago.Sahib don't just let fly your opinions by listening to a few.Learn to dig deeper into the issue before commenting. Good correspondents are those who get their facts right.
Stranger
February 7, 2013 10:46 am
Please dont portray the WEST as villians all the time.
raghu
February 7, 2013 10:13 am
what a corelation...man you are funny
Prem
February 7, 2013 5:52 am
Sir you talk as though there were no famines and deaths in Africa before the advent of business people trying to exploit the available land for farming. Come on, there was so much of poverty in these countries and they do need the investment money to pull out large sections of society out of it. In the process there is a big displacement involved but that is where the government concerned should do Cost-Benefit Analysis. Simply put if many more people are benefited than those affected, they have to just move forward.
Ravi
February 7, 2013 4:14 am
Very clear that the writer has never stepped out of his home while writing such fanciful theories.
umesh bhagwat
February 7, 2013 3:29 am
neo-liberal economics The present economic model being followed all over the world is replete with tremendous dangers and has been responsible for the global meltdown. It is evident that capitalism like communism and socialism has run its course and is now totally bankrupt. Unless a new economic paradigm emerges from the ruins of the past,a sustainable economic recovery will not be possible and will lead to more crises.More inflation,unemployment,social unrest,rise in social inequalities and devaluation of currency seem imminent.The Euro-zone crisis can only get worst from hereon and will result in the breakup of the EU. Even the newly emerging economies in Asia, Africa and Latin America are finding it difficult to make ends meet. The old solutions recommended by the IMF,the World Bank and other international financial solutions are no longer viable. The only way out of the present impasse is a drastic re-structuring of the global economy. New international and multi-lateral financial bodies will have to be created with equal participation by all countries of the world. The era of the dollar as a reserve currency is over! The present restrictions on immigration imposed by the affluent west will have to be reversed and a more open-borders policy put in its place. International trade will have to become more favorable for the poorer countries in Asia,Africa and Latin America. Everyone has to realize that ' United we stand,divided we fall!" The present consumerist led model will have to be amended and a more welfare oriented model put in its place. Environment,public health,reduction in fossil fuel consumption levels,reduction in social in-qualities and defense expenditures will be vital for the safety and security of the new world! Agricultural growth will be crucial! The present trend of indiscriminate urbanization will have to be reversed with due importance being given to rural development. Cooperation will be the key-word for the proposed new economic model for global economic recovery. Instead of pursuing profits,the MNCs will have to put social justice high on their agenda. The new business units should be on a cooperative basis with equal participation by the workers and the management.
dinesh
February 7, 2013 2:08 am
this guy is a typical apologist and conspiracy advocate for radical -Islam .he will criticize anyone and everyone who so ever does anything good in muslim world.