Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Mining

Karamoja Mining Rush Threatens Livelihoods of Indigenous People

Billions of investments into mining projects have breathed new life in Uganda’s once-neglected Karamoja region, creating thousands of jobs in mineral-rich heartlands near the Kenyan border but the investment rush has also brought new problems, fueling environmental degradation, rights violations, and land grabbing, threatening livelihoods of millions of indigenous Karamojong people.

Ugandan authorities are investigating the latest deadly clash in the impoverished gold mining sub-county of Rupa Moroto district which happened in late April, that left a 28-year old local defense personnel dead and forced several hundred locals to flee their homes after armed assailants staged a daytime raid and stole gold ores, worth millions of Ugandan shillings. Days earlier, dozens of policemen from Uganda’s mineral protection police who had been deployed to secure the lucrative gold mining village abandoned their positions, due to rising attacks, blamed on assailants, who usually cross from Kenya’s Turkana region.

In a region long inhabited traditionally by cattle-herders, the rush to get the region’s precious minerals gold, limestone, and marble, is uprooting people, damaging key water sources, and stirring social unrest. Locals talk of being displaced from their ancestral farmlands by land grabbers while others are now suffering from many diseases, including skin infections and diarrhea, blamed on consuming water from contaminated water bodies, as some miners use hazardous chemicals including mercury to extract gold.

Impact On The Environment

“We have been invaded by foreigners who don’t care about our livelihoods,” said Anne Napeyo, a 30-year old mother in Rupa. “Many of our people are getting wounds on their skin because the water here is contaminated”

Thousands in Karamoja have taken jobs in the mines while others have become “artisanal diggers” digging their own holes and tunnels, risking cave-ins and other dangers in pursuit of buried treasure, local leaders say. In addition to hazards such as contaminated water bodies, mining activities are leaving behind gaping pits, which now dot vast areas as artisan miners leave these behind in search of new grounds. Small children sometimes drown in these pits, while local farmers have lost livestock.

Sacred grounds known as ‘Akiriket’ are also being destroyed. According to the Karamoja traditional setting, every community is socially organized to have its own Akiriket from where the assemble for social events from initiations to naming happens. Community leaders say the minerals are turning into a curse.

“We want development but it can’t be at the expense of our peoples’ lives and livelihoods,” said Margerate Lomonyang coordinator of Karamoja Women Cultural Group and Karamoja representative on the multi-stakeholder group for the Extractives Industries Transparency initiative EITI. “Investors are taking advantage of desperate people who are trying to make a living in the mines”

Land Grabbing

A total of 17,083 square kilometers of land area in Karamoja is licensed for mineral exploration and extraction activities, according to official data. In 2018, Chinese mining company Sunbelt was given 3.3 square kilometers of land to set up a $13 million marble mining factory in Rupa sub-county. A year later, the company expanded its operations to cover additional 4.1 square kilometers, ostensibly after a deal with local leaders. Hundreds of families have since been pushed out of their ancestral homes, local officials say. Locals accuse Rupa Community development trust, a community trustee group created three years ago, of conniving with investors to steal their land.

“The community leaders came to us with compensation documents saying they were going to help us demand compensation when investors come,” one local known as Lokol, said “They tricked us to sign them without paying anything, now we have nowhere to go.”

While Sunbelt insists that company representatives went through the right channels to acquire the land, including signing a memorandum of understanding with the local leaders, authorities are investigating the transaction, according to the energy and minerals ministry.

“Sunbelt violated the community members’ rights to fair and adequate compensation in the land acquisition process. They didn’t involve the community members who are the real custodians of the land,” said Lomonyang.

Another company DAO Marble Africa Limited, which operates a mining license to mine marble has been accused by Human Rights Watch for rights violations, including allegations that the company connived and paid off a few local chiefs without compensating the local residents.

Land ownership in Karamoja is under customary tenure and communally owned and managed. This means that land is held in trust by one generation for another with the elders as ‘stewards’. This very unclear land ownership model makes fair compensation a difficult issue as few elders negotiate with the companies for the temporary acquisition of land.

Local Miners Association To The Rescue

Karamoja Miners Association unites miners in the region and was formed to sensitize local mining communities about their rights, help locals demand accountability from their leaders, and seek fair compensation from mining companies.

A Woman makes a submission during a meeting organized by Resource Rights Africa and karamoja Miners Association to educate miners about their labor rights
Women engage in mining activities in Karamoja. Poor working conditions and environmental degradation pose health risks for them. Credit: Resource Rights Africa

“We organize miners in groups so that they have a formidable voice and can negotiate for better wages and working conditions from mining companies,” says Simon Nagiro the chairperson of the association. “We have also embarked on interpreting into local languages miners’ rights as enshrined under the mining laws.”

Regions’ Mineral Potential

Karamoja is endowed with a vast array of metallic and industrial minerals that have the potential to be developed commercially. A 2011 survey found that the region contains over 50 minerals including gold, limestone, uranium, marble, graphite, gypsum, iron, wolfram, nickel, copper, cobalt, lithium, and tin. With 61% of Karamoja’s 1.2 million people living in poverty, the region’s mineral potential holds the promise of economic development.

Karamoja Mining At A Glance

The Constitution of Uganda 1995, vests all mineral resources in the hands of government but article 244 provides that minerals shall be exploited taking into account the interests of landowners and local governments and further states that land will not be deprived of a person without prompt payment of fair and adequate compensation. Under articles 39 and 41, every Ugandan has a right to a clean and healthy environment and as such can bring an action for any pollution or improper disposal of wastes.

The Mining Act, 2003 is the principal law that governs mining in Uganda. Under Section 4 of the act, a person may acquire the right to search for and mine any mineral by acquiring a license issued by the commissioner. Section 15 provides for payment of compensation to owners of private land for damage done to the surface of the land or to any crops, trees, buildings, or for livestock injured or killed by the negligence of the holder of the license or an agent. Section 43 provides that a mining license shall not be granted unless the proposed mining program takes into proper account environmental impact assessment and safety factors.

Section 110 further makes it mandatory for every license holder to submit a costed environmental restoration plan which requires approval by the National Environment Management Authority. The Act however does not clearly address the regulation of mining activities by different government agencies and how they can follow up with the investors regarding royalties. This is worsened by the limited role local government plays in the regulation of mining activities due to resource constraints.

Rights Of Indigenous Groups In Uganda

According to Minority rights group international, Karamojong pastoralists, are some of the most marginalized minorities in Uganda, isolated economically and politically. Commonly stereotyped by their compatriots as violent and backward, other Ugandans refer to them as warriors. The African Commission’s International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs also recognizes the Karamojong people as indigenous minority groups in Uganda. However, Uganda does not officially recognize Indigenous minority groups. This lack of formal recognition by the state further disenfranchises Karamojong.

Uganda is a signatory to various international instruments that reiterate the rights of indigenous people. These include; the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People 2007, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. However, the country is still lagging behind in terms of protecting the rights of indigenous people.

An artisan gold miner mines for gold in Rupa sub-county
A Karamojong woman digs a hole as she mines for gold in Rupa-sub-county. Such holes dot the area and have become death traps for both children and livestock. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire

“We are empowering communities by educating them about their land and property rights so that they are able to hold mining companies accountable,” says Abaho Herbert a program officer at Resource Rights Africa a local charity organization operating in the region. “We also work with local leaders to put in place by-laws that enable fair wages for miners to avoid being exploited by the mining companies”

Since Belgium-based Africa gold refinery set up a $20 million gold plant in Uganda, the country has become a magnet for gold mining activities, notably in Karamoja. Gold exports fetch $1 billion every year and have overtaken coffee as Uganda’s leading export commodity.

For many local leaders, this rush is the reason for increased insecurity, displacement of locals, and inter-communal clashes. Gold miners are routinely attacked by assailants looking for the highly sought-after metal, bringing back memories of the insecurity that plagued the region at the height of cattle rustling in the 1990s and 2000s. Illegal miners continue to flock to the 7 districts of Karamoja, driving up displacements, clashes over land ownership and shared water bodies.

Food insecurity is also a challenge in the region and reliance on natural resources has rendered livelihoods sensitive to climate change, already a reality manifested inform of recurring droughts, flash floods, and prolonged dry spells.

In June 2021, Uganda’s cabinet approved a draft mining law (Mining and minerals Bill 2019) that imposes steep penalties for violations in the sector, including fines of 1 billion shillings ($278,164.12) and prison terms of up to seven years for those found guilty of environmental degradation, illegal mining among other violations.

The new law will replace the old mining legislation that has been in place since 2003, when the region hadn’t discovered vast minerals, according to Vicent Kedi the commissioner licensing at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development.

“The new law will solve issues of non-compliance by mining companies to social and environmental safeguards, ” he says. “We are working with local leaders in the region to continuously monitor mining company operations.

This story was produced with the support of Internews’ Earth Journalism Network’s Indigenous Story Grants

Poverty clobbers Zimbabwe’s mineral-rich areas

MARANGE — His two thatched huts lay side by side overlooking a stream beyond which stood mounds of soils dug up from the diamond mining claims in the vicinity of his home.

Yet, over the 14 years since the diamonds were discovered in Marange, 56-year old Tenson Gowero has never tasted the sweetness of the country’s diamond wealth despite living in the midst of the gems.

Marange is a district in Zimbabwe’s Manicaland Province, West of Mutare, a town at the country’s border with Mozambique.

Home to many poverty-stricken villagers like Gowero, Marange is also an area of widespread small-scale diamond production in Chiadzwa, again west of Mutare, the Manicaland capital.

Even as Marange diamond fields were known to the public over a decade ago, the lives of many villagers here like Gowero have not changed for the better amid claims locals like Gowero himself were overpowered by migrant artisanal miners who descended on Marange diamonds salivating for the gems.

“I have nothing to show as a sign that I live in an area that houses the country’s diamond wealth; my children dropped out of school and I have no job even as some of my colleagues found employment at local diamond mining firms, I couldn’t because I know nobody there,” Gowero told Ubuntu Times.

Slums dot gold-rich area.
Hordes of slums dot gold-rich Shurugwi where mining corporations have over the years extracted the precious metal, however neglecting the general outlook of the communities whose gold wealth has enriched them. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo / Ubuntu Times

In 2006, diamonds were discovered in Marange, home to Gowero, triggering a diamond rush that lasted for three to four years, but even then Gowero claims that never turned around his fortunes.

“I have remained poor although it is known all over the world that my area sits on the country’s bulky diamond wealth,” said Gowero.

Yet, in a 2013 report, Zimbabwe’s Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Mines said it ‘observed with concern that from the time that the country was allowed to trade its diamonds on the world market, the government has still not realized any meaningful contributions from the sector.’

Besides the poverty that has pounded many villagers like Gowero, rights abuses have also accompanied Zimbabwe’s diamond wealth.

In fact, at the height of artisanal diamond mining in Gowero’s village, in particular, around 2008 an estimated 40,000 artisanal miners and diggers lived in the Marange diamond fields.

But, without warning whatsoever, the Zimbabwean government under the leadership of late President Robert Mugabe, deployed the military into Marange in November 2008 to violently put an end to artisanal mining.

Shabby home at center of gold riches.
Located in Venture, a place in the mining town of Kadoma in an area called Patchway in Zimbabwe’s Mashonaland West Province is a poor home consisting of two accommodation features a mud-plastered single room house roofed with a single zink sheet and a thatched kitchen hut built from sticks plastered with mud although the home stands in the midst of gold wealth. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo / Ubuntu Times

Subsequently, what ensued was a holocaust of local diggers and dealers.

But, for many Marange villagers like Gowero, even as brutality reigned supreme on Zimbabwe’s mines, poverty for them surpassed all and even to this day, he (Gowero) still bewails the grueling poverty that has gripped many like him despite living in a diamond-rich section of Zimbabwe.

Instead, according to civil society organizations like the Platform for Youth Development (PYD), criminal gangs made up of artisanal miners with links to Zimbabwe’s governing politicians, have seized parts of the diamond mining areas in Marange.

“Local villagers since the days the diamonds were discovered have rarely had the turn to directly benefit nor enjoy the diamond wealth of this country as armed gangs from other provinces like the Midlands Province seized the opportunity to run the show on the diamond fields,” Claris Madhuku, PYD director, told Ubuntu Times.

In Zimbabwe’s Midlands Province, machete-armed artisanal gold miners better known as mashurugwi because of their origin in Shurugwi town in the Province, stormed Manicaland’s Marange diamonds fields 14 years ago, elbowing out many locals like Gowero from the opportunities to mine the gems, rendering them further poorer.

Meanwhile, the Midlands Province itself, with a population of approximately 1.6 million, even with its gold wealth, 70 percent of its population is living in poverty, according to the Zimbabwe Statistics Agency (ZIMSTAT).

In Manicaland, where Marange diamond fields are located, 65 percent of the area’s population of 1.7 million as of the 2012 Zimbabwean census, are poor — many like Gowero, despite the people living in the midst of the country’s diamond wealth.

Derelict home in the midst of gold wealth.
In Patchway, a gold-rich area in Zimbabwe’s Kadoma town in Mashonaland West Province lies an old thatched house built from mud-plastered sticks where some people here have called home for years despite being resident in a gold-rich area. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo / Ubuntu Times

According to human rights activists like Elvis Mugari of the Occupy Africa Unity Square, a rights organization that was led by the missing journalist-cum activist Itai Dzamara, ‘in all the mineral-rich areas in Zimbabwe, criminal gangs have gained control, barring poor people from accessing the minerals.’

In order for ordinary persons to mine either gold or diamonds, or any other precious stones, to Mugari, ‘they have to bribe criminal gangs before they are permitted to mine, and so only the financially able can mine at the end of the day.’

So, Gowero said ‘as villagers, we have not only been robbed of diamonds but also of our freedom and we are now worse off than we were before diamonds were discovered here.’

As such, many poor villagers like Gowero even as they live amid plentiful diamond wealth, face twin hurdles to contend with — poverty and rights abuse.

To regional human rights defenders like Dewa Mavhinga, the Southern Africa Director with the Africa Division at Human Rights Watch, lack of effective national policies to help locals benefit from natural resources in their areas, have helped fan poverty around Zimbabwe’s mineral-rich spots.

“Communities on mineral-rich areas of Zimbabwe continue to live in extreme poverty for several reasons, including the absence of effective devolution and decentralization that would otherwise allow local communities to benefit from their indigenous resources,” Mavhinga told Ubuntu Times.

He (Mavhinga) also said ‘the centralization of control of mineral resources disempowers local communities and deprives them of an equitable share of the benefits from mining.’

Poverty ridden home amid gold wealth.
In a gold-rich mining area called Patchway located in Kadoma in Zimbabwe at a place called Venture, lies a poverty-ridden home, made from pole and mud despite the residents here domiciled in the gold-rich spot where the precious stone is being extracted every day. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo / Ubuntu Times

In March 2016, in his televised 92nd birthday, former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, while providing no evidence, told the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) that diamonds worth over US$15 billion had been looted in Marange.

However, to this day even after the former President kicked the bucket, no one has been held accountable for the alleged diamond heist.

But, evidently, Marange’s villagers like Gowero have had to remain behind testifying of the resultant poverty.

The Centre for Natural Resource Governance, (CNRG) which works with Marange community activists, petitioned the Parliament of Zimbabwe in 2017 to “ensure diamond mining contributes to the development of the health, educational and road infrastructure of the Marange community, especially areas affected by diamond mining.”

But, to this day, the 89 km road from Marange to Mutare is derelict, with its longest stretch unpaved over 10 years after Chinese diamond mining firms descended on Marange.

CNRG is a research and advocacy civil society organization whose mandate is to promote good governance of natural resources.

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