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The
Tonga: left high and dry
IRIN News
September 05, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=74139
Fifty years after the
Tonga people were forcibly removed from the Zambezi Valley to make
way for the Kariba Dam between southern Zambia and northwestern
Zimbabwe, the community is still trying to find its feet.
Over the past decade
a number of development programmes have been initiated to improve
the Tonga people's lives, after their eviction by the former governments
of Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) and Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)
to make way for the hydroelectric power project that created Lake
Kariba.
But community leaders
and international experts say the restitution efforts have failed
to improve the living conditions of the majority of the 250,000
Tonga: most live in three districts of Zambia's Southern Province,
are heavily reliant on national and international food aid, and
despite the tourism and fishing opportunities of Lake Kariba, unemployment
remains high.
Still
recovering
Chief David Siankusule,
a Tonga elder in the Sinazongwe district of Zambia's Southern Province,
told IRIN that official initiatives to improve his people's quality
of life had failed to take into consideration the trauma they had
suffered for the past 50 years.
"It is true that
the Zambian government and others have made efforts to help us,"
Siankusule said. "They bring us food when we are hungry, and
they have built schools and clinics."
But the efforts were
"not ... enough to make a real difference". "Nearly
57,000 Tongas were moved from our fertile land next to the Zambezi,
to plateau areas that suffer from drought and have poor soil - our
whole way of life was destroyed," he commented at his homestead
near Lake Kariba's western shore.
"We are now in the
region of 250,000 [people], and the land we were put on can no longer
support us. We need to be compensated for what was done, and with
that money we can rebuild our own lives and culture. So, our noise
[complaints] to the government will continue until our lives are
improved."
According to Science
and Politics of Large Dam Projects: Case Study-Kariba Dam, an independent
study in 2006 by the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science
and Technology (EAWAG), 23,000 people were moved far from the valley
in the Zimbabwean side to new land of poor quality.
The Tonga on the Zimbabwean
side received food during the resettlement period, but no monetary
compensation. The study estimated that the government invested a
little more than US$100 per person.
The Zambian government
offered about $270 in monetary compensation per person and was therefore
considered "less racist" by the Tonga, who were more eager
to move to the Zambian side, the authors claimed.
Nevertheless, even in
Zambia little was done until the mid-1990s to help the Tonga people
after their forced removal from the Zambezi Valley between 1957
and 1958.
Government
efforts
In 1998, as part of a
project by the World Bank Zambia Power Rehabilitation Programme
and the Zambia Electricity Supply Corporation (ZESCO), the Zambian
government began work to rehabilitate and electrify Lake Kariba's
shoreline to improve the local economy of the Tonga.
The World Bank, which,
in its previous incarnation as the Federal Power Board, had co-funded
the Kariba Dam's construction, urged ZESCO to establish the Gwembe-Tonga
Rehabilitation and Development project with funding from the Development
Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA). Under this initiative the Zambian
government built schools, health clinics, drilled boreholes and
developed irrigation schemes.
To avoid past mistakes,
the local communities were involved in all stages of the project,
the Swiss study said. However, de-mining activities, bureaucratic
glitches in the DBSA and poor supervision of the loan funds significantly
delayed implementation of the project.
On top of this, "the
continued distribution of free food aid in the project area and
the high expectations from the beneficiary communities, and the
bias against using Tonga professionals, have affected the implementation
of the project", and little was accomplished by way of efforts
to increase local production and improve household incomes, the
EAWAG study found.
The bi-national Zambezi
River Authority (ZRA), which administers water rights and usage
of the Zambezi River and Lake Kariba, initiated "Kariba Dam's
Operation Noah Re-Launched" a programme designed to emulate
the efforts of conservationists to rescue the Zambezi Valley's wildlife
before it was flooded.
The $142m project was
one of the first attempts to rescue the ethnic group by improving
their current economic, social and living standards, and offer reparation
to the displaced Tonga. However, the Swiss study pointed out that
aside from the ZRA's fund, which was financed by a one percent fee
on water used for generating electricity, the amount of money raised
was insufficient for the development needs of the community.
Unwilling
to change
Laiven Makani Apuleni,
the district commissioner of Sinazongwe, which lies along the western
shoreline of Lake Kariba, told IRIN that the government was keen
to help right the wrong done to the Tonga people by its predecessor,
the Northern Rhodesian government.
But he warned that little
progress could be made if the Tonga were unwilling to give up their
traditional lifestyles as herdsmen, and livelihoods such as flood-recession
farming, in which communities living on the flood plains had planted
crops on the fertile alluvial soil left behind by flooding.
"We have tried to
improve their [the Tongas'] environment so they can better their
own lives, but the people do not take advantage, and prefer to live
like they did in the past, even though the land they live on cannot
sustain such a life," said Apuleni.
"We drill boreholes
but they only use them to drink and wash their clothes. Lake Kariba
is full of fish, but the fishermen you see on the lake are not Tonga;
they are from the Northern and Western Province."
An irrigation scheme
constructed by the government at Buleya-Malima in Sinazongwe, funded
by the DBSA, was a prime example of the impasse between the authorities
and the community, Apuleni said.
"When we finished
building the scheme, it was handed over to the local Tonga cooperative,
but they only use 10 percent of its capacity. If fully utilised,
the food output from the irrigation scheme could feed the whole
district."
Illiteracy was also a
major stumbling block. "We feel [that] if they embrace education
then they will see more clearly the opportunities available to them,
but many adults feel it is better their children watch the animals
[cattle] than learn in school," Apuleni said.
Marginalised
The EAWAG study said
the reasons for the Tonga people's failure to compete for the economical
benefits of tourism, fisheries and hydroelectricity were multiple.
It maintained that lack of capital and poor education or professional
skills had played a major role, and that the government was not
giving the Tonga the opportunity to compete against better capitalised
entrepreneurs.
"In the tourism
industry, for example, the governments [of Zambia and Zimbabwe]
and better capitalised immigrants share the benefits, whereas the
local economy, especially those of the Tongas on the Zimbabwe side,
bear the costs," the report stated.
The authors concluded
that the main reasons for the delays in assisting the Tonga were
the difficult political situations in Zambia and Zimbabwe, racism,
lack of consideration for an underdeveloped population, and an absence
of international pressure.
The resettlement areas
"still lack the basic social and economic infrastructure. Furthermore,
only a few rural centres have access to electricity or transport
and in many areas people do not have access to basic services such
as telephone and post-offices."
Tongas relocated to Zimbabwe
had fared even worse, as they were unable to take advantage of the
new opportunities the lake provided. "The lakeshore is state-owned
and the government restricted access to the lake to a few fishing
camps," said EAWAG.
"It is not surprising
that the households in the resettlement areas suffer from some of
the highest levels of unemployment and poverty in Zimbabwe."
This, along with overcrowding in the settlement areas, "has
led to chronic food shortages", added the report.
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