Experts meet to 'prevent humanitarian catastrophe' in Ethiopia and Kenya - News from Survival

News from Survival r1 ... s16 r18. Survival for tribal peoples

Experts meet to 'prevent humanitarian catastrophe' in Ethiopia and Kenya

500,000 tribal people in Ethiopia's Lower Omo Valley and around Kenya's Lake Turkana face a 'humanitarian catastrophe.'500,000 tribal people in Ethiopia's Lower Omo Valley and around Kenya's Lake Turkana face a 'humanitarian catastrophe.'© Nicola Bailey/ Survival, 2015

Survival International, the global movement for tribal peoples’ rights, is hosting two events in Milan, Italy, on October 1 and 2, in an attempt to prevent a humanitarian and environmental “catastrophe” in Ethiopia and Kenya.

Representatives of tribal peoples from Kenya and Ethiopia, as well as international experts, are meeting to expose the threats to hundreds of thousands of people and point towards solutions.

Speakers include: Anuak refugee Nyikaw Ochalla, Director of Anywaa Survival; Ikal Angelei, Turkana spokeswoman and co-founder of Friends of Lake Turkana; British human rights lawyer Gordon Bennett; Berkeley Professor Claudia J. Carr; and Will Hurd, Director of Cool Ground.

In one of the most audacious land grabs that Africa has yet seen, the tribes of Ethopia’s Lower Omo Valley are being evicted from their ancestral homes, and their grazing and farming lands are being transformed into industrial sugar cane, cotton and biofuel plantations.

The massive Gibe III hydro-electric dam, which is being constructed by the Italian-based Salini Costruttori, will end the natural flood on which many tribes depend for cultivating crops, and dramatically lower the level of Kenya’s Lake Turkana, the world’s largest desert lake, on which many tribal people depend for a livelihood. Up to 500,000 tribal people in Ethiopia and Kenya face catastrophe.

Survival recently revealed that the U.K. government attempted to cover up gross human rights violations following a visit to the Lower Omo Valley by Ethiopia’s key donors, such as the U.K.’s DFID, USAID, and the European Union.

Francesca Casella, Director of Survival Italy, said, “The situation has never been more critical for the indigenous peoples of Ethiopia and Kenya. Aid donors can no longer turn a blind eye to the serious human rights abuses in the region. At this meeting we hope to launch an unprecedented effort to promote a model of development in the Horn of Africa that neither destroys tribal peoples nor denies them their rights.”

Notes to editors:

- Speakers are available for interviews, please contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or +39(0)28900671
- Details of the events can be found here: www.survival.it/evento-omo (in Italian)

Read this online: http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/10928

Girl jumps off El Capitan, but you'll never guess why

Tesia Bobrycki jumped off Yosemite's El Capitan in to stop crimes committed in the name of conservation. Tesia Bobrycki jumped off Yosemite's El Capitan in to stop crimes committed in the name of conservation. © Edwin Bobrycki/ Survival 2015

Ahead of Yosemite National Park’s 125th anniversary on Thursday, Survival’s Tesia Bobrycki launched herself off the iconic El Capitan monolith to stop crimes committed in the name of conservation – dangling 3000ft in the air supported only by a rope.

Moved by her first-hand observations of tribal peoples who were evicted from their lands in the name of conservation, Tesia said,

“I love Yosemite. But my love for the place does not excuse the fact that Native Americans were violently evicted or killed when it was created. And it does not excuse the fact that parks around the world now follow its example – from Cameroon to Botswana to India.

“If we continue to destroy tribes, we’ll continue to destroy nature, and we’ll continue to destroy our future. Together, we can create a new conservation.”

Watch the film:

Girl jumps off El Capitan, but you’ll never guess whyFind out why Tesia cares so much about stopping the conservation con, and what she did to launch the movement. For tribes, for nature, for all our humanity.

Tesia is raising awareness of Survival International’s Stop the Con campaign for a conservation model that respect tribal peoples. Read Tesia’s story here.

Read this online: http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/10923

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