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Tanzania charges Maasai with murder over policeman death
by AFP Staff Writers
Dar Es Salaam (AFP) June 17, 2022

Myanmar junta rejects UN rights criticism as 'unfounded'
Yangon (AFP) June 17, 2022 - Myanmar's ruling junta on Friday rejected criticism of its human rights record by the United Nations, accusing the organisation's rights chief of "interference" in the country's internal affairs.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on Tuesday said Myanmar's military government had likely committed "crimes against humanity" in its crackdown on dissent since seizing power in February last year.

In a statement, the Myanmar junta rejected what it called "one-sided and unfounded statements" at the UN's ongoing Human Rights Council in Geneva.

Bachelet called on the military to abandon plans to carry out Myanmar's first executions since 1990, including those of a former lawmaker from Aung San Suu Kyi's party and a prominent democracy activist.

"Myanmar wishes to remind the High Commissioner and certain countries that the individuals sentenced to death are those who were found with hundreds of weapons and they are in charge of several dozen terrorist factions," the statement from Myanmar's mission to the UN in Geneva said.

The junta's announcement that it would execute the men triggered a storm of criticism from international rights groups, who contended that the secret military tribunals where they were convicted were unfair.

Bachelet said at least 1,900 killings by the military had been reported since the coup, with more than 13,500 people arbitrarily arrested.

The figures tally with those gathered by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a local monitoring group that maintains data on killings and arrests since the coup.

But the junta's statement criticised Bachelet for making a "misleading statement with sweeping allegations" and for not criticising violence carried out by anti-junta militias.

Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government in February last year.

Widespread resistance to the takeover was met with a bloody military crackdown.

Tanzania has charged 20 Maasai protesters over the killing of a policeman during a demonstration against the government's decision to cordon off land for wildlife protection, according to a chargesheet seen by AFP Friday.

The clashes erupted last weekend in Loliondo in Ngorongoro district, where Maasai herders protested against the government's push to reserve 1,500 square kilometres (580 square miles) of land to create a wildlife protection area.

One officer was killed and several protesters were injured during the demonstrations, sparking anger among the Maasai who have accused the government of trying to force them off their land in order to organise safaris and hunting expeditions.

The government has rejected these accusations, claiming that it wants to protect the area from human activity.

Police have now charged 20 of the protesters in connection with the policeman's killing, according to a chargesheet signed on Thursday, with the case filed at the resident magistrate court in Arusha.

"It is now official, our relatives and our leaders in Loliondo have been maliciously charged (in) a murder case," Onesmo Olengurumwa, the coordinator of the Tanzania Human Rights Defenders Coalition, said on Twitter on Friday.

"These include those who were illegally detained one day before the killing of the police officer," he said, adding: "This marks the end of any negotiations."

Tanzania has historically allowed indigenous communities such as the Maasai to live within some national parks, including the Ngorongoro conservation area, a UNESCO World Heritage site.

But they now face the threat of eviction, as the authorities contend that their growing population is encroaching on wildlife habitat.

- 'Depend on grazing' -

The pastoralists and some local lawmakers believe the demarcation, which will leave herders with access to 2,500 square kilometres out of 4,000, will reduce grazing land in Loliondo.

"The 2,500 square kilometres are already loaded with district offices, hospitals, schools and colleges," Ngorongoro legislator Emmanuel Ole Shangai said in February as the plans were under discussion.

"Some 23 villages with over 73,000 people depend on the area, (which is) being protected, for grazing," he added.

The violence in Loliondo has triggered outrage among campaigners, with Amnesty International describing it as "shocking both in its scale and brutality."

"Authorities must halt the ongoing demarcation and security operation in Loliondo, and begin genuine consultations with the community," it said Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Home Affairs Minister Hamad Masauni has ordered police to investigate all non-profit organisations operating in Loliondo, warning that "their operations should not disturb national security in any way."

In 2009, thousands of Maasai families were moved from Loliondo to allow an Emirati safari company, Ortelo Business Corporation, to organise hunting expeditions there.

The government cancelled that deal in 2017, following allegations of corruption.


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AFRICA NEWS
Tanzania starts moving Maasai out of Ngorongoro reserve
Dar Es Salaam (AFP) June 16, 2022
Tanzania on Thursday began relocating Maasai pastoralists from the famed Ngorongoro conservation area in a move that rights campaigners described as unlawful evictions. The indigenous community has lived in the reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage site in northern Tanzania, for over a century. But they now face the threat of eviction, as the authorities contend that their growing population is encroaching on wildlife habitat. Officials insist the relocation is voluntary. Arusha regional comm ... read more

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