Deutsche Welle, 26 August 2013
In 2001,
more than 4,000 people were evicted from land in Uganda after it had been acquired
by a German coffee firm on a 99 year lease. The company insists the deal was
above board, but an NGO is now raising doubts.
Many of the
residents from Kyengeza village in Mubende district have always insisted that
they were forcefully driven off from their land, which lies approximately 170
kilometers (106 miles) from Uganda's capital Kampala.
Margaret
Nakiyingi, 29, is one of the evictees. She now lives in a small wooden house
located close to Kaweri coffee plantation. Kaweri is a subsidiary of Neumann
Gruppe based in Germany.
After the
eviction came despair
Margaret's
estranged husband works at the Kaweri coffee farm where he earns $1.5 (1.12
euros) a day. Margaret, who has four children, does not have a regular income
but still has to find $15 a month for rent for the tiny house, an enormous
amount of money by her standards.
“We don't
have a life to enjoy. We move like human beings but deep down in our hearts we
are not living a good life", she told DW correspondent Leylah Ndinda.
This is
because she has serious financial problems. “We are now suffering because we
are in rented houses and have no land to cultivate. Some of our colleagues
acquired land away from the coffee farm,” Margaret said.
"Water
is challenge. The coffee farm managers constructed a water tap for us but we do
not get water all the time, “ Margaret said.
Neumann says it provides fresh drinking water free of charge to two villages |
“Another
problem is firewood. They kicked us out from our land, but when we go to the
coffee farm to collect firewood they beat us up,” she complained, saying they
don't have an alternative source of firewood.
The
majority of the people living in Kyengeza village were evicted from their farms
with a promise from the government that they would be compensated. Twelve years
later John Bosco Senginiya, a casual laborer on one of the privately owned
farms, said they were subjected to physical abuse during the eviction.
"I
didn't even get 100 Uganda shillings, but they paid us with a beating,” he
added.
When asked
by DW if they knew how much compensation they were entitled to, many residents
were unsure with one admitting that "did not know the compensation
rate".
Compensation
Neumann
Kaffee Gruppe, (NKG in Uganda), the German coffee company behind the
controversy, insists that it leased the land in good faith from the Ugandan
government.
The firm
claims the Ugandan government compensated 166 families.
Residents say they now find it hard to put a meal on the table |
According
to Neumann, which operates in 28 countries worldwide, only 25 families in
Mubende district refused to move and they were then driven off the land by the
Ugandan government.
In a
document posted on their website, Neumann Company has denied any allegations of
land grabbing or carrying out illegal evictions.
After 12
years, this dispute over land in Uganda has resurfaced in Germany.
FIAN
international, an NGO that campaigns for people's right to food, started a
campaign to protest against what it calls "brutal evictions". It is
also demanding adequate restitution for those who lost their land.
The
protests led Germany's Development Minister Dirk Niebel to write a letter to
FIAN asking them to cease their activities. The minister warned that such
accusations could have far reaching consequences for Uganda's coffee industry.
"It is a known fact that since last year some coffee traders in Germany
have started to boycott Ugandan coffee," Niebel told the German broadcaster
Deutschlandfunk.
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