Apr 05, 2011

Batwa: Rwandan Government Accused Of Making Batwa 'Pygmies' Homeless


Survival International has warned that a Rwandan government programme to destroy all thatched roofs in the country is leaving thousands of Batwa homeless.

 

Below is an article published by: Ekklesia.

Survival International has warned that a Rwandan government programme to destroy all thatched roofs in the country is leaving thousands of Batwa ‘Pygmies’ homeless.

The NGO says that hundreds of Batwa families have seen their homes destroyed in recent months, forcing them to live in the open during the rainy season.

The authorities plan to destroy all thatched roofs in the country by May this year. Under the scheme, families with means are meant to build new houses at their own expense. The very poor - a group that includes most Batwa - are supposed to be provided with iron sheets to replace the thatch. The government has said that sick and older people will be given completely new homes.

But Survival International reports that many huts have been destroyed without new homes being provided. The NGO says that the Batwa are among the most affected.
They describe them as "the most marginalised people in Rwandan society". Rwandan Batwa are subjected to deep-seated racism and discrimination on a daily basis.

In Rwanda’s Southern Province, 30,000 thatched huts are said to have been destroyed in the last three months. Thousands of families have been left homeless.

The Governor of the Southern Province has justified the demolitions by saying "people were seemingly happy to stay in their thatched houses and showed no commitment to leave them".

Stephen Corry, Director of Survival International, said "Destroying Batwa’s homes, against their wishes, leaving them drenched by the rains, sounds like a sick joke, or the action of an enemy force. That their government is doing this ‘for their own good’ is deplorably arrogant".

He insisted, "You don’t improve people’s housing by demolishing their existing homes and leaving them with nothing".