A three-judge panel said on Friday it would rule on December 13 on a plea by the Basarwa, also known as Bushmen, to stay on ancestral homelands that also harbour vast mineral and diamond potential.
The suit, the longest running legal battle in Botswana’s post colonial history, followed the government’s attempt to evict the Basarwa from the Central Kalahari Game Reserve.
Backed by the British-based group Survival International, the Basarwa have accused the government of destroying their traditional way of life to make way for mining, which accounts for most of Botswana’s export earnings.
The Bushmen maintain that about 1 800 of them have been forced out of the reserve, about the size of Switzerland, into camps where they have contracted diseases such as HIV/Aids and tuberculosis, and have become dependent on alcohol.
”You can only move people if they give their free consent. Residents of the Central Kalahari Game Reserve did not give their free consent,” British barrister Gordon Bennett told the court earlier this week.
The government has denied the charges, insisting that the Basarwa were removed with their consent in order to make the area into a game reserve.
The government claims it held extensive consultations, starting in 1985, with the inhabitants of all the settlements in the game reserve, non-governmental groups and other interested parties. It maintains that more than 1 700 people relocated to the new settlements of their own choice, prompting others to follow. – Sapa-AP