Herder-farmer conflict in the Sahel needs a new description: why ‘eco-violence’ fits

The Sahel – a 5,000km long strip of the African continent stretching from the Atlantic coast to the Red Sea – has become the most neglected and conflict-ridden part of the planet. Millions of people have been displaced in the region. Mass murders and property destruction occur almost daily.

According to reports, around 11,276 people have been murdered in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso since 2012. In the first six months of 2022 alone, about 2,057 people had been killed in the three countries.

The Sahel region stretches from Senegal in the west through parts of Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria, Chad and Sudan to Eritrea on the Red Sea. Arabic, Islamic and nomadic cultures from the north meet traditional cultures from the south.

Different kinds of conflicts arise in the region: religious insurgencies, civil wars, and disputes between nomadic herders and sedentary farmers.

The conflicts between herders and farmers over water and grazing opportunities have been going on for decades. But they intensified during and after the droughts of the 1970s and 1980s when nomadic Fulani herders moved into communities where they had not grazed their animals previously.

The Fulani, also called Fula or Ful?e, are among the largest ethnic groups in the Sahel. There are millions of Fulani in Guinea-Conakry, Mauritania, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, The Gambia, Cameroon, Senegal, Nigeria and Niger. They also live in Burkina Faso, Sierra Leone, the Central African Republic, Chad, Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire.

Issues and labels

The conflict over water and land in the Sahel has been given various labels. These include the Fulani herdsmen and farmers conflicts, herder-farmer conflicts, herdsmen militancy, resource conflicts, land-use conflicts, Fulani-Konkomba conflict and ethnic violence.

Some of these labels focus on the social identities and occupations of the groups. This gives the impression that the conflicts are only between non-state actors. But conflicts over agricultural resources like water have existed between state actors too, like Senegal and Mauritania in 1989.

Labels like farmer-herder conflicts or Fulani and Konkomba conflicts draw attention to ethnic identities and livelihoods. Consequently, the conflicts are incorrectly portrayed as a result of ethnic divisions and commercial disputes.

The shortcomings of these labels necessitate a neutral definition that includes more facets of these violent conflicts. They should not be defined as single-issue problems.

A better definition would shed light on overlooked factors that keep violent conflicts going – such as governments’ failures to deal with resource shortages, insecurity, and social and environmental injustices.

Land and resources

We undertook a conceptual study which analysed existing facts to produce fresh ideas. The study explored the literature on the conflicts between herders and farmers in the Sahel over water and agricultural resources and identified many names ascribed to such disputes.

We argue that giving names that emphasise the social identities of the contending parties or that represent the conflicts as single-issue occurrences not only impedes efforts to comprehend their causes but also obscures their vast dimensions.

Although the many labels may shed light on some facets of these conflicts, they hide many others. Other facets, such as social and environmental injustices and governmental failures, are essential to an informed understanding of these conflicts. An umbrella term is preferable to these multiple labels.

A label such as “herdsmen militancy” portrays herders as the perpetrators. Yet there are instances when herders have suffered great loss of lives. It is likewise inappropriate to refer to these conflicts as “farmer militancy”.

The term “resource conflict” is also used to refer to violent conflicts in Nigeria and Sierra Leone over extractive resources such as gold, diamonds, oil and gas. The conflict over extractive resources and the conflict over agricultural resources, such as water and farmland, are wide apart in terms of conflict players and repercussions; it would be misleading to use the same label for both conflicts.

Using terms like “land-use conflicts” makes it sound like disputes over land use are only caused by competition over agricultural resources. The relevance of land goes beyond being a means of survival. It is a symbolic religious tool that links the past, present and future in most African communities. Land is used for burial and the dead are revered ancestors.

Conflicts over land in Mali and Ghana have been called “ethnic violence”. Such labels imply that the ethnic composition of the disputing parties may be the source of conflict. That a conflict is fought between two distinct ethnic groups does not always imply that ethnic diversity is at its root. The terms used may be hindering understanding of the causes.

We propose the use of the term “eco-violence” instead. It is neutral and takes the focus off the identities of the conflicting parties and what they do for a living.

Eco-violence as an umbrella term

Eco-violence is defined as conflicts in which competition for water and agricultural resources occurs within or between social groups or state actors. Such conflicts are made worse by state failure to address resource redistribution challenges, institutional failures, and environmental and social injustice.

The term highlights these broader dimensions of the conflicts.

This definition brings together some scholars’ ideas and recent findings from empirical studies on the conflicts in the Sahel.

Using it will bring attention to issues like social injustice, resource capture and increasingly adverse climatic conditions.

Source: The Conversation

SLTF disburses GHS12 million to “No Guarantor Students Loan” Applicants

Accra, July 12, GNA – The Students Loan Trust Fund (SLTF) has released a total of 12 million Ghana cedis as loans to students in tertiary institutions across the country.

A total of 10,000 students from 148 tertiary institutions in the country benefitted from the scheme which is the first payment being made after the official launching of the “No Guarantor Loan Scheme” on June 9, 2022.

Nana Kwaku Agyei Yeboah, the Chief Executive Officer of SLTF, who disclosed this to the media in Accra said, the amount covered payment to only first-time applicants for the first semester of the year.

First-time applicants from the University of Education, Winneba recorded 1,523 as the highest recipients, followed by the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology which had 787, the University of Ghana had 511, with Koforidua Technical University recording 488 students and Takoradi Technical University with 371, respectively.

He stated that the lowest amount received by each student ranged from GhS1500 being the lowest and GhS3000 as the highest depending on the needs of the students after a means-testing assessment by the SLTF before disbursement to the students.

Nana Agyei Yeboah said the payment would help to ease the burden of students as they continued their education on various campuses across the country.

The CEO explained that all continuing students who were beneficiaries of the Students Loan Scheme in the country were paid in March this year.

He pledged to ensure that payment of funds to students would be made timeously to the beneficiaries to ensure that the students do not have challenges with funding.

Nana Agyei Yeboah appealed to beneficiaries of the scheme to ensure that they voluntarily paid back their loans to ensure that the Government got enough funds at all times to run the scheme for the benefit of others.

The CEO said the only people who had so far not been paid were those who had applied but had not completed the submission of the required information to the scheme and urged them to expedite their documentation and take their biometrics for payment.

He appealed to those who had not yet applied to the scheme to do so since they could also benefit from the facility which was readily available to all qualified students irrespective of political, social, religious and ethnic orientation.

Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo-led government introduced the “No Guarantor Scheme” to ensure that tertiary students are able to secure loans to support their education without much difficulty.

To ensure that beneficiaries received their funds without much challenges, they are required to have E-zwich cards (a smartcard issued by the Ghana Interbank Payment and Settlement System Limited for easy payment.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Suspected Marburg virus cases: WHO deploys experts to Ghana

The World Health Organization (WHO) has deployed a team of experts to support Ghanaian health workers after Ghana confirmed two suspected cases of Marburg virus disease.

The two cases were found in the Ashanti Region after preliminary tests done in the country on two patients came back positive.The two affected patients have since passed away.

According to the Ghana Health Service, no new cases have been reported; however, 34 contacts linked to the initial two cases have been traced and are currently under quarantine.

“The Ashanti Regional Health Directorate with support from the Ghana Health Service Headquarters is currently conducting further investigations on the cases and contacts,” it said.

The WHO experts are to support Ghana’s health authorities by bolstering disease surveillance, testing, tracing contacts, preparing to treat patients and working with communities to alert and educate them about the risks and dangers of the disease. They will also collaborate with the emergency response teams.

The team will also prepare for a possible outbreak of Marburg virus; a highly infectious disease in the same family as the virus that causes Ebola.

Meanwhile, the samples have been taken to the Institute Pasteur in Senegal for further tests, said Dr. Francis Kasolohe, the World Health Organization’s representative in Ghana.

“The two patients from the southern Ashanti region – both deceased and unrelated – showed symptoms including diarrhoea, fever, nausea and vomiting. They had been taken to a district hospital in the Ashanti region,” he said.

“The health authorities are on the ground investigating the situation and preparing for a possible outbreak response. We are working closely with the country to ramp up detection, track contacts, be ready to control the spread of the virus,” he added

Marburg Virus Disease is a rare but severe haemorrhagic fever that affects both humans and non-human primates.

It is caused by the Marburg virus. It is transmitted by infected persons or animals from direct contact with body fluids, blood and other discharges from the affected person/animal. The incubation period for the disease is two (2) to twenty-one (21) days. Treatment is symptomatic. There is currently no vaccine available.

Prospective cases may present with fever, bloody diarrhoea, bleeding from gums, bleeding into the skin, bleeding into eyes and, bloody urine.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

KNUST Alumni commits GHS 50,000 to start arboretum?

Accra, July 12, GNA – The Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) Alumni has committed 50,000 Ghana Cedis to the start of an arboretum in Mamfe Akuapem for scientific, medicinal and educational purpose.

The seven-acre project, research-driven, is to help attain?the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 15, that is to “protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss.”

This came to light during the launch of a tree planting exercise to set up the Arboretum as part of the 70th anniversary of KNUST by the Alumni Association, also known as “TEKNOKRAT” at the forecourt of the Mamfe Traditional Palace.

The entire project is under the tutelage of?Osabarima Ansah Sasraku III, Mamfehene and Kyidomhene of the Akuapem Traditional Area, in partnership with the Forestry Commission.

Dr Kwaku Agbesi, Global President, KNUST Alumni Association, in an interview with the Ghana News Agency, said, their efforts were to complement the Government’s initiatives of protecting the environment and forest and promoting biodiversity.

“In working to support Government in achieving the SDGs, we need to partner government, Civil Society Organizations, academia and traditional leaders so that we can also as an Alumni do something to help our society,” he said.?

Dr Agbesi said the Association would replicate the project in the middle and northern parts of the country.

Osabarima Ansah Sasraku III, an Alumni and a ‘TEKNOKRAT’, said: ” With global warming and flooding being experienced, this initiative could not have come at a better time.”

Osabarima Sasraku III said the arboretum would not only serve educational purposes but would have recreational centres to draw traffic for domestic tourism.

The Mamfehene and Prof?Mrs Rita Akosua Dickson,?Vice-Chancellor, KNUST, planted the first two trees a few metres from Mamfe roundabout.

Madam Priscilla Asomani, District Manager, Forest Services Division, Somanya, also told the Ghana News Agency that their role was to give technical support on the species of trees and their importance.

“The species of trees we have selected for planting are?Terminalia ivorensis, also known in local parlance as (Emire); Khaya avorensis (Mahogany) and Terminalia superba (Ofram).

“Others are Tetrapleura tetraptera (prekese) and Ceiba pentandra (onyina),” she said.

An arboretum is a botanical collection composed exclusively or very largely of trees of a variety of species. Originally mostly created as a section in a larger garden or park for specimens of mostly non-local species, many modern arboreta are in botanical gardens as living collections of woody plants and are intended at least in part for scientific study.

Source: Ghana News Agency

2022 edition of Israeli Green innovation competitions opens

The Embassy of the State of Israel in collaboration with the Ghana Garden and Flower Movement has opened calls for application for the fourth edition of the Israeli Green Innovation Competition.

This year’s competition focuses on promoting sustainable green innovation initiatives by young Ghanaian startups.

H. E. Shlomit Sufa, Israeli Ambassador to Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone opened the calls for application at the launch of the 10th Edition of the Ghana Garden and Flower Show.

She expressed her excitement for this year’s competition and said “as a country that finds innovation as the main engine for its economic growth, I am excited to be able to support solutions that answer Ghana’s challenges in agriculture and climate change, while at the same time support the SME ecosystem.”

Ambassador Sufa added that “I would like to take this opportunity to officially open registration for the 2022 edition of the Israeli Green Innovation Competition as part of the 10th edition of the Ghana Garden and Flower Show.

We are hereby calling for entries for this year’s competition, so if you are a startup within the agricultural, horticultural and environment sectors or you operate or have a prototype idea that promotes and supports climate change, I would like to encourage you to participate in this year’s competition for an unforgettable learning experience.”

To participate, startups must demonstrate innovative solutions to challenges within the agricultural, horticultural or environmental sectors that promote green innovation in Ghana and supports the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 13- which calls for urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts.

Participants will present their prototype or solution in a 90-second video clip, detailing all the essential information such as name, problem statement, benefits and a brief of how their innovative solution solves the sectors’ challenges.

Interested participants, have until Thursday, 4th August to register at https://www.gardenandflowergh.com/igic/registration. After a screening and short-listing process, six qualifying participants will be selected for the final pitch to be moderated by an expert team of judges on Sunday 4th September 2022 at the Efua Sutherland Children’s Park. The finalist would have a 5-minute timeframe to present their innovative solution. This event will be held at the 10th edition of the Ghana Garden and Flower Show. The winner for this year’s competition will receive a fully paid trip to Israel to participate in industry-related meetings, excursions and conferences to learn best practices, network and seek potential investors to expand his/her existing business.

About the Israeli Green Innovation Competition (IGIC)

Instituted in 2019, the Israeli Green Innovation Competition (IGIC) seeks to honour individuals and organizations that come up with innovative solutions that promote environmental conservation and agriculture in Ghana.

The initiative is undertaken in collaboration with the Ghana Garden and Flower Movement, an initiative of Strategic Communications Africa Limited (Stratcomm Africa). The IGIC is a combination of the two greatest strengths of Israel: Agriculture and Innovation. Israel prides itself as a nation of innovation that helps to stimulate innovation wherever it finds itself. As such, the Israeli Green Innovation Competition focuses on innovative startups in the agriculture and horticulture sector. This is in line with Israel’s commitment to stimulate and support both agriculture and innovation in Ghana.

Past winners of the competition include Mr. Prince Pius Nutsugah from Coologi Ghana, who won the competition in 2019, Mr. Jefferey Appiagyei of SAYeTECH, winner of 2020 and Mr. Maxwell Kojo Xonu from EbaPreneur Solutions Ghana, winner for the 2021 edition.

Source: Ghana Web

Being an economist in Ghana is becoming frustrating-Dr Kwakye

Accra, July 12, GNA- The Director of Research at the Institute of Economic Affairs, Dr John Kwakye has expressed frustration that the Government does not heed to the critical advice of independent economists, plunging the country’s economy into woes.

He said Ghanaian economists got frustrated when government made economic decisions for political gains against their “prescribed” solutions over the years.

“We are economists. It is very frustrating. People call us from outside and ask us, is there no economist in Ghana and I tell them our own colleague, the Vice President is in there,” he said.

He was speaking as a member of a panel at a 3Business Colloquium on the topic, “The Road to the IMF”.

He called for the inclusion of independent-minded economists to the Government’s negotiation team with the IMF at every stage of negotiations, adding that, “the Finance Minister should be there because it will dent international confidence if you remove him at this time and that is not the best strategy.” Dr Kwakye said.

Professor John Asafu-Adjaye, Senior Fellow and Head of Research at the African Centre for Economic Transformation, disclosed that the outcome of a study by his outfit had shown that a one percentage point increase in GDP led to 3 per cent decrease in inflation.

In that regard, he said it was necessary for the country to pursue an agenda of increasing production with mechanisms set to decrease cost of production as well as improve enabling environment to attract domestic and foreign investment.

Mr. Tsonam Akpeloo, Greater Accra Region of the Association of Ghana Industries (AGI), said it was problematic for policymakers to perceive inflation in the country to increase because of more money chasing fewer goods.

For an economy that imports about 70 per cent of its needs, he said an attempt to reduce the purchasing power of citizens through monetary policy was burdensome as it led to a rise in interest rates which translated into higher cost of raw materials for local production.

He called for a bi-partisan approach to resolving the challenge of fixing weak exchange rate regime.

“They have increased the policy rate which meant that the interest rate had gone up. Already we are burdened,” he said.

Source: Ghana News Agency

AGI to establish permanent office and SME incubation centre in Ho

Ho, Jul. 12, GNA – The Association of Ghana Industries (AGI) in the Volta, Eastern, and Oti Regions has?selected the Volta Regional capital as host of its permanent regional office.

The site will also host an incubation centre complex for Small to Medium Scale Industries (SMEs), and will be named after Dr. Mrs. Esther Ocloo, founder of the AGI, who is a native of the Volta Region.

Mr. Dela Gbeve, Treasurer of the Association in the Regions, said the Ho Municipality had been a strategic launch point for its activities in the enclaves, and therefore deserved the honour of the intended development.

He was addressing the media launch of the maiden Ho Investment Expo and said the establishment would affect the development of the bulking tourism and investment potentials of the?Region and its neighbours.

“For us at AGI, Ho has played host to our three zonal regions of Eastern, Volta and Oti over the past years and am delighted to inform you that the city has been a wonderful host.

“To acknowledge the fact that the Volta Region has been a great host to the AGI, the regional executives have decided to build a permanent office and SME incubation centre here in Ho.?

“It will be named after the renowned industrialist Dr. Mrs. Esther Ocloo of Nkulenu fame who founded our association some 52 years ago,” he said.

Mr. Gbeve said discussions were “far advanced” with relevant authorities towards the allocation of land, following which construction would commence, and that the support of the Municipal Assembly would be required.

“We strongly believe our municipality of Ho has great investment and tourism potentials that if well harnessed can boost the economic activities in the Municipality”, he said while noting recent partnered on the establishment of a diplomatic garden in the Municipality among other developmental initiatives.

The Ho Tourism, Real Estate and Investment Expo is a two-week event that is expected to stimulate among others, shareholder collaboration towards the realisation of a fully developed municipality.

The AGI, a key partner of the hugely successful Volta Trade and Investment Fair, promised spirited support for the Ho Expo, which is on the theme “Positioning the Oxygen City, Ho for Infrastructural Development and Tourism”.

It would be held from August ending at the Ho Jubilee Park, and over 200 exhibitors are expected to attend.

Mr Divine Bosson, the city’s Chief Executive, said the Expo would help in the transformation of the resource-endowed Municipality from an agrarian to a fledgling multi economic hub serving growth and employment needs.

He said the fair would attract both local and international investment to the Municipality and the Region at large and exhibit the tourism potential and the fast-expanding real estate industry to investors.

“This event, having been carefully thought through, is aimed at changing the face of the Ho Municipality to one which focuses on growth, development, and employment creation for the youth.

“Our reliance on agriculture as the mainstay of the municipality has proven over the period that we need to diversify and delve into other economic activities to enhance income reduce poverty among the populace. This therefore calls for pragmatic measures aimed at lifting the majority of our people from the doldrums,” the MCE stated.?

Stakeholders including the Ghana Tourism Authority, the Volta Regional Coordinating Council, and the AGI are working together on the expo, with others such as the Volta Development Forum and the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) as partners.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Feeding fee reports untrue-Mfantsipim school

Cape Coast, July 12, GNA-The Mfantsipim School has denied media reports that it is charging parents GHC250.00 to cater for the feeding of the students.

Rev. Ebenezer Aidoo, the Headmaster of the school, indicated in an interview with the Ghana News Agency that the reports were false and should be disregarded by the public.

“Whatever is out there is untrue. I do not know where they got that information from, but I can assure you that there are no plans or any intention to do such a thing,” he said.

Media reports suggested that the Mfantsipim School and the Wesley Girls Senior High School (SHS) are charging parents GHC250.00 and GHC500. 00 respectively amid shortage of food in SHSs to mitigate the situation.

Checks by the GNA, however, indicated that even though the Mfantsipim School is facing a challenge for food, the allegation of demand for feeding fee was untrue.

A teacher, some caterers and some students the GNA engaged were all consistent that the report was false.

“Where is this coming from? It is not true that we are taking any money from parents or students for feeding,” the teacher emphasised.

A student, however, explained that some parents who were aware of the school’s situation with regard to feeding were voluntarily supporting the school with some cash and food.

A caterer also maintained that it was true that the school did not have enough food for the students but denied taking money from parents for such purposes.

“The situation here is that we are not getting food commodities in adequate quantities.

“There is a timetable for the students but we don’t follow it because we only cook what is available for them,” she added.

Source: Ghana News Agency