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Two Ugandans killed in jungle land clash Rainforest Portal - 13.04.2007 12:38
Ugandan police have opened fire at hundreds of Mabira rainforest protection campaigners in Uganda protesting against government plans to allocate forest land to a sugar company. Ecological Internet is sad to report that two local rainforest conservationists, protesting to save the Mabira protected rainforest from being 1/3 cleared for sugar cane have, were shot dead when protesting according to BBC. ACTION ALERT UPDATE PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY! Demand Ugandan Government Stop Killing Rainforest Protestors and Fully Protect Mabira Rainforest Preserve By Rainforest Portal, a project of Ecological Internet, Inc. http://www.RainforestPortal.org/ April 12, 2006 TAKE ACTION Last Chance to Stop Great Ugandan Mabira Rainforest Give-Away http://www.rainforestportal.org/alerts/send.asp?id=uganda Update: Ugandan police have opened fire at hundreds of Mabira rainforest protection campaigners in Uganda protesting against government plans to allocate forest land to a sugar company. Ecological Internet is sad to report that two local rainforest conservationists, protesting to save the Mabira protected rainforest from being 1/3 cleared for sugar cane have, were shot dead when protesting according to BBC. Stopping the "Great Mabira Rainforest Give-Away" has been something the Ecological Internet Earth Action Network has been deeply involved with internationally (media coverage below). This in support of one of Africa's first grassroots modern ecological protest campaigns - with local peoples organizing boycotts against the sugar company involved, setting up cyber-petitions and text messaging via cell phones to organize protests. Efforts to save Mabira rainforest are a spontaneous, home-grown rainforest conservation protest that deserves our continued support. Search "Mabira": http://www.rainforestportal.org/shared/search/welcome.aspx?searchtext=Mabira Ecological Internet's 25,000 strong global campaign community must let the Ugandan government know that shooting protestors is unacceptable, that the authoritarian efforts to give away Mabira's rainforests are undemocratic and corrupt, and once again emphasize that Uganda needs more protected ancient primary and old-growth forests and restored buffer zones and corridors to ensure national ecological sustainability including water, climate, soils and local development options. Though indications are the President is going to ram this rainforest give-away through Parliament, let's not give up. And let's not abandon those dying in the streets for the principle that logging ancient rainforests is archaic and must be banned. The message being sent has been completely altered so please send again if you did already. We have other campaigns coming but this is important. Please take action now at: http://www.rainforestportal.org/alerts/send.asp?id=uganda ******************* Must recent alert: Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni continues to pursue legally dubious plans to destroy large areas of Uganda's last important intact and protected rainforests. Some one-third of Mabira Forest Reserve, about 7,000 hectares of an area which has been protected since 1932, will lose its protection for sugar cane production by the Mehta Group. Ecological Internet was the first to bring a thriving Ugandan rainforest protection and protest movement to an international audience. Since that time many more local and international groups have joined the campaign. Uganda has long been facing a deforestation crisis, with forests covering 20 percent of Uganda 40 years ago, but now just covering seven percent. Deforestation has been directly responsible for declining levels of waters in Lake Victoria, River Nile and other rivers resulting in a scarcity of drinking water and reduction in hydroelectric energy production. Continued destruction of Uganda's surviving forests will have further grave ecological consequences -- threatening ecotourism revenues, rare species, sparking soil erosion and water pollution. Already the movement for sustainable rainforest use and development in Uganda has won. Maintaining and expanding rainforest protection has been established as a critical pillar of climate change mitigation, water availability and national ecological sustainability for Uganda's future. Please contact the entire Ugandan parliament, Ugandan ministries and embassies and insist that the Mabira sugar cane project be abandoned, and Uganda's remaining rainforest strictly protected. Take Action! http://www.rainforestportal.org/alerts/send.asp?id=uganda Discuss alert: http://www.rainforestportal.org/issues/2007/04/alert_update_demand_ugandan_go.asp ********************** Deaths in Uganda forest protest Source: Copyright 2007, BBC Date: April 12, 2007 Original URL Two people have been killed in Uganda during violence at a protest against government plans to allocate forest land to a sugar company, police say. A suspected looter was shot dead by security guards and a passer-by hit by a stray bullet, say the police, who have fired live bullets and tear gas. There have been several attacks on Asians, leaving two people in hospital. A Hindu temple has also been damaged. The sugar firm which wants to use part of the Mabira forest is Asian-owned. Environmentalists say the move threatens existence of rare species of trees and birds in the 30,000 hectare forest. 'Frightening' The march began quietly, with about 500 people marching through central Kampala, carrying placards and tree branches. "People were demonstrating peacefully when there was a misunderstanding with the police. All of a sudden they opened fire," Frank Muramuzi, and environmental activist told Reuters news agency. The BBC's Sarah Grainger in Kampala says protesters threw stones at the police and set fire to vehicles. Reuters news agency reports that police had to rescue about 40 men from a Hindu temple after it was attacked by a mob. "We were inside the temple and the protesters started attacking us from outside," 50-year-old Dipaul Patel told Reuters. "It was very frightening." The Sugar Corporation of Uganda (Scoul), part of the Mehta group, owned by a Ugandan Asian, wants to expand its plantations in central Uganda, taking over one-third of the Mabira forest. Campaigners are now calling on Ugandans to boycott its sugar products. In recent years, Ugandan Asians have started to return to the country, after being expelled by Idi Amin in the 1970s. They used to control much of the economy, sparking resentment among some Ugandans. Text campaign Parliament is yet to change the status of the forests and campaigners have threatened legal action if the forest is given away. Public protests over the government plans have heightened in the capital and car bumper stickers urging people to save Mabira forest have become very popular, our correspondent says. There has also been a text message campaign, urging people to take part in the protests. Supporters of Scoul's bid for more land say the expansion of would create more jobs and income for the country. They dismiss those opposing the move saying subsistence farmers have already encroached on much of the forest land. The kabaka, or king, of the local Buganda community has offered to give alternative land for the sugar company in a bid to save the hardwood forest. 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