Page 1 REPUBLIC OF KENYA INDIGENOUS PEOPLES PLAN (Ilchamus, Ogiek and Sengwer) of the Kenya Agricultural Productivity Sustainable Land Management Project Final 20/1/2006 Prepared by Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) P.O. Box 57811- 00200 Nairobi Tel: 4183301-20 Fax: 4183344 Email: resource.centre@kari.org Webpage: www.kari.org IPP232 Page 2 2 Table of content Executive Summary......................................................................................................3 1. Introduction ................................................................................................7 2. The indigenous peoples affected by KAP-SLM.........................................11 2.0.1. Limitations................................................................................................13 2.1. Hunter-Gatherer affected by KAP-SLM....................................................14 2.1.1. Ogiek........................................................................................................18 2.1.1.1. History......................................................................................................18 2.1.1.2. Livelihood.................................................................................................16 2.1.1.3. Social organisation....................................................................................21 2.1.2. Sengwer....................................................................................................22 2.1.2.1. History......................................................................................................22 2.1.2.2. Livelihood.................................................................................................24 2.1.2.3. Social organisation....................................................................................26 2.1.3. Hunter-Gatherers: Development visions and key issues.............................26 2.2. Marginalised pastoralists affected by KAP-SLM: Ilchamus.......................28 2.2.1. History......................................................................................................28 2.2.2. Livelihood.................................................................................................30 2.2.2.1. The mainland Ilchamus.............................................................................30 2.2.2.2. The Ilchamus communities on the islands of Lake Baringo .......................31 2.2.3. Social Organisation...................................................................................31 2.2.4. Marginalised pastoralists: Development visions and key issues.................32 2.3. Summary of the living condition of indigenous peoples in the KAP-SLM project regions ..........................................................................................33 3. Impact and risk assessment - proposals for mitigation and compensation measures...................................................................................................35 4. The Indigenous Peoples Plan of the KAP-SLM.........................................46 5. Communication framework.......................................................................51 6. Grievance processes..................................................................................53 7. Monitoring and evaluation mechanisms ....................................................54 Annexes Bibliography...............................................................................................................55 Itinerary .................................................................................................................58 Peoples and organisations directly consulted...............................................................59 Participants IPP Workshop Kakamega 18/1/2006........................................................61 Comments and Feedbacks from IPP Workshop...........................................................62 OP. 4.10: Indigenous Peoples......................................................................................71 Page 3 3 Executive Summary The Kenya Agricultural Productivity and Sustainable Land Management Project (KAP-SLM) seeks to promote the sustainable use of land and natural resources to achieve higher productivity and incomes for the rural populations of Kenya and the maintenance of critical ecosystem functions in fr agile areas. The project’s key development goal is to contribute to the improvement of the lives and livelihoods of rural communities through the development, acquisition and application of improved and profitable land management technologies and production practices. During project preparation it became clear that the project might impact on indigenous peoples’ rights, lands, livelihoods and culture. To qualify for funding from the World Bank and following best practice documented in the World Bank’s policy on indigenous peoples (OP 4.10), the Government of Kenya has commissioned through the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) the elaboration of this Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP) to ensure that the development process fully respects the dignity, human rights, economies, and culture of indigenous peoples and that the project and its IPP has a broad community support from the affected indigenous peoples. To achieve this, this IPP develops measures to (a) avoid potentially adverse effects on the indigenous peoples' communities; or (b) when avoidance is not feasible, minimize, mitigate, or compensate for such effects. (c) The IPP aims also to ensure that the indigenous peoples receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate and gender as well as intergenerationally inclusive. The IPP is based on free, prior and informed consultations with indigenous peoples undertaken in five phases: a) baseline survey and in-depth consultations with seven representative indigenous peoples’ communities, with some indigenous peoples’ organisations and other NGOs; b) elaboration of a draft IPP on the basis of this information; c) distribution of the draft IPP to indigenous peoples’ communities and indigenous peoples’ organisations; d) internal discussion of the draft IPP among the indigenous peoples; e) feedback workshop to discuss and finalise the IPP of the KAP-SLM. Indigenous Peoples in the KAP-SLM Operational Areas The African Commission’s Working Group of Experts on Indigenous Populations & Communities outlines that “almost all African states host a rich variety of different ethnic groups (…). All of these groups are indigenous to Africa. However, some are in a structural subordinate position to the dominating groups and the state, leading to marginalisation and discrimination. It is this situation that the indigenous concept, in its modern analytical form, and the international legal framework attached to it, addresses”. The project will become active in five operational areas. The report documents that the Sengwer in the Cherangany Hills , the Ogiek in the Yala and Kinale-Kikuyu Catchments and the Ilchamus in the Tugen Hill catchments are the marginalised and social discriminated peoples of that particular region. The report documents in detail that indigenous peoples face similar problems whether they are hunter-gatherers or semi-pastoralists. From the legal point of view the Ogiek, Page 4 4 Sengwer and Ilchamus are citizens equal to all other Kenyans, but they have neither the same access to land, resources and protection against land grabbers and cattle rustlers as other groups, nor the same influence, legal status, organizational, technical or economic capacities as other citizens of Kenya. The Ogiek and Sengwer, who formerly ranged over broad areas of uninterrupted forests as full-time foragers, have increasingly been constricted to areas with home ‘bases’ involving agriculture and livestock rearing and outlying areas where some honey gathering is still practiced. The Ilchamus have been forced to act as a buffer between powerful sets of people paying the lion’s share of the costs of the clashes without participating in the benefits. The constant taking of land and constantly increased restrictions of the access to natural resources have further increased the sedentarisation, marginalisation, social discrimination and impoverishment of the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus. The Ogiek and Sengwer, who are more dependent on forests than others, were - often in disrespect of their legal utilisation rights - forced out of the forest with little or no compensation and with little or no land to go to or resources to live on. Has this increased dependence on farming and livestock rearing, and the desire to access social services and decision making processes turned the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus into simple citizens of Kenya like others - a few ethnic groups among many others? Decidedly not! Few Ogiek, Sengwer or Ilchamus are working as civil servants. They are less represented in county councils etc. and decision making processes and less often recognised as chiefs or assistant chiefs. On the contrary, they are forced to accept to be represented by their neighbours and to be administered by dominant ethnic groups in the local and central administration. Rough estimates of cash income indicate that indigenous peoples’ households may earn about one third of average rural incomes in the country, most of them are landless and without legal access to natural resources or any other source of income. They have no way to participate in the benefits of the reform process in the domain of sustainable land and natural resource management as they lack the capacities to voice their needs and concerns. They are not able to defend their possession of the remnants of their ‘homelands’ from outside interests and further encroachment on their land and their resources. The key development vision of the indigenous peoples is quite simple: They want to live in peace with their neighbours, on a piece of land big enough to carry out agriculture and graze some livestock, have access to forests to gather honey for consumption and commercial use, practice their culture, have equal access to social infrastructure and technical services and be equally represented in all decision making bodies at local, regional and national level. In short, they want to enjoy life as all other people in Kenya. They don’t request special treatment, but equal opportunities. Page 5 5 The Indigenous peoples plan of the KAP-SLM In the positive scenario of a successful KAP-SLM, which works in accordance with the visions and approaches set up in the various project documents, the policy framework in Kenya and the World Bank social safeguards, the KAP-SLM will foster the full respect for the dignity, livelihoods, human rights, and culture of the indigenous peoples, protect the indigenous peoples from suffering adverse effects from the implemented measures, and guarantee that the indigenous peoples receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate and gender and intergenerationally inclusive. Is it likely that the KAP-SLM will achieve all this without a specific set of action? Certainly not! If one deconstructs sustainable land management to the key principles, it becomes obvious that the concept is to invest time, money and energy and to not exploit all possible short term benefits in view of future individual and collective gains. As it is logic that nobody invests or accepts reduced short term benefits as long as he/she is not sure that he/she will benefit from the long term benefits, the secured ownership of land and access to resources for all stakeholders is a key requirement for sustainable land and natural resource management. This key problem for the indigenous peoples’ communities has to be addressed in a timely and comprehensive manner to allow indigenous peoples to become beneficiaries of the KAP-SLM project. The report documents in detail that the KAP-SLM project embodies in a scenario without an IPP several major risks for the indigenous peoples, which have to be mitigated to insure that the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus do not · face further physical and economic displacements from land and forests traditionally utilized by them as source of livelihood and basis for their cultural and social system, · loose all legal access to natural resources, which are an important source of livelihood and basis for their cultural and social system, · continue to be affected by land grabbers and cattle rustlers, · become even more marginalized in the society and disintegrate from the nation, · receive less assistance from governmental services, · have less capacities to defend their legal rights, · become or remain as dependent of other ethnic groups, and · lose their cultural and social identity. Discussions with all stakeholders indicate that all parties involved are prepared to assist the indigenous peoples to face these risks. The main actors of the IPP of the KAP-SLM KAP-SLM are KARI, the Ministries of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries, Environment and Natural Resources, Water and Irrigation, Lands, Home Affaires, Planning and National Development, Education, Gender, Sports, Culture and Social Services, Special Programmes, Tourism and Wildlife, Justice, the Office of the President, the Kenya National Commission for Human Rights, the indigenous peoples’ organisations and the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus themselves. To realise the potential positive impacts and to mitigate the potential negative impacts, to guarantee that the indigenous populations have equal opportunities to participate in the benefits offered by the KAP-SLM and that these benefits are culturally appropriate, to ensure that the rights, livelihoods, dignity and culture of the indigenous forest are Page 6 6 respected, to guarantee that the KAP-SLM fulfils international standards as outlined in the OP 4.10 of the World Bank and to enable the KAP-SLM to fulfil its objectives, the Government of Kenya will carry out through KAP-SLM the following mitigation measures for the Sengwer, Ogiek and Ilchamus in the operational area of the KAP-SLM project: Establish an environment that enables sustainable land and resource management · Establish the capacities necessary to implement the IPP; · Establish an equal access to land and natural resources; · Establish an equal access to security, social infrastructure and technical services. Establish equal technical opportunities · Provide the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus with technical capacities to participate actively in sustainable land and natural resource management; · Provide the relevant GoK staff and other stakeholders with the technical capacities to cooperate successfully and in a culturally appropriate manner with the indigenous peoples; · Facilitate priority access of indigenous peoples to KAP-SLM related jobs; · Establish for the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus an equal access to decision making processes in the domain of sustainable land and natural resource management; · Establish a participatory impact monitoring for KAP- SLM in indigenous peoples’ areas. Establish equal cultural opportunities · Establish a national policy on indigenous peoples; · Assist the indigenous peoples’ organisations in capacity building to preserve the loss of traditional knowledge, culture and livelihood patterns. · Foster the creation of forums for communication and exchange between IP and other ethnic groups and accompany this process of mutual understanding. It is assumed that these eleven activities of the IPP of the KAP-SLM are able to guarantee that the KAP-SLM is able to satisfy international requirements in general and the OP 4.10 of the World Bank in particular and that · the KAP-SLM reduces poverty for all ethnic groups and lower the dependence on and degradation of natural resources; · the KAP-SLM promotes an effective management system of lands and natural resources, which offers positive impacts to the entire population and the biodiversity; · the KAP-SLM respects the dignity, rights and culture of the indigenous peoples; · the KAP-SLM assures that the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus receive culturally appropriate benefits equal to any other ethnic groups. Page 7 7 1. Introduction The Kenya Agricultural Productivity and Sustainable Land Management project (KAP- SLM) seeks to promote the sustainable use of land and natural resources to achieve higher productivity and incomes for the rural populations of Kenya and the maintenance of critical ecosystem functions in fragile areas. The project’s key development goal is to contribute to the improvement of the lives and livelihoods of rural communities through the development, acquisition and application of improved and profitable land management technologies and production practices. The Government of Kenya (GoK) recognizes the need to raise rural incomes and to improve the sustainability of land and natural resource utilisation. It has elaborated various strategies to address these issues: The Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation emphasised the importance of sustainable land management as a critical element in poverty reduction. The Strategy for Revitalizing Agriculture stressed the need for a coherent land policy and forest policy as condition sine qua non for the sustainable utilisation of land and natural resources and as key to poverty reduction and biodiversity conservation. Comprehensive forest and land policies covering the use, administration, tenure, and delivery systems of land and forest have been initiated. The forest policy has been adopted in 2005, while the land policy is still under preparation. These policies have far reaching implications on: (i) existing legislation and the institutions mandated with the management of land and natural resources; (ii) land and natural resource management; and (iii) the extent to which local communities can participate in these activities. The National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan recognizes encroachment for agriculture and grazing and the resulting loss of vegetation as a major threat to biodiversity and notes the link between soil erosion resulting from hillside and dry land cultivation and monoculture. The National Action Programme addresses these issues in the context of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification . In a participatory process the following priorities were identified: · An environment that enables communities to access and manage local resources; · Development of ecologically sound land use policies, plans and techniques; G · Information and knowledge base for addressing land degradation; G · Implementation of a targeted awareness to foster cooperation and a common understanding on sustainable land management; · Capacity building of stakeholders; G · Support to local community initiatives to develop long-term financial mechanisms. G The KAP-SLM has been elaborated to address these national and international key objectives. The development objective of the project is that “agricultural producers and other natural resource users increasingly adopt profitable and environmentally-sound land management practices and alternative livelihood strategies in the targeted operational areas.” Specifically, the project will: · Make resources available and strengthen the capacity of agricultural producers and other resource users to: (i) adopt SLM practices and technologies to mitigate land degradation and achieve greater productivity of crops, trees and livestock; and (ii) adopt sustainable alternative livelihood options to diversify and increase income, and reduce the pressure on the natural resources. Page 8 8 · Enhance the institutional capacity of all relevant stakeholders to promote sustainable land management practices and alternative livelihood strategies based on participatory and demand-driven approaches. · Evaluate the impact of existing policies affecting the management of natural resources and contribute to the removal of barriers hindering the widespread adoption of SLM practices. · Facilitate the exchange of information on best practices in sustainable land management among farmers, communities, extension agents, researchers, development partners, and policy makers. The project has 5 components: Component 1 ( Building Capacity for Sustainable Land Management) recognises the critical need for technical, organisational and financial capacity at multiple levels and seeks to address the gap between the needed and existing capacities. It will target communities and service providers for training and capacity enhancement as well as help build a broader awareness of the potentials and impacts of SLM. It will support capacity building among producers and resource users within communities and empower households to analyse opportunities, identify and experiment with alternative interventions, and generate and share knowledge on adaptive management of natural resources. It will help communities to develop micro-catchment-plans through participatory approaches, involving all strata of society (women, the poor, landless people, indigenous people, etc), advisory service providers, and researchers as well as support Community Based Organisations (CBO) in developing and implementing demand-driven micro-projects in the context of these plans. As much as possible, the project will focus its capacity building efforts on existing CBO. Particular emphasis will be placed on social inclusion to ensure adequate representation of women, landless, and other disadvantaged groups such as indigenous peoples. This means that the project will work with all sets of people living in the catchment areas, despite the legal status of their access to land (legal, tolerated or illegal). Component 2 (Investments in community SLM micro-projects) will support community micro-projects that are identified within the micro-catchment-plans developed by communities to address land degradation and/or provide alternate means of livelihoods. Communities will be able to select from a menu of technologies and practices to address land degradation and generate income that are examined through cost-benefit analysis and adapted to the agro-ecological conditions of the targeted project areas. The communities will be able to access the necessary technical assistance from public and private service providers. Component 3 (Strengthening the enabling environment for SLM) will strengthen the enabling environment necessary for mainstreaming sustainable land management approaches through the policy and institutional landscape. It will seek to address gaps in the policy framework, support for institutional capacity for planning and for monitoring and improved coordination between agencies. It will support the Government in implementing its policy objectives related to sustainable land and natural resources management including the land and forest policies. It will also support stakeholder consultations on these various policy issues as well as seek to remove existing policy and legal barriers through a consultative process involving communities, CBOs, Page 9 9 government agencies and research institutions. Policy makers will also be exposed to SLM & NRM issues through consultative policy meetings, workshops and dialogue. Component 4 (Payment for Environmental Services - PES) will pilot the implementation of a PES mechanism in watershed of the rivers that supply water to the Sasumua Water Treatment Plant operated by the Nairobi Water and Sewerage Company. PES is an innovative market-based approach to conservation financing, based on the principles that those who benefit from environmental services should pay for them, and that those who contribute to generating these services should be compensated for providing them. The PES approach is attractive in that (i) it generates new financing, which would not otherwise be available for conservation; (ii) it is likely to be sustainable, as it depends on the mutual self-interest of service users and providers and not on the whims of government or donor funding; (iii) it is likely to be efficient, in that it conserves services whose benefits exceed the cost of providing them, and does not conserve services when the opposite is true. Achieving these benefits, however, requires implementing the approach correctly. Critical aspects include ensuring that there is a good understanding of how land use affects the desired environmental services and establishing appropriate institutional arrangements to mediate transactions between service users and providers at acceptable transaction costs. Component 5 (Project coordination and monitoring) will support project coordination and implementation at the national, district and grassroots level, both through institutional structures. The project coordination organ will include competitively selected personnel with the required skill-mix (agronomy and economics, SLM/NRM, communications, community and social development, M&E etc). During project preparation it became clear that the project might impact on indigenous peoples’ rights, lands, livelihoods and culture. To qualify for funding from the World Bank and following best practice documented in the World Bank’s policy on indigenous peoples (OP 4.10), the Government of Kenya (GoK) has commissioned through the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute the elaboration of this Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP) to ensure that the development process fully respects the dignity, human rights, economies, and cultures of indigenous peoples and that the KAP-SLM and its IPP has a broad community support from the affected indigenous peoples’ communities. To achieve this, this IPP develops measures to (a) avoid potentially adverse effects on the indigenous peoples' communities; or (b) when avoidance is not feasible, minimize, mitigate, or compensate for such effects. c) The IPP also aims at ensuring that the indigenous peoples receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate and gender and intergenerationally inclusive. To achieve this, the IPP has been elaborated through a) a gender and intergenerationally inclusive framework that provided opportunities for consultation at each stage among (i) the project, (ii) the affected indigenous peoples' communities, (iii) the indigenous peoples organizations, and (iv) other local civil society organizations identified by the affected indigenous peoples' communities; b) consultation methods appropriate to the social and cultural values of the affected indigenous peoples' communities and their local conditions and, in designing these methods, gives special attention to the concerns of indigenous women, youth, and children; and c) the provision of all relevant information about the project (including an assessment of Page 10 10 potential adverse effects of the project on the affected indigenous peoples' communities – see chapter 3) in a culturally appropriate manner. The free, prior and informed consultations with indigenous peoples was undertaken in 5 phases: a) baseline survey and in-depth consultations in 7 representative indigenous peoples’ settlements and some indigenous peoples’ organisations; b) elaboration of a draft IPP on the basis of this information; c) distribution of the draft IPP to all stakeholders (KARI, relevant governmental structures and indigenous peoples’ communities in the operational area of the KAP-SLM project); d) internal discussion of the draft IPP among the stakeholders without external influence; d) workshop to discuss and finalise the IPP of the KAP-SLM (see annex). The IPP for the KAPSLM embodies the following elements: a) A summary of the legal and institutional framework, the demographic, social, cultural, and political characteristics of the affected indigenous peoples’ communities, the land and territories that they have traditionally owned or customarily used or occupied, and the natural resources on which they depend. b) A summary of results of the free, prior, and informed consultations with the affected indigenous peoples’ communities. c) A summary of project activities and their possible impacts. d) An action plan of measures to ensure that the indigenous peoples receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate, including, if necessary, measures to enhance the capacity of the project implementing agencies. e) When potential adverse effects on indigenous peoples are identified under b, an appropriate action plan of measures to avoid, minimize, mitigate, or compensate for these adverse effects. f) The cost estimates and financing plan for the IPP. g) A framework for ensuring free, prior, and informed consultations with the affected indigenous peoples’ communities during project implementation. h) Accessible procedures appropriate to the project to address grievances by the affected indigenous peoples’ communities arising from project implementation taking into account the availability of judicial recourse and customary dispute settlement mechanisms among the indigenous peoples. i) Mechanisms and benchmarks appropriate to the project for monitoring, evaluating, and reporting on the implementation of the IPP. The monitoring and evaluation mechanisms will include arrangements for the free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected indigenous peoples’ communities. Page 11 11 2. The indigenous peoples affected by KAP-SLM “There is no internationally agreed upon definition of indigenous people” (UN Human Right and Indigenous Issues: 92). But for operational purposes and in line with other international organisations, such as the UN Working Group on Indigenous Populations , the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues and the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the OP 4.10 of the World Bank suggests “to use the term ‘indigenous peoples’ in a generic sense to refer to a distinct, vulnerable, social and cultural group possessing the following characteristics in varying degrees: a) self-identification as members of a distinct indigenous cultural group and recognition of this identity by others; b) collective attachment to geographically distinct habitats or ancestral territories in the project area and to the natural resources in these habitats and territories; c) customary cultural, economic, social, or political institutions that are separate from those of the dominant society and culture; and d) an indigenous language, often different from the official language of the country or region.” The African Commission’s Working Group of Experts on Indigenous Populations & Communities outlines the problems related to the use of the term “indigenous peoples” in Africa: “There is no question that all Africans are indigenous to Africa in the sense that they were there before the European colonialists arrived and that they have been subject to sub-ordination during colonialism. We thus in no way question the identity of other groups. When some particular marginalized groups use the term indigenous to describe their situation, they use the modern analytical form of the concept (which does not merely focus on aboriginality) in an attempt to draw attention to and alleviate the particular form of discrimination they suffer from. They do not use the term in order to deny other Africans their legitimate claim to belong to Africa and identity as such” (ACHPR 2005: 88). “Almost all African states host a rich variety of different ethnic groups (…). All of these groups are indigenous to Africa. However, some are in a structural subordinate position to the dominating groups and the state, leading to marginalisation and discrimination. It is this situation that the indigenous concept, in its modern analytical form, and the international legal framework attached to it, addresses” (ACHPR 2005: 114). In that logic it becomes clear that the indigenous concept is nothing fixed once and forever, but that it is possible that certain groups, which are marginalised and discriminated at national level, might at a local level be in a dominant position or at least able to defend their rights, interest and to voice their needs in local fora. Social discrimination might also change with time. It is possible that a group, which at a certain period had been in a dominant or equal position to others becomes marginalised and socially discriminated. Nevertheless, it seems as in most cases indigenous peoples remain for structural reasons (for example because they are employing different livelihood patterns) throughout history in a marginalised and discriminated position. The project will become active in five operational areas: Cherangany Hills, Tugen Hills, Kinale-Kikuyu, Yala and Taita-Taveta (see map 1). All of them are inhabited by many ethnic groups. Quite some of them consider themselves as being the indigenous peoples Page 12 12 of the area and fulfil the general criteria of indigenous peoples of the UN, the ILO and the World Bank. Philosophy teaches that if everybody is considered to be special, nobody is special. Due to that, it doesn’t make sense to establish special measurements for all ethnic groups in all the watersheds. Following the outlined modern indigenous concept one has to ask whether all ethnic groups have the same chance to benefit from the project and voice their concern if their rights, interests, needs, livelihoods, culture or desires are affected by the project. This question will be answered in a case by case assessment. It will show that the Sengwer in the Cherangany Hills, the Ogiek in the Yala and Kinale-Kikuyu Catchment area and the Ilchamus in the Tugen Hills are the indigenous peoples in the KAP-SLM operational areas. Page 13 13 2.0.1. Limitations During the consultations it became clear that there are some Watha living in the Taita hill catchment area. From published and oral sources it also became clear that the Watha – a group of hunter-gatherers - are indigenous peoples according to the definition used in the IPP. Prof Julian Bauer from the NGO ECOTERRE, who has worked with the Watha for the last ten years, was so kind to establish contacts with the Watha in this area. He and the ECOTERRE field staff indicated that the Watha of the Taita hills have no traditional link to the area, but consist mostly of some individuals or families (in total around 20-30 individuals), who have stranded there after being evicted from the Tsavo East National Park. This finding is further supported through information gathered by KARI and the teams, which elaborated the social assessment and the environmental and social framework for the KAP-SLM project. Due to that, it was agreed that there is no need to consult the Watha in this area in the elaboration of the IPP. The KAP-SLM project will make sure that they are invited for relevant meetings in that catchment area and that their rights, livelihoods and interests are respected. During the elaboration of the IPP it has been suggested that the Endorois, another marginalised group of semi-pastoralists, who lives near Lake Bogoria in the Tugen Hill catchment area, might be affected by the project. During the consultations all stakeholders agreed that their lebensraum is outside the project area as it has been defined in December 2005. In case the operational area of KAP-SLM is changed in a way, which would make it likely that the Endorois might be affected by the project, KAP-SLM will facilitate free, prior and informed consultations with them to seek their broad community support for the project. As the operational areas of KAP-SLM have not be finally defined, the project will screen all new areas for groups, which might qualify as indigenous peoples according to the definition used in this IPP, and consult them in a free, prior and informed manner to seek their broad community support for the project. As the selection and limitation of the operational areas and partner communities has not been completed while elaborating this IPP, the precise number of indigenous peoples affected by the project in each of the five project sites is unknown. This IPP provides some estimates on the basis of published and oral sources and have been verified by the stakeholders. It has been suggested that a more detailed assessment is carried out as soon as the detailed operational areas are defined. It has to be noted that the following description of the baseline situation of the indigenous peoples in Kenya are not comprehensive scientific ethnographies. They are rather rapid assessments of the situation found in December 2005 and January 2006 and based entirely on the documents listed in the bibliography and discussions with the people listed in the contact list. Page 14 14 2.1. Hunter-Gatherer affected by KAP-SLM Hunter-gatherer are in Kenya often addressed as Torobbo, Dorobo, Ndorobo, or Wandorobo, which are all swahili-izations deriving from "Il Torobbo," the Maa- term for people without cattle i.e. in the Maasai understanding “poor people”. In the coastal areas hunter-gather are mostly addressed by the Somali term “Boni”, which refers to someone without any possessions, and/or “Sanye”, which means in Somali “to gather together to use for a general purpose”. Assimilation policies and lack of recognition of separate and distinct identities of hunter-gatherers started under the colonial government, when the stated policy was “wherever possible the Dorobo should become members of and be absorbed into the larger tribe with which they have most affinity” (Adams, 1932). The post-colonial government has followed a similar approach by classifying all hunter-gatherer groups under “Other” or forcing them to be counted and grouped along with their dominant neighbours. They are further marginalised through their way of living and their livelihood patterns, as in Kenya all hunting is illegal since the 70ies and all policies, sector strategies and projects solemnly address the needs and interests of agriculturalists and/or pastoralists. From a national perspective, this makes perfect sense as more than 95% of the population depend on these two sources of livelihood and origin from cultures which are closely associated with one of the two. If one considers that most people depend on agriculture and cattle grazing, the ban of all hunting also seems not that much of a problem as game meat has for most ethnic groups only a cultural meaning (rite de passage, etc.), but no economic importance. The problem for them is not that they are unable to hunt, but that the compensation schemes for human-wildlife conflicts are either hardly ever paid (crop destruction) or very low (KSH 30,000 = USD 400 for a human killed by a wild animal). Nevertheless, there are people in Kenya who traditionally depended entirely on non- agricultural and non-pastoral use of forests: Among others the Ogiek and the Sengwer. Another form of marginalisation resulted from the limited understanding of hunter- gatherer livelihood strategies by the colonial powers. Huge parts of the land used before the advent of the colonialists by hunter-gatherers, teeming with wildlife, were allocated to white settlers, who considered these landscapes terra nullius (empty land) as the traditional lifestyle of hunter-gatherers doesn’t leave obvious signs of settlement or caretakership. Even where hunter-gatherer habitation or “ownership” was obvious, people were moved off the land to make way for white settlers that preferred the healthier highlands to the malaria-infested plains. During this time much of the wildlife was decimated by game hunters - long before the post-colonial government came into power. With independence, productive hunter-gatherer land was grabbed by the more dominant groups, scattering the people and forcing them to seek refuge deeper in the forests, higher up the mountains or to move to marginal areas where tsetse flies and mosquitoes are rife. During the same time, the forests were taken away when the government unilaterally gazetted these forests as protected areas, forest reserves or forest areas. Other areas, especially in the coastal region, have been set aside for large agricultural projects. Hunter- gatherer communities were summarily evicted from the forests, which had been the source of their livelihoods for thousands of years. Several hunter-gatherer communities have lodged court cases against the government, but till date no decision has been taken. The Government of Kenya has realised some of the problems created by its ignorance to the rights, needs and cultures of hunter-gatherer communities. The 2005 Forest Policy and Forest Page 15 15 Bill define as one of its policy objectives: “promote the participation of the private sector, communities and other stakeholders in forest management to conserve water catchment areas, create employment reduce poverty and ensure the sustainability of the forestry sector” (Forest Policy: Introduction). To do that, forests and wildlife should no longer be either used or protected, but sustainably managed (FP: 1.1.). A key strategy is outlined as policy statement 1.1.3.: “Empower local communities to manage forests through community forest associations”. It makes clear that “sustainable managed indigenous forests can supply goods and services to meet the demand of the growing population. These forests will be put under efficient and sustainable multipurpose management, which combines biodiversity conservation and water-catchment functions together with the production of tangible benefits for forest adjacent communities.” The KAP-SLM is a tool to implement this policy. It can and should build on the lessons learned of the ODA/DFID funded Kenya's Indigenous Forests Conservation Project (KIPCON), which has worked intensively with hunter-gatherers in the establishment of sustainable management systems for indigenous forests. A significant shortcoming of the Forest Bill , which stands in contrast to international treaties such as the Convention on Biological Diversity to which Kenya is a signatory, will be addressed in the context of the Kenya – Natural Resource Management Project (KNRM), which is a sister-project to KAP-SLM and presently under preparation within the Ministry of Natural Resources. It has applied for funding from the World Bank and is expected among others to establish the regulatory and institutional framework for implementing the forest bill. It is foreseen that it provides the legal, organisational and technical framework to adjust the forest policy to international standards. One of the issues to be solved by the project in accordance with international standards such as the social safeguards (here especially OP 4.10 Indigenous Peoples & op 4.12 Involuntary Resettlement) is the existence of large group of people living in indigenous and gazetted forests. The KNRM project preparation team has committed to address forest related issues resolving from the IPP of the KAP-SLM project within the KNRM project. The Ministry of Lands has initiated the formulation of a comprehensive policy for the administration and management of Kenya's land. The overall objective is to provide for sustainable growth and investment and the reduction of poverty in line with the Government's overall development objectives. The policy is expected to guide the development of laws that provide all citizens, particularly the poor, with equal opportunities to access and beneficially occupy and use land and guarantee the economic, equitable and environmentally sustainable allocation and use of land. It will also establish appropriate regulatory arrangements for the productive, sustainable use and equitable distribution of land. Technical reports to various aspects have been developed and are presently incorporated into a first draft (MLH 2005). Following is a short introduction to the indigenous peoples addressed in this IPP, to their history, their livelihood strategies, their social organisation, and - in general - to the marginalisation and social discrimination, they are facing and its underlying courses. Page 16 1 6 Page 17 Page 18 18 2.1.1. Ogiek The Ogiek ( Ogiot - sing.) ethnic group consists of 20-30 groups of former hunters and honey-gatherers, mostly living in forested highlands in west and central Kenya. Local groups have more specific names, e.g., Kaplelach, Kipsang'any, Kapchepkendi etc. Okiek, a Kalenjin language of the Southern Nilotic group, is the mother tongue of most Ogiek people, but several groups now speak Maasai as their first language. Their main area of living is around the Mau forest, which is not part of the KAP-SLM project. Nevertheless, at least four Ogiek groups are found in the project region: Five groups in the extreme west of the Yala river catchments near the villages Serengoni, Senghalo and in the Kipkurere forest south-west of Burnt (the last one has been visited) and one group in the Enoosupukia forest southwest of Maiella in the Kinale-Kikuyu catchments (this one has also been consulted) (see areas circled in red in the maps). In the discussions it was made clear - supported by historical evidences - that traditionally the Ogiek had occupied most of the forests of the upper Yala catchments and the higher areas of the eastern rift valley escarpment. Precise demographic figures are not available as the government did not consider the Ogiek as an independent group within the last national census. The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights estimated their total population to be between 15,000 and 20,000 individuals (ACHPR 2005:15) which is in line with scientific data (Heine and Möhlig 1980:32), while the Ogiek themselves estimate their total number to be between 20,000 (Kobei 2002:60) and 60,000 (Ogiek.org). 2.1.1.1. History Knowledge of Ogiek history before 1900 is limited. Oral history traces back the origin to the Kiplombe hills near Siswek. It is said that all Ogiek have lived there before a famine forced some of them to migrate to the Mau and Tindiret forests. Before the advent of the colonialists, they were already involved in the local and regional trading networks, bartering honey and meat for agricultural products. Colonial administration affected Ogiek groups in different ways. Between the 1920s and 1940s, many Ogiek were displaced from their lands by European farmers, while others – especially deeper in the forests – received at least full usufructuary rights for their lands, which were transformed into forest reserves. Initially they had limited direct government interaction, but felt colonial policies through the ever increasing encroachment of their neighbours, who were forced into the forests by the government to create space for the farms in the plains. Due to the reduction of land and increasing hunting pressure, the Ogiek gradually diversified their economy, adding agriculture and/or herding to the traditional hunter-gatherer lifestyle. 2.1.1.2. Livelihood Traditionally the Ogiek divided land into lineage-owned tracts stretching along the escarpment slope. Tracts transected four or five ecological zones, giving families access to honey and game during each season. Residence groups were small extended families, patrilineal cores that might be joined by affine and matrilineal relatives. Six to ten Page 19 19 adjacent lineages constituted a named local group, i.e. a significant unit of cultural identity and history. Unlike many other hunter-gatherers, beside of honey, Ogiek collect hardly any plants, fruits or non-timber-forest-products from the forest. Honey is eaten, stored for future use, brewed into beer and traded. It is said to have been the main product for the barter with their agricultural and/or pastoralist neighbours. Traditionally the Ogiek hunt with dogs, bows and arrows, spears, clubs and poison. Traditionally they were going for buffalos, elephants, duikers, hyraxes, bongos, and giant forest hogs. Now that hunting is illegal, they only hunt with small traps around their garden farms resulting in some meat from monkeys and other smaller game. Starting in the 1920ies the Ogiek stated to cultivate small millet and maize gardens due to reduced production from the forest. This led to a more sedentary lifestyle in mid- altitude forest and - in turn - a further increase of agriculture and/or pastoralism. Today, agriculture is the main source of subsistence and income, which is supported through some livestock rearing, hunting (which is illegal) and bee-keeping. Honey gathering is still a key activity and carried out the traditional way, with few Ogiek using modern bee-hives and/or processing the honey for regional markets. Blackburn concludes: "without honey and condition of getting it, Ogiek life would be entirely different. This explains why the Ogiek live in the forest" (Blackburn 1974:151). The economic activities are organised by gender groups: Men traditionally make beehives; collect honey, hunt and these days herd cattle and/or clear land to plant maize and beans. Women's work traditionally included building the houses under thick canopies ( Sanet ) and the making of leather bags, straps and clothing. Today they concentrate on the planting and harvesting of crops, the processing and cooking of food, the maintaining of firewood and water supplies and the childcare. Their access to land varies very much from village to village. Before independence most Ogiek lived on state or trust land (i.e. in the forests) with all usufructuary rights, but no letters of allotment. Following independence, the land reform and the general land demarcation in 1969 usufructurary rights were out-ruled. Legal access to land is now channelled through individual land titles and - in the Maasai-dominated districts - group- ranches. Group-ranch demarcation began in the 1970s, crossing lineage land boundaries, incorporating non-Ogiek into some groups, and registering significant parts of Ogiek land to non-Ogiek. During the same time, the Ogiek were evicted from the forest reserves. As they were not provided with any land or compensation most had to go back and live illegally in the forests until the next eviction-team would show up. The regular evictions, arrests and loss of property, crops and even lives further increased the poverty of the Ogiek, underlined their social discrimination and cemented their marginalisation. Those Ogiek that managed to obtain group-ranch titles, started in the 80ies and 90ies to divide the land into individual plots following the example of their neighbours and supported by governmental services. Settlement patterns shifted again as people moved to live on their own land, but it also attracted many Ogiek to lease or sell their lands to other ethnic groups. Many of these land sales were technically illegal as they were made Page 20 20 before group-ranches were legally divided and many sales were undertaken before Ogiek learned about the market value of their land and at ridiculously low prices. Today the majority of the Ogiek have still no legal access to land or any source of livelihood and live a life at the mercy of their non-Ogiek neighbours and local and national governments in which they are not represented (Huntingford 1929, 1954; Blackburn 1976, 1982; Kratz 1981, 1994; Marshall 1994; Tuweit 2004). If one takes the two sites visited during the elaboration of the IPP, one even gets a better understanding of the marginalisation and social discrimination of Ogiek communities and their vulnerability to all interventions in the area of land management: In the Kipkurere forest, the indigenous forests are protected as forest reserve (i.e. not considered to inhabit humans), while the lowlands were in the early 70ies transformed by non-Ogiek into Shambas, leaving little land and sources of income for the Ogiek. They mostly settled at the forest fringes and established small gardens and lived from honey gathering and subsistence agriculture. In the context of the ethnic clashes in the early 90ies, most non-Ogiek were driven out and did not return as the Shamba system, which regulated farming in forest areas, was banned during that period. They left a vast area of potential agricultural land behind, but this land was not given to the Ogiek, but taken by their dominant neighbours. The Ogiek of this region, about 1,500 individuals, have neither a legal access to land nor to any source of livelihood. Some of them were resettled in 1995 to a settlement scheme near Senhalo, where they were provided with individual land titles, but the settlement scheme was much too small to absorb all those Ogiek of the area without land. Those who remained behind report constant conflicts with their neighbours and the local administration as they have no legal access to land and resources and due to that live at the mercy of others. In 2001 the administration prohibited Ogiek children to visit the local primary school and in 2005, they told the Ogiek that they would burn down any larger farm. Due to that, they are unable to generate any cash income (Focus group discussion & Tuweit 2004). The living condition of the Ogiek in the Enoosupukia forest, which is situated at the southern end of the Mau escarpment, is even worse. The transformation of Enoosupukia from thick forest to an agricultural enclave occurred within the living memory of many of the elders. Prior to independence the Ogiek had almost exclusive use of the area. After independence some Purko-Maasai families arrived and were accepted into the community. Official demarcation of land began in 1977, but numerous small development projects were initiated up to a decade earlier and were inclusive of, or even initiated by the Ogiek. Scott Matter suggests in his MSc thesis that agricultural groups started entering the areas in the late 1960s. Coming at first to stay in the forest, they began to clear small areas and to cultivate. A gradually growing population of farmers began to invite their relatives and friends, leading to the nearly complete deforestation and the social and political marginalization of Ogiek and Maasai residents. In the context of the ethnic clashes in the early 90ies they were violently expulsed from Enoosupukia – legalised with the need for water catchment protection (Matter 2004, forthcoming). Most parts of Enoosupukia remained Trust Land and are till date under the legal jurisdiction of the Narok county council, while some of the land, which has been earlier Page 21 21 transformed, was gazetted as settlement scheme (Moi Ndabi) and hosts today 21 of the 64 Ogiek families of Enoosupukia. Stability was maintained until 2002 when the government called for the eviction of all residents from the water catchment area. Local community members fought back, supported in their fight by the Catholic Church, the Ogiek Welfare Council and Survival International – an US-based human rights organisation. Due to external pressure the evictions was not carried out that year, but in February 2005, residents of the trust land were notified of an impending eviction order, which has since been effected. Approximately 1,200 people were forced from their homes, houses were burnt or destroyed. People dispersed to various locations, with the majority taking refuge on the land of their Ogiek relatives. The Ogiek continued to protest that they had been unlawfully evicted from their land and victimized by police brutality and received missions from the UNHCHR and the ILO, but the only result was the return of county council rangers in June 2005. The rangers proceeded to target specific homes, destroying the temporary shelters erected by victims of the first eviction. In the wake of this second eviction, those community members whose homes had been destroyed either fled again or took refuge with those whose homes survived the attacks (Matter 2004, forthcoming). When we visited the Ogiek of Enoosupukia in December 2005 tenuous stability ruled the place. While the county council claims the need to enforce depopulated water catchment areas, long-term residents, both displaced and remaining at Enoosupukia, begun legal proceedings against those institutions. Meanwhile, Maasai have moved their herds back onto the lush, highland pastures around the former homes and shambas of displaced residents, while the Ogiek have nearly given up all hope to survive the next years without external assistance. 2.1.1.3. Social organisation Ogiek live in local groups dispersed throughout the highlands, typically near one or more other Ogiek groups and adjacent to more populous ethnic groups. In quite a good number of cases Ogiek speak their neighbours' language better than their own. Ogiek groups thus have distinctive histories of interaction with one another, with their neighbours, and with local government administration. Modes of social organization vary among Ogiek groups, but in general one can say that patrilineages are central in land holding and residence, legal matters, inheritance, and marriage arrangement, while matrilineal and affine relations are important for ceremonial occasions, in some residential and work groups, and in emotional terms. Further units are the age-sets, which create relationships among members, crosscutting relations defined by lineage and clan. Women have no separate age-sets, but become associated with male age-sets through relatives. Political and legal matters are discussed in meetings of men. Depending on the issue, gatherings involve men from one lineage, several lineages, or a large neighbourhood. All adult men have the right to attend and speak at meetings, though older men often speak more extensively. This changes of course in meetings with officials as most elders don’t speak Swahili or English. Women were traditionally excluded from formal councils, but this traditional setting is no longer ruling as government officials and external visitors demand and invite the presence of all gender groups (Huntingford 1929, 1954; Blackburn 1976, 1982; Kratz 1981, 1994; Marshall Page 22 22 1994). While in their majority still organised in the traditional way, most Ogiek are grateful for the effort of some educated Ogiek, who have established an armada of Community Based Organisation and NGOs. These efforts are spearheaded by Charles Sena (the first Ogiek lawyer) and Joseph Towett from the Ogiek Peoples National Assembly (they also represent the Ogiek Rural Integral Projects and the Ogiek Welfare Council), Daniel Kobei from the Ogiek Peoples’ Development Program and Sarone ole Sene, who holds a PhD in anthropology from McGill and runs the research department of World Vision Kenya. 2.1.2. Sengwer The Sengwer (also referred to as Cherangany, a nickname given to them by the Maasai) are former hunter-gatherers, who live in the Trans-Nzoia, Marakwet and West Pokot Districts in and around the Cherangany Hills. In a letter to the Review Commission of the Constitution of Kenya, they outlined in detail the boundaries of their ancestral land, which covered most of the Cherangany hills and the lowland of the region. 1 The majority of them live in the Cherangany hill catchment area of the KAP-SLM project (see area circled in red in the map=. The published data of the 1999 census does not provide information on the ethnographic distribution. The Sengwer themselves claim to have between 40,000 (Tiampati 2002:63) and 60,000 (Kiptum 2001) members. No scientific material could be located to judge on this claim. 2.1.2.1. History Oral history traces the history of the Sengwer back to a man called Sengwer, who is considered to be the mythical first inhabitant of the Cherangany hills. It is said that he had two sons named Sirikwa (elder) and Mitia, whose children formed the clans: Kapchepororwo, Kapchepar (Kaptoyoi), Kapumpo, Kaptogom, Kapcherop, Kaki-sango, Kimarich (Kamosus), Kapsormei (Kapseto), Kapteteke, Kipsirat, Kamengetiony (Kopoch & Kapkotet), Kaplema and Kamesieu. Each patrilineage is said to have had their portion of land running from the highlands to the plains. The elders said that before the advent of the colonialists, the Sengwer lived during the rainy season in the vast plains of what is today Trans-Nzoia and during the dry season in the forest on the mountain slopes of the Cherangany hills. It is said that the Sengwer lived in good relation with their neighbours as they were not competing for the same resources, but barter honey and dry meat for food crops and/or milk etc. 1 “Ancestral Land of the Sengwer: Commences from Kiporoom River in Uasin Gishu District. It extends along Kapsumbeywet river through Ziwa (Sirikwa) centre, Moiben Posta and Kose hills in Uasin Gishu. From Kose hills it goes down to join Moiben river. The boundary goes up river Moiben to the confluence of Ko'ngipsebe and Kimowo streams. It turns eastwards to cover areas of Maron sub-location in Emboput location in Marakwet District. Turning to the west it then goes to Kamolokon along Marakwet/West Pokot and Marakwet boundary. From here it drops to Sebit, Somor, then to Kongelai and up along Swom river. From Swom river to the confluence of Swom and Cheptenden river. From Cheptenden river to the confluence of Cheptenden river and Moiben river where these two rivers confluence with Kiboorom” (Kiptum 2002). Page 23 23 It is believed that the first Arab slave and ivory hunters came to the area around 1600 and oral history claims that the Sengwer have been quite involved into the trade. In exchange for the ivory they were provided with Millet and Sorghum seedlings. During the Maasai immigration they acquired their first cattle, but it is a common belief that hunting and gathering remained the main source of livelihood for all Sengwer until the mid of the last century. As so many other ethnic minorities, the Sengwer were considered by the British to be served best if they were forced to assimilate with their dominant neighbours. Due to that Page 24 24 their traditional structure was not recognised and integrated as independent ethnic group in the system of indirect rule, but as sub-structure of their neighbours. As their land in the plains of Trans Nzoia turned out to be the best area for agricultural production in Kenya, they were displaced entirely from there to make way for white farmers. A minority stayed behind as farm workers, but the majority went up into the forests of the Cherangany hills. When the government started to protect the water-catchments and forests in the 1920ies and 30ies as forest reserves, they acknowledged the presence of the Sengwer and provided them with all usufructuary rights for this area as well as the right to farm on the openings in the forest. They enjoyed these rights until the 1970ies, when a new fashion of conservation recommended that all hunting should be prohibited and forests should be cleansed of people. As the Sengwer were not considered as independent group, they were also not invited to join the settlement schemes in which the independent Kenya redistributed the white farms to the farm workers and the dominant ethnic groups of the area. While most Sengwer are officially landless, some few Sengwer especially in the northern parts of the Cherangany hills received some land, but even this land is hardly contested. 2.1.2.2. Livelihood Before the colonial time, Sengwer used to be hunters and honey-gatherers. Following their contacts with the Arabs and the Maasai some adopted small scale agriculture (shifting cultivation) and/or livestock rearing, but it is said that hunting remained their main source of livelihood until the 1920s. The elders reported collective as well as individual hunting techniques. During the Sakas (collective hunt) a group of people would try to circle large animals such as elephants and buffalos on the plains and spear or arrow them down. In contrast, the Kwo (individual hunt) is carried out by a nuclear family and mostly based on the use of poisoned baits and/or traps. Gathering of fruits and other non-timber-forest-products is mostly done by women, while honey collection from beehives as well as from natural places such as holes in trees etc. is traditionally a male activity. It has - beside of eating - a variety of uses: · honey is mixed with water as a daily drink (breakfast), and used to brew beer; · honey plays a major role in marriages and other ceremonies. Before marriage, honey is given to the mother of the bride as part of the dowry. The night before the marriage, wife and husband had to smear honey on their future house, each starting in a different direction until they met and unite. · honey has also medical use. People apply it to their body to drive away mosquitoes and against muscle pains. Another smelly mixture is spread around the compounds to keep wildlife at distance. Millet and Sorghum are the “traditional” crops, which were inherited from the Arab traders and mostly planted in the lowlands. These days, maize, potatoes, beans and a variety of vegetable are grown. Before land became scarce, the Sengwer used shifting cultivation patterns and changed their farms every three years. Transplanting, harvesting transforming, marketing and preparing of crops is considered beside of gathering, the provision of water and the education of the children as core female activities. Page 25 25 The Sengwer learned to keep animals, especially cattle, from the Maasai, when these arrived in the area in the context of their expansion from the north. The herds of the Sengwer are - also due to the common cattle rustling - very small and milk and livestock mostly used for auto-consumption. Most of the ancestral land of the Sengwer is occupied either by other ethnic groups or demarcated as forests, which prohibit legal settlements or agriculture. It is said that around 20% of the Sengwer have legal access to land, but that these plots are on average only 2.5 acres per household, i.e. very small. The majority of the community members are landless. Significant parts of the ancestral lands have been demarcated as forests: Kapkanyar 70,000 acres; Kipteber 57,000 acres; Kapolet 10,800 acres; Chemurgoi 9,800 acres; Sogotio 8,800 acres; Kerer 5,340 acres; Kaisingor 2,680 acres and Embobut 8,000 acres. The problem of the Sengwer to access land and/or resources legally might best be described best through an assessment of the three communities visited: The Embobut forest in the Marakwet district contains, according to local sources, approximately 5,000 Sengwer, which claim to have arrived in the area in the 1930s when they were displaced from the plains of Trans-Nzoia. The settlements are located right on top of the highest lines of the Cherangany hills, with a view into the Rift Valley and the plains of Trans-Nzoia on either side, but without roads, schools, health infrastructure as it is officially considered as forest. The people who took refuge there, report of ongoing conflicts with forest officials and neighbouring communities. They commonly stated that the forest guards would arrive every three to four years to burn and destroy their houses and farms in the name of forest conservation and to loot their property. In the meantime armed cattle rustlers would come time and again to take crops and cattle and shoot those who resisted. The Sengwer of the Embobut forest made clear that the local and central administration did not react on any complaints against the evictions, with the argument that the Sengwer are illegally in the area and due to that not entitled to any protection from the state and county council. Their average annual cash income is said to be around KSh 3,000 (USD 40) per household as significant parts of their production are taken away before they can market it. The situation of the Sengwer of the Kapolet forest is not much better. Presently there are 487 Sengwer households living in this half-legal settlement, which had been given to them after they invaded a state lodge. The history of these people is closely linked to the quest of the Sengwer for land and recognition: In result of years of broken promises from side of the government approximately 2.000 Sengwer invaded on March, 22, 1997 a state owned farm in the plains (ADC Milimani) and stayed there even when their elders and leaders were arrested. After a month of serious fights, the government offered them a new settlement scheme in the Kapolet forest (in total over 3,000 acres) in exchange for a peaceful end of the invasion. The Sengwer accepted, and in a first phase 1,000 acres were demarcated for nearly 500 households, who moved in the same month, but the promised letters of allotment were not even issued in December 2005 with the official reason that the land is officially a forest and due to that not suitable for a settlement scheme. Due to the same reason, the second and third phase of the settlement scheme, which supposed to provide the entire 3,000 acres to Sengwer, have not yet Page 26 26 started. The community members stated that they have witnessed significant encroachments from non-Sengwer on the entire Kapolet forest, especially logging activities and the establishment of new farms on the land of phase 2 & 3 In view of legal access to land, the Sengwer of the Talau Location are quite lucky. All 755 households have letters of allotment and they are satisfied with the quality and size of their lands, but they also have significant problems: Only in 2005 about 20 Sengwer of this small location with a total population of around 4,000 people have been killed by cattle rustlers. The total loss of cattle is reported to be around 400 and the non-economic losses might be even higher as most families have to be on alert each night. The Sengwer complained bitterly that even those cattle which have been identified to be theirs, were not returned and that no support was coming from the government. In contrast, some rifles, which had been organised by the only Sengwer councillor to protect the lives and property of the Sengwer, have been confiscated by the police, leaving the Sengwer unarmed to stand well equipped intruders. From that perspective it is not surprising that most Sengwer feel marginalised by the government. 2.1.2.3. Social organisation Patrilineages led by the elders are the traditional form of self-organisation. In contrast to other hunter-gatherer societies, the influence of the elders seems to be quite strong among the Sengwer and have also survived the advent of modern forms of self-organisation. In their struggle for land and recognition the Sengwer-elites have created a good number of Community Based Organisations and NGOs (see contact list), which are spearheaded by David Kiptum Yator, chairman of among others the Sengwer Indigenous Development Project and the Hunter-Gatherer Forum of Kenya, Jacob Tekeroi, the chairman of the Sengwer land allocation committee, and Josilah Cheruiyot, who is an assistant director in the Ministry of Livestock & Fisheries. All are assembled and coordinated through the Sengwer Cultural Centre in the Kapolet forest. Those Sengwer who have managed to obtain legal access to land also received some form of representation at local and regional level. The Sengwer of the Talau location have a Sengwer sub-chief and also an elected councillor (who presently serves as assistant mayor) in the county council since 1971, while those Sengwer who remain in illegal (Embobut forest) or partly legal settlements (Kapolet forest), are not represented by one of their people, but by members of other ethnic groups in the area. 2.1.3. Hunter-Gatherers: Development visions and key issues The key development vision of the hunter-gatherers – documented in their numerous publications and in the discussion during the elaboration of the IPP of the KAP-SLM – is quite simple: They want to live in peace with their neighbours, on a piece of land big enough to carry out agriculture and graze some livestock, have access to forests to gather honey for consumption and commercial use, practice their culture, have equal access to social infrastructure and technical services and be equally represented in all decision making bodies at local, regional and national level. They don’t request special Page 27 27 treatment, but equal opportunities. To achieve this, a good number of key issues have to be addressed: Equal access to land: To have equal opportunities for a self-determined development, the Ogiek and Sengwer need land to settle, to farm and to graze their small herds on. Equal access to security: As a result of their social discrimination, their legal titles are often not respected by their neighbours. To have equal opportunities, the Ogiek and Sengwer need the support of the security forces to protect their properties and lives. Equal access to traditional sources of livelihood : To have equal opportunities, the Ogiek and Sengwer need more than any other people in Kenya legal access to forests and forest products (honey etc.), as these two are their traditional sources of livelihood. Equal access to decision making processes: To participate fully in the development process, to voice their concerns and needs and to be able to guarantee that the rights, livelihoods and culture of the Ogiek and Sengwer are not negatively affected, they need to be represented in all relevant decision making bodies (county councils, local consultative meetings, KAP-SLM structures). Page 28 28 2.2. Marginalised pastoralists affected by KAP-SLM: Ilchamus The Ilchamus (sometime referred to as Tiamus, Njamusi or Njemps, which is the name of a swamp south of Lake Baringo) are semi-pastoralists, who use a Maa-language. They live on the islands of Lake Baringo, around the lake and in the lowlands in the south of the lake. Presently the Ilchamus constitute the majority in six locations (Eldume, Ilngarua, Ngambo, Salabani, Kiserian and Mukutani) and the minority in two locations (Labaral and Marigat). Quite some of their settlements are in the Tugen Hill catchment area of the KAP-SLM project. The 1989 Census indicates their total number to be around 16,000 (Minority Report 2005: 12), which is supported by scientific data (Little 1992; Heine and Möhlig 1980). It should nevertheless be noted, that the Ilchamus themselves estimate their number to be around 45,000 people. Page 29 29 2.2.1. History Oral history states that in the pre-colonial time the Ilchamus, the Pokot, the Samburu and the Maasai grazed their herds in the lowlands around Lake Baringo (an area of around 750 km²), while the Tugen carried out small scale agriculture on the highlands. In the 18 th century the Ilchamus are said to have started to settle down around and south of Lake Baringo to take advantage of the water for small scale irrigation schemes and for fishing and to hunt in the plains. Due to the more permanent settlement style which resulted from their involvement into agriculture, their herds consisted at this time mostly of goats and sheep, while the Pokot, Samburu and some Maasai groups (Loosekelai, Laikipiak and Purko) depended mostly on cattle. While the relation between the cattle herders have been dominated by conflicts and ongoing battles, their relation with the Ilchamus is said to have been more a form of coexistence as they didn’t stand in direct conflicts over resources. The differences between the groups in the lowlands had not been clearly defined and boundaries did not exist. This changed with the advent of the colonial administration which invented tribal boundaries and a framework of political and social relationships. In the quest for an “organised” regional set up, there was no space for a minority such as the Ilchamus. The land was distributed between the larger ethnic groups and filled with more and more people, who had been displaced from other areas to create space for the white farmers. This resulted in an increasing assimilation of the Ilchamus, but it didn’t transform the Ilchamus from an independent group into a subgroup of their dominant neighbours. They transformed into a group which faced double oppression: by the colonial powers and by the dominant groups. As their lebensraum has been mapped out to be at the northern edge of Maasai land, the frequent clashes between the Maasai and the Pokot were carried out on their land; making them particularly vulnerable and poor. As they were considered by the government as a Maasai subgroup and due to that as nomadic herders, their relation to and dependence on land for their small scale agriculture have not been considered when “developing” the area. The Ilchamus have been moved around by all kinds of people and for all kinds of activities and interests. The last major displacement took place in the 40s and 50s, when significant Ilchamus populations were moved away for the Perkerra Irrigation scheme near Marigat. They did not receive any compensation or resettlement assistance as they were considered to be mobile pastoralists, and the swamps south of Lake Baringo (Njemp) into which they were forced and which they are presently occupying is not very suitable for human settlements due to the prevalence of tsetse flies, ticks and malaria. Nevertheless, even in this area the Ilchamus are not protected from further repressions. Their neighbours are said to encroach constantly on their land and/or loot their farms and animals. A well documented clash (East African Standard 2002) could serve as an example: Some cattle rustlers invaded the land of the Ilchamus, took 1,500 animals and killed 20 people. According to most sources, the government stayed quiet, nobody has been sanctioned and not a single animal returned. The Ilchamus had, according to reliable sources, continuously complained about Page 30 30 this encroachment and aggression , but don’t see a chance to succeed as the cattle rustlers and encroachers are armed, powerful and well connected (Little 1987, 1992, 1996). 2.2.2. Livelihood The majority of the Ilchamus practice both livestock rearing and agriculture, but on the islands in Lake Baringo there are about 800 Ilchamus who live nearly entirely from fishing. As the livelihoods of these two groups varies a lot the will be analysed separately. 2.2.2.1. The mainland Ilchamus The Ilchamus on the mainland south of Lake Baringo live in permanent settlements, which are lose conglomerates of individual compounds, which are quite in a distance from each other. An obvious feature which separates Ilchamus settlements from their neighbours is the missing fences and the much higher number of houses without solid roofs, which might be considered as an indicator for a higher prevalence of poverty. The social infrastructure in these settlements – if there is any – is significantly worse than in the neighbouring communities. Water comes in most cases from open water holes, which are used by animals and people alike. As said before, the Mainland Ilchamus are semi-pastoralists with a long history of small scale agriculture. The main types of livestock owned by the Ilchamus are cattle (zebus), sheep (red maasai and dopper cross) and goats (small east African), but their herds are significantly smaller than those of their neighbours. The key problems here are the insufficient security against aggressions from their neighbours, access to water and pressure of other people on their land due to the non-existence of land titles. The nearest markets are at Marigat and Kiserian. While these were earlier considered to be dominated by cattle cartels from Nakuru, most people these days were of the opinion that there is enough competition among the middlemen to provide fair prices. The experts from the Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries Development were of the opinion that these herds are on average to small to sustain the survival of the Ilchamus and only work out to make a living in combination with their involvement into crop production. Agriculture is carried out at very small scale and nearly entirely for subsistence due to limited rainfalls in the area and due to the fact that the Ilchamus have been displaced from their former land in which they had established small scale irrigation schemes. Two modern irrigation schemes (with small dams) at the Perkerra and Molo rivers have enhanced the situation and enable the families involved to produce enough to even commerce parts of it. The main products cultivated are maize, beans and millet. The main problem here is that the irrigation scheme, which at the beginning involved 400 Ilchamus families, has attracted the interest of their neighbours. Over the years, 300 Non-Ilchamus families have taken over Ilchamus farms illegally. This was made easy as most Ilchamus don’t have access to their letters of allotment, which are kept for them by the administration. The farms outside the irrigation scheme face serious crop destruction through livestock and wildlife as the Ilchamus traditionally do not fence their compounds and farms. Our informants stated that the damage through livestock is limited as they can drive it away or do not allow them to graze near the farms, but that the damage through ostriches, Page 31 31 monkeys, baboons, gazelles, zebras, porcupines, bush-pigs and other wildlife is much more serious. Some said to have requested compensation from the Kenya Wildlife Service, but as stated earlier it is a futile effort. Commercial activities beside livestock rearing and agriculture are beekeeping, the production of charcoal and for some to work as farm labourers in the irrigation schemes which earlier belonged to them. Both beekeeping and charcoal production are carried out for subsistence and for commercial reasons and are often the only source of cash- income for the Ilchamus (Little 1987, 1992, 1996). 2.2.2.2. The Ilchamus communities on the islands of Lake Baringo As documented above, the Ilchamus are as group significantly disfavoured in view of the development process. Among the Ilchamus, the fishing communities on four of the seven islands of Lake Baringo, with a total population of around 800 people, are even more disfavoured. Due to the absence of significant rains and irrigation systems, they don’t cultivate anything and the grazing areas on the island sustain only very limited numbers of livestock. The only source of income is fishing and for about ten people on the main island (Ol Kokwai), jobs in the Baringo island camp. Income from fishing (Tilapia, Catfish and Mudfish) has reduced significantly over the last years as industrial fishing carried out in 70s and 80s from the mainland and by migrants from other areas have significantly reduced the stocks. As they are unable to stop fishing to allow the stock to recover, even their very limited fishing reduces the stocks further. The ever reducing stocks are associated by the villagers to environmental degrading (sedimentation from erosion along the contributors) and overexploitation in the 70s and early 80s, and on the other hand to the increasing population of crocodiles, which are totally protected and are said to affect not only the fish stocks, but also cause significant losses of livestock and even human lives. The fishing itself is carried out by the men, while the women smoke and market the fish on the mainland. Revenues are small and hardly able to provide enough cash to buy maize etc. to feed the islanders. Famine seems to be a common problem and is mostly covered by subsidies from the owner of the Lake Baringo island camp and other white families, who have houses on the islands. While this secures the survival of the Ilchamus during famines, it also increases their dependency and marginalisation. 2.2.3. Social Organisation Traditionally the Ilchamus don’t seem to have any central authority, but are ruled by the elders of the patrilineages. The Ilchamus claim that structures above the level of the clan were first introduced in the 60s in preparation of independence. The first sub-chief was elected around 1970. Presently, Ilchamus chiefs and councillors have been elected in all six locations where they constitute the majority, but in none where they are in the minority. With the help of the Community Capacity Support Programme, which had been supported by DANIDA and implemented by the District Department of Social Affaires, a central structure for the Mainland Ilchamus (Nkatampoi), four registered women’s groups, three self-help groups, some youth groups at sub-location level and in Page 32 32 two sub-locations (Kailerr and Longewan) village development committees have been established. The influence of these bodies is said to be quite limited. As the county councils meet only in the District capital Kabarnet, which is 50 km away from the settlements of the Ilchamus, their councillors –according to their own accounts - don’t participate in all meetings and are sent away, if other issues than those with direct relevance for the Ilchamus are discussed. Quite helpful for the case of the Ilchamus was the decision of the Community Capacity Support Programme to work in two Ilchamus communities (Kailerr and Longewan). This support is very much appreciated by the Ilchamus and the impacts considered as a significant enhancement of their capacities to defend their rights and to participate in decision making processes. Unfortunately, the project closed down its activities in the process of restructuring the DANIDA support to Kenya end of 2005. Nevertheless, the project resulted in the fact that Ilchamus interests and needs found their way into the district development plan. In view of their social organisation, the Ilchamus community on the islands in Lake Baringo are quite separated from the other Ilchamus communities and not part of the Nkatampoi organisation, which unites the Ilchamus on the mainland. They have closer ties with migrant fisherfolk as they share the same problems. Traditionally the elders of the five settlements are in charge of the decision making process, but in result of the establishment of a primary school on Ol Kokwai in the 70s, decisions are more and more made by educated Ilchamus, which are organised in the Lake Baringo Self-Help Group, the Island Youth Group and the Island Women’s Group. The latter used to receive some support through a JICA funded women self help project on the mainland. 2.2.4. Marginalised pastoralists: Development visions and key issues In two PRA undertaken by the Community Capacity Support Programme, the Ilchamus prioritised their problems in the following way: inadequate water, inadequate food, health, land tenure, low education levels, livestock diseases, insufficient education of girls, unemployment of the youth, poor roads and communication network, low access to markets for crops and livestock, and wildlife menace. In turn, action plans were elaborated and partly implemented in one location (Kailerr). The project didn’t start to implement the second plan due to internal problems in Longewan. During the meetings in preparation of this IPP, the Ilchamus provided detailed recommendations on how the project could assist them: · Protection against the violence, aggression and social, economic and political discrimination · Fencing grazing areas so that other people can not encroach on their land. · Provision of community titles for their grazing area. · Protection against encroachment by handing out their letters of allotment · Protection against encroachment through the establishment of personal land titles. · Expanding the intakes for the Eldume and Perkerra irrigation scheme to allow more people to participate in the benefits. Page 33 33 · Convincing the school headmaster to allow Ilchamus children to attend school without school uniforms as they are not able to buy uniforms for all their children. · Expanding their production of honey and the marketing of it. · Reducing soil degradation, erosion and to deal with unfertile soils. · Establishing natural fences for the farms so that livestock and wildlife does not destroy crops. During the meetings on Ol Kokwai it was suggested that the project could · provide them with titles for the land, · establish an irrigation scheme on the main island to facilitate the production of Maize to reduce their dependence on income from fishing, · enhance their capacities to renegotiate the contract with the tourist camp, and · assist them to negotiate with the Kenya Wildlife Service the culling of crocodiles in the lake or the economic utilisation of them to protect their lives, enhance their income and to allow them to manage their numbers. It needs to be noted, that some of these concerns may not be able to be addressed either directly of indirectly by KAP- SLM as they don’t fall within the mandate of the project and its implementing structures (see chapter 3 & 4). 2.3. Summary of the living condition of indigenous peoples in the KAP-SLM project regions It becomes clear that the indigenous peoples face similar problems whether they are hunter-gatherers or semi-pastoralists. From the legal point of view, the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus are citizens equal to all other people born Kenya, but they have neither the same access to land and resources, and protection against land grabbing and cattle rustlers as other groups, nor the same influence, legal status, organizational, technical or economic capacity as other citizens of Kenya. The Ogiek and Sengwer, who formerly ranged over broad areas of uninterrupted forests as full-time foragers, have increasingly been constricted to areas with home ‘bases’ involving agriculture and livestock rearing and outlying areas where some honey gathering is still practiced. The Ilchamus have been forced to act as a buffer between their neighbours, paying the lion’s share of the costs of the clashes without participating in the benefits. The constant taking of land and constantly increased restrictions of the access to natural resources have further increased the sedentarisation, marginalisation, social discrimination and impoverishment of the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus. The indigenous peoples who are more dependent on forests than others were often - in disrespect of their legally guaranteed utilisation rights - forced out of the forest with little or no compensation and with little or no land to go or resources to live on. Has this increased dependence on farming and livestock rearing and the desire to access social services and decision making processes turned indigenous peoples’ communities into simple citizens of Kenya like others - a few ethnic groups among many others? Decidedly not! Few Ogiek, Sengwer or Ilchamus are working as civil servants. They are less represented in county councils and the decision making process and less often Page 34 34 recognised as chiefs or sub-chiefs. On the contrary, they are forced to accept to be represented by their neighbours and to be administered by dominant ethnic groups in the local and central administration. Rough estimates of cash income indicate that indigenous peoples’ households may earn about one third of average rural incomes in the country, most of them are landless and without legal access to natural resources or any other source of income. They have no way to acquire rights to participate in the benefits of the reform process in the domain of sustainable land and natural resource management as they lack legal recognition as independent ethnic groups and/or the capacities to voice their needs and concerns. They are not able to defend their possession of the remnants of their ‘homelands’ from outside interests and further encroachment on their land and their resources. To participate in the KAP-SLM project and to have an equal access to social, economic and culturally appropriate benefits from KAP-SLM and to make sure that KAP-SLM fully respects the dignity, human rights, economies, and cultures of indigenous peoples, the project will need to provide the Ogiek, the Sengwer, the Ilchamus in the project area with · Equal access to land · Equal access to security · Equal access to traditional sources of livelihood · Equal access to decision making processes · Equal access to social infrastructure and technical services Page 35 35 3. Impact and risk assessment - proposals for mitigation and compensation measures Note: During the elaboration of this IPP, the following documents, which might be of high relevance for the IPP, were not yet available: a) the detailed logical framework for the KAP-SLM project specifying which activity will be carried out when, where, how and by whom (this is said to be elaborated in the context of the M&E framework); b) the detailed description of alternative income generating activities promoted by the project; c) the social assessment; d) the social and environmental framework; e) the economic assessment, f) a report, which specifies - based on objective criteria, which are also still to be elaborated - the operational area of the project at location level and g) a more detailed description of the component 4 (PES). It has been agreed that the IPP will be updated as soon as these documents are available. In what follows, impacts on the Ogiek, Sengwer, Ilchamus, which might result from the KAP-SLM will be discussed. The chapter outlines possible positive impacts and possible negative impacts of the KAP-SLM incl. cumulative impacts, and begins with the detailed assessment of the possible impacts, benefits and risk in a project situation without an IPP . This is a logical step as the IPP should among others aim at avoiding and mitigating the possible negative impacts and strengthening the possible positive impacts. Tab. 1: The possible impacts of a KAP-SLM without an IPP on the indigenous peoples in the operational areas of the project Project activities as outlined in the PAD Possible Impacts on indigenous peoples without IPP ( - >0 - . =0 - / <0) 2 Component 1: Building Capacity for Sustainable Land Management 1.1. Community capacity building 1.1.1. Soil and water conservation technologies; 1.1.2. Appropriate fertility management practices; 1.1.3. Environmentally positive production systems; 1.1.4. Water management; 1.1.5. Integrated pest management; 1.1.6. Conservation and utilization of biodiversity; // As the indigenous peoples (IP) are marginalised there is a high risk, that the project does not work with them, that they do not benefit from the project and even lose their access to resources through management plans etc., which might enforce that only those with legal access use the natural resources. // As the IP are marginalised, there is a high risk that non-IP benefit more from these activities and implement these activities on land that are presently or traditionally used by IP. 1.1.7. Alternative livelihoods (e.g. tree nurseries, ecotourism, apiculture, medicinal plants, fisheries, emerging livestock); -- The support to apiculture embodies the chance for significant and cultural appropriate benefits for the IP. // As the IP are marginalised, there is a high risk that they are not invited to participate in the capacity building in these domains. 1.1.8. Consensus building and conflict resolution mechanisms; -- The training in conflict resolution might enable the IP to search and find ways to pacify their social environment and find sustainable solutions for the problems with their neighbours. // As the IP are margina lised , there is a high risk 2 Key for the potential impacts on the indigenous populations: -- = significant positive impact; - = limited positive impact, . = no impact; / = limited negative impact, // = significant negative impact. Page 36 36 Project activities as outlined in the PAD Possible Impacts on indigenous peoples without IPP ( - >0 - . =0 - / <0) 2 that they are not invited to participate in the capacity building. 1.1.9. Early warning systems; 1.1.10. Marketing and value addition; // As the IP are marginalised, there is a high risk that IP do not benefit and even lose their access to resources through management plans etc., which enforce that only those with legal access use resources. 1.1.11. Efficient use and alternatives to fuel wood; -- The support to efficient fuel wood harvest might be a chance for significant and cultural appropriate benefits for IP in forest areas. 1.1.12. Compliance to environmental policies. // As most IP live illegally on state land, an enforcement of environmental policies (i.e. no human habitation in forests and the ban to hunt) will displace them physically and economically and undermine their culture, which relays to a large extent on their being in forests and their chance to hunt 1.2. Services Providers Capacity 1.2.1. Sustainable resource use planning and management; 1.2.2. Livestock management; crop management practices; 1.2.3. Water harvesting and irrigation practices; 1.2.4. Marketing strategies; 1.2.5. Agro-forestry systems; 1.2.6. marketing; 1.2.7. Agro-processing and other 1.2.8. Alternative livelihood strategies. 1.2.9. Project management methods, 1.2.10. Participatory research and extension methods; 1.2.11. Participatory and outcome based monitoring and evaluation; 1.2.12. Conflict management and consensus building among others. // As the project will mostly work with existing service providers it is unlikely that IP are invited to benefit from these trainings // As most existing service providers are non- indigenous, without additional measures non- indigenous organisation will benefit more from the capacity building. This increases the gap in capacities between IP and Non-IP and due to that their marginalisation in decision making processes. That might lead to a situation in which only non-IP organisations are implementing activities of KAP-SLM even on IP land etc. As these service providers are most likely neither motivated to support the case of the IP and/or don’t have the capacity to consult with the IP in a cultural appropriate way, they might not take their rights, needs and livelihoods into consideration when carrying out activities and through that increase the marginalisation of the IP. Component 2: Investments in community SLM micro-projects 2.1. Value addition of NTFPs and agroforestry and processing; 2.2. Diversification into high value crops; 2.3. Marketing information networks and strengthening marketing channels; 2.4. Ecotourism incl. facilitating community and private sector partnerships; 2.5. Apiculture technologies and community honey processing, 2.6. Packaging and marketing channels; 2.7. Fisheries including appropriate fish varieties, processing and links to market outlets; 2.8. Promoting emerging livestock and identifying market opportunities. 2.9. Promotion of biogas technology -- The support for apiculture, NTFPs and agro- forestry embodies the chance for significant and culturally appropriate benefits for the IP. // As this component will support micro-projects that are identified within the micro-catchment plans, the present setting in which the IP’s rights to land and resources are not recognised and the IP not represented in decision making bodies, it is most likely that IP rights and needs are not represented in the micro-catchment plans and that they - due to that – will not benefit from the component. In contrast they face the high risk that non-IP implement micro-projects on land and with resources presently used by IP, displacing them physically or economically and increasing their social discrimination and marginalisation. Page 37 37 Project activities as outlined in the PAD Possible Impacts on indigenous peoples without IPP ( - >0 - . =0 - / <0) 2 Component 3: Strengthening the enabling environment for SLM 3.1. A sound policy framework 3.1.1. Support the Government in implementing its policy objectives // As the forest policy and the forest bill do not allow any settlement in forest, there is a high risk that this activity displaces IP from their homes, land and resources and forces them into an ever increasing impoverishment 3.1.2. Support various studies and analyses that assess the current and proposed policy and regulatory frameworks for potential implications on land degradation. 3.1.3. Support stakeholder consultations on these various policy issues as well as 3.1.4. Seek to remove existing policy and legal barriers through a consultative process involving communities, CBOs, government agencies and research institutions. 3.1.5. Policy makers will also be exposed to SLM & NRM issues through consultative policy meetings, workshops and dialogue. -- There is a chance to use these activities to address the current problems of IP in view of access to land and resources and find mutual and satisfying solutions. // As indigenous peoples are not represented in the decision making bodies, there is a high risk that their rights, needs and interests are not addressed in the studies and the enhancement of policies and that the IP are not considered as stakeholders and also in the future not able to participate in the decision and policy making process. 3.2. An improved knowledge and information base 3.2.1. Address the gaps towards a sound information system that would link outcomes to adaptive decision-making (relying less on ‘control’ measures and more on market signalling and incentive measures) 3.2.2. Support mainstreaming SLM into sectoral program areas such as energy, forests, wildlife, biodiversity, water resources as well as gender issues and technology dissemination. 3.2.3. Support an adequate M&E framework. 3.2.3.1. Establishing baselines and developing a simplified monitoring framework for the collection and use of socio-economic and environmental data relevant to improving land and natural resources management at the local level, which can then be aggregated upwards for decision-making at the district, provincial and national levels. 3.2.3.2. Building capacity to analyze and interpret data for decision-making and management. 3.2.3.3. Building capacity to identify and address NRM links to poverty and cross-sectoral issues. 3.2.3.4. Valuing the economic cost of degradation and demonstrating benefits from alternate approaches. -- There is a chance to use these activities to address the current problems of IP in view of access to land and resources and find mutual and satisfying solutions and to make them known to decision makers and the interested public. // As indigenous peoples are not represented in the decision making bodies, there is a high risk that their rights, needs and interests are not addressed in the studies, information systems and M&E frameworks. // As traditional knowledge of indigenous peoples is presently not legally protected, there is a high risk that their neighbours market IP knowledge and/or receive benefits related to them. 3.3. Stronger institutions 3.3.1. Strengthen institutions relevant to the promotion of sustainable land management by supporting capacity enhancement and improved coordination and information sharing. - There is a chance to use the capacity building to address the current problems of IP, but as they are not involved in the decision making process, this is not very likely. Page 38 38 Project activities as outlined in the PAD Possible Impacts on indigenous peoples without IPP ( - >0 - . =0 - / <0) 2 3.3.2. In-country training (including site-visits for policy makers) will be organized; agencies that will be targeted include the relevant ministries, research institutes and related organizations. 3.3.3. Regional and international training, where necessary, will be conducted as appropriate and may include workshops, conferences and study tours. // Presently hardly any IP association or IP individual has achieved a position that would make it likely that IP benefit directly from these activities. // As IP are not involved in the decision making process is it likely that their rights, livelihoods and needs are not included in the capacity building exercise. Component 4: Payment for Environmental Services 4.1. A functioning PES program in the catchments serving the Sasumua Reservoir 4.1.1. Conduct detailed technical studies to identify the specific causes of the sedimentation and water contamination problems and alternatives that would reduce the problems. 4.1.2. Conduct socio-economic evaluation of upstream areas to identify the specific land users who manage the land from which problems originate and the incentives and constraints they face in making land use decisions. 4.1.3. Establish an appropriate institutional structure for the payment mechanism that will persist beyond the end of the project, in particular arrangements for payments to service providers and monitoring systems. 4.1.4 . Prepare a work plan for Nairobi Water approval. 4.1.5 . Implement the PES program, by contracting service providers, then verifying their compliance, and paying them. -- Indigenous organisations within the CBD- process have identified the payment for environmental serves as a key activity to compensate and honour the IP for their sustainable utilisation of natural resources. . There are no Ogiek, Sengwer or Ilchamus living in this catchment area. // As the project has chosen without free, prior and informed consultation to carry out this activity away from areas inhabited by IP, they don’t have a chance to benefit from it. 4.2. Lessons for the implementation of PES programs in Kenya and other African countries 4.2.1. Draw lessons from the pilot and developing a replication/scaling up strategy. . As the project has chosen to carry out this activity away from areas inhabited by IP, the lessons learned will be of no interest for the IP 4.2.2. Replication strategy elsewhere in country, including initial technical studies in other watersheds where PES approaches - There is a chance to implement the next PES program in an IP area and provide the IP with direct benefits for their sustainable management of natural resources, but as IP are neither represented in the decision making bodies nor in control of land and resources or present in the pilot area, this is unlikely in the present setting. Component 5: Project coordination and monitoring 5.1. Support project coordination and implementation at the national, district and grassroots level, 5.2. Project monitoring and evaluation (M&E) 5.3 Impact assessments // As IP are neither involved in the decision making process nor represented at the level of project coordination, they will most likely not benefit from the job opportunities resolving from the project. If no special measures are taken, their rights, livelihoods and needs will most likely be addressed neither in the M&E system nor in the impact assessments. Both would sustain their marginalisation and social discrimination. Page 39 39 In the following, these detailed impacts are clustered to derive the overall and cumulative risks and obstacles of the project, which are than used to elaborated mitigation measures, which will stand at the centre of the Indigenous Peoples Plan. In the positive scenario of a successful KAP-SLM, the project will foster the full respect for the dignity, livelihoods, human rights, and culture of the indigenous peoples, protect the indigenous peoples from suffering adverse effects from the implemented measures, and guarantee that the indigenous peoples receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate and gender and intergenerationally inclusive. Is it likely that the KAP-SLM will achieve all this without a specific set of action? Certainly not! If one deconstructs sustainable land management to the key principles, it becomes obvious that the concept is to invest time, money and energy and to not exploit all possible short term benefits in view of future individual and collective gains. As it is logic that nobody invests or accepts reduced short term benefits as long as he/she is not sure that he/she will benefit from the long term benefits and as long as it is uncertain that these long term benefits are higher for the individual than the short term costs, the secured ownership of land and access to resources for all stakeholders is a key requirement for sustainable land and natural resource management. The KAP-SLM project addresses the questions of short-term costs and long-term benefits and the question of balancing individual/local costs with collective/international benefits through cost-benefit studies, the payment for environmental services and a full set of activities, but the project does not address the problem of land-ownership and access to resources as the allocation of land and especially forest related issues falls not within the mandate of KARI – the implementing structure of KAP-SLM If one reviews the detailed risk assessment, it becomes obvious that the project – in a project scenario without IPP - embodies significant risks to speed up the economical, social and cultural impoverishment of the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus. There are several major risks resulting from the KAP-SLM in a scenario without an IPP, which have to be mitigated to ensure that the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus do not · face further physical and economic displacements from land and forests traditionally utilized by them as source of livelihood and basis for their cultural and social system, · loose all legal access to natural resources, which are an important source of livelihood and basis for their cultural and social system, · continue to be affected by land grabbers and cattle rustlers, · become even more marginalized in the society and disintegrate from the nation, · receive less assistance from governmental services, · have less capacities to defend their legal rights, · become or remain as dependent of other ethnic groups, and · lose their cultural and social identity. Page 40 40 Key Obstacles 1. Neither the indigenous peoples nor the governmental services or service providers have an idea of how to incorporate the usufructural and traditional rights of the indigenous peoples in the modern legal system. While other ethnic groups have been compensated in cash or kind for their losses of land and access to resources during the colonial period, the claims of the indigenous peoples have not yet been addressed. This is the underlining cause of the marginalisation and social discrimination of the indigenous peoples in Kenya. 2. Most Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus do not have letters of allotment or any other legal ownership of land for settlements, farms and grazing areas. As their settlements are illegal in view of the law, they are hardly able to interact on a level-field basis with governmental services or become involved in sustainable land and natural resource management. 3. The forestry policy and the forest bill prohibit human settlements in forests and do not recognise traditional usufructural rights. Collective management of forest is possible according to the 2005 forest bill, but restricted to Community Based Organisations and does not offer any special measures for indigenous peoples or those people presently living in the forest or who base their livelihood on its resources. As the majority of the hunter-gatherers have no legal settlements and some of them do not have the capacity to apply as a Community Based Organisation (CBO) for community forests, they might without specific measures not be able to obtain legal access to their traditional sources of livelihood. 4. As the settlements of indigenous peoples are often not legally recognised and their houses, farms and cattle grazing areas not officially demarcated, administration claims quite often not to be in charge of defending these settlements and properties against encroachers and cattle rustlers. 5. As Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus settlements are most of the time not considered as legal villages etc., the governmental support in form of social infrastructure (schools, health centres, roads, etc.) is restrained and the indigenous peoples’ representation in decision making processes (chiefs of locations and councillors) not equal to those groups which have legal and fully recognised settlements. Mitigation measures: 1. The basis for all improvements in the interaction between the Government of Kenya and the indigenous peoples is the recognition of the existence of the other and the willingness to learn from each other. Training on the best practices and techniques of working with indigenous peoples (as outlined in the OP 4.10) for relevant GoK staff, NGO, and indigenous peoples’ organisations will improve the mutual understanding that the respect of the rights, culture and dignity of the indigenous peoples is a necessity for the nation building process in Kenya and a sign of good governance. 2. Legal access to agricultural land (housing, farms and grazing areas) is a prerequisite of sustainable land and resource management. Due to that, the GoK through KAP-SLM will Page 41 41 · hasten that the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus in the operational areas of KAP- SLM obtain titles (letter of allotment, group ranches, etc.) for the agricultural land they are presently occupying (housing, farming grazing areas) and will support all necessary steps (land survey and demarcation, registration and documentation) to provide all indigenous peoples in the project area with letters of allotment, group ranch titles, etc., · hasten that the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus in the operational areas of KAP- SLM get full access to the pending settlement schemes, and · not support any activities in locations with ongoing/pending disputes and/or any unsettled claims with regards to land ownership of the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus as long as the affected Ogiek, Sengwer and/or Ilchamus in their broad majority don’t agree in prior, free and informed consultations that these activities are carried. 3. Legal access to land in forests and to natural resources is an important element of sustainable land and natural resource management. Due to that, the GoK through KAP-SLM will · assist (through its component 1 and through special programmes) all indigenous peoples’ communities in the operational area to create CBOs and/or strengthen existing CBOs and through this CBOs to receive legal access to forests (community forests, etc.) and other natural resources, · assist the indigenous peoples’ communities in the production, transformation and marketing of honey, other non-timber-forest products and dead-wood as well as in the domain of agro-forestry, · not engage/support in any form evictions of indigenous peoples from forests, and · not support any activities in indigenous forests with ongoing/pending disputes and/or any unsettled claims with regards to land ownership of the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus. KAP-SLM supports the relevant statement of the OP. 4.10, which says that “because physical relocation of indigenous peoples is particularly complex and may have significant adverse impacts on their identity, culture, and customary livelihoods, the Bank requires the borrower to explore alternative project designs to avoid physical relocation of Indigenous Peoples. In exceptional circumstances, when it is not feasible to avoid relocation, the borrower will not carry out such relocation without obtaining broad support for it from the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities as part of the free, prior, and informed consultation process. In such cases, the borrower prepares a resettlement plan in accordance with the requirements of OP 4.12, Involuntary Resettlement that is compatible with the Indigenous Peoples' cultural preferences, and includes a land-based resettlement strategy. As part of the resettlement plan, the borrower documents the results of the consultation process. Where possible, the resettlement plan should allow the affected Indigenous Peoples to return to the lands and territories they traditionally owned, or customarily used or occupied, if the reasons for their relocation cease to exist.” (OP 4.10). To enhance the quality of indigenous forest management, the KAP-SLM sister project KNRM ( Kenya Natural Resource Management Project ), Page 42 42 which will be implemented through the Ministry of Natural Resources at the same time as KAP-SLM and which has applied for funding from the World Bank, has committed itself to address the issue of people living in indigenous forests and find mutual solutions in accordance with international standards (OP 4.10 Indigenous Peoples & OP 4.12 Involuntary Resettlement). 4. The GoK through KAP-SLM will support as much as possible all necessary steps (protection, conflict resolution and mitigation) to secure the lives and livelihoods of the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus. Presently, Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus are significantly less often employed by the government, due to lower levels of formal education. To achieve equity in this domain, KAP-SLM will support indigenous peoples to obtain priority access to KAP-SLM jobs within the operational areas inhabited by indigenous peoples. 5. KAP-SLM will undertake all necessary steps to find mutual solutions to guarantee the full participation of indigenous peoples in the decision making process at the level of locations, divisions and districts in the implementation and supervision of KAP-SLM. All stakeholders described the inability to understand the specificity of indigenous peoples in Kenya. The documented failure of the various structures to represent the indigenous peoples equally documents that governmental services, donor organisations and NGO can not address the specific needs of indigenous peoples through the same channels as their farming and pastoralist neighbours. Based on a sensitive analysis of the differences in social organisation, projects need to elaborate jointly with those concerned adapted strategies for strengthening the effective representation of indigenous peoples in relevant committees (according to their share of the population and not their share of power). Beside of this conceptual problem, a full array of technical, financial and organisational hindrances prohibit till date the establishment of an equal representation of indigenous people in decision making bodies related to sustainable land management: Conceptual Obstacles 1. To date, the Government of Kenya (GoK) has not adopted a general policy on how to assist the indigenous peoples in their struggle to achieve that their dignity, human rights, and cultural uniqueness are protected and respected and that it is assured that they receive culturally appropriate benefits from all governmental interventions. The majority of the indigenous peoples are therefore depending on the good will of governmental services in their struggle for equal representation. Mitigation Measures 1. Following the documented best practice (OP 4.10), based on existing laws and regulations and through a participatory process of all stakeholders in general and free, prior and informed consultations with the indigenous peoples in particular, KAP-SLM will support the indigenous peoples in their quest for the elaboration of a strategy of how the dignity, rights and culture of the indigenous population can be respected best and how the GoK can assure that the indigenous peoples receives in Page 43 43 the long run culturally appropriate benefits from all governmental interventions arising from KAP-SLM. Technical Obstacles 1. To date, the indigenous peoples in their majority do not have the technical skills to participate actively in technical discussions and activities and/or to anticipate the long term impacts of abstract decisions (laws, regulations, contracts, etc.). The indigenous peoples are, due to that - even in those rare cases where they are invited to participate in decision making bodies - not able to defend their rights, needs and interests. 2. The governmental bodies and other stakeholders have insufficient skills to interact with indigenous peoples successfully. Due to that, the majority of the indigenous peoples are not treated with the necessary respect for their dignity, rights and culture. Mitigation Measures 1. KAP-SLM will elaborate together with other relevant national research/training structures, governmental extension services and the indigeno us peoples’ organisations, based on the documented best practices, training curricula for the indigenous peoples on key topics related to sustainable land and resource management. The training and sensitisation in the KAP-SLM operational area will be implemented by the indigenous peoples’ organisations with a long-term backstopping programme from the technical services. Apart from the technical aspects of these training opportunities, special emphasis will be on the facilitation of mutual understandings of indigenous peoples and neighbouring communities. This might open the road to a new, more beneficial relationship. 2. KAP-SLM, other relevant national research/training institutes and the indigenous peoples’ organisations will enhance existing training curricula for governmental staff (project staff, government extension workers, etc.) working in KAP-SLM operational areas with indigenous peoples to enable them to respect the rights, livelihoods, culture and needs of indigenous people and interact successfully and in a culturally appropriate manner with the indigenous peoples. The training should be implemented by the social services in close collaboration with the indigenous peoples’ organisations and should build on the experiences of the Community Capacity Support Programme. Organisational Obstacles 1. Indigenous people are not equally represented in decision making bodies at all levels (location, division, district, etc). The rights, needs and interests of the indigenous people can thus not be equally considered in the decision making process. 2. Indigenous people do not have equal access to employments in jobs resolving from KAP-SLM or other projects in the area of sustainable land and resource management as their level of formal education is, due to their lower access to higher education, lower. As indigenous knowledge and experiences are missing in Page 44 44 the administration and technical services, their needs and interests are not considered at all or only to late to ensure that the indigenous peoples are able to benefit from the interventions of the GoK in the domain of sustainable land and natural resource management. 3. Presently, the M&E framework of KAP-SLM has not been finalised. Due to that, it is uncertain whether indigenous peoples and their interests will equally be represented in the monitoring and evaluation system of the KAP-SLM and might be excluded from the dynamic of the M&E process. Mitigation Measures 1. KAP-SLM will technically, financially and organisationally support the indigenous peoples in the operational area of KAP-SLM to be equally represented in all meetings, workshops, hearings, decision making bodies etc. (according to their share in the affected population). The KAP-SLM project provides the indigenous peoples with a representation in each commission founded or maintained within the implementation and execution of the project, which is equal to their share in the affected population. 2. The KAP-SLM project offers the indigenous people priority access to employment (lower requirements for formal education, etc.) and support indigenous peoples’ applications to SLM related jobs in the OAs inhabited by indigenous peoples. 3. The KAP-SLM will implement a participatory impact monitoring (PIM) for KAP- SLM interventions in OAs inhabited by indigenous peoples (see also chapter 7) and include it in the M&E framework of KAP-SLM. Also the best mitigation system, which offers indigenous peoples equal access and equal benefits, has serious impacts on their culture and their belief systems. The decision on how to preserve indigenous culture in the development process is an ongoing discussion among the indigenous peoples, their organisations and in social sciences, which has not yet – and might never - result in a final solution. It is considered as best practice to provide sensitisations on the risks of the development process, assist indigenous peoples’ organisations in capacity building to preserve traditional knowledge, culture and livelihood patterns and to promote the interethnic communication and exchange of experiences. First and foremost KAP-SLM provides (see chapter 6) mechanisms through which indigenous peoples can voice in free, prior and informed consultation their concerns. All these activities will not be able to keep the culture and belief systems of the indigenous peoples as they are today, but it offers the indigenous peoples the opportunity to understand the risks and find their own solutions on how to adapt their culture to the modern mode of interaction. To realise the potential positive impacts and to mitigate the potential negative impacts - both outlined in detail in Table 1 -, to guarantee that the indigenous populations have equal opportunities to participate in the benefits offered by the KAP-SLM and that these benefits are culturally appropriate, to ensure that the rights, livelihoods, dignity and culture of the indigenous forest are respected, to guarantee that the KAP-SLM fulfils international standards as outlined in the OP 4.10 of the World Bank and to enable the KAP-SLM to Page 45 45 fulfil its objectives, the GoK through KAP-SLM will carry out in the operational areas with indigenous peoples’ communities the following mitigation measures: Establish an environment that enables sustainable land and resource management · Establish the capacities necessary to implement the IPP; · Establish an equal access to land and natural resources; · Establish an equal access to security, social infrastructure and technical services. Establish equal technical opportunities · Provide the indigenous peoples with technical capacities to participate actively in sustainable land and natural resource management; · Provide the relevant GoK staff and other stakeholders with the technical capacities to cooperate successfully and in a culturally appropriate manner with the indigenous peoples; · Facilitate priority access of Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus to KAP-SLM related jobs; · Establish for the indigenous peoples an equal access to decision making processes in the domain of sustainable land and resource management; · Establish a participatory impact monitoring for KAP-SLM in indigenous peoples’ areas. Establish equal cultural opportunities · Establish a national policy on indigenous peoples; · Assist the indigenous peoples’ organisations in capacity building to preserve the loss of traditional knowledge, culture and livelihood patterns. · Foster the creation of forums for communication and exchange between indigenous peoples and other ethnical groups and accompany this process of mutual understanding. Page 46 46 4. The Indigenous Peoples Plan of the KAP-SLM The following Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP) of the KAP-SLM develops measures to ensure that the indigenous peoples (Ogiek, Sengwer & Ilchamus) receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate, including measures to enhance the capacity of the project implementing agencies and other stakeholders. It also addresses the risks for indigenous peoples identified in chapter 3 and develops on the basis of the outlined mitigation strategies, actions to avoid, minimize, mitigate, and/or compensate these adverse effects and enhance the potential positive impacts of the project on indigenous peoples. The IPP embodies a pilot phase in which the IPP will be presented and discussed in all indigenous peoples’ settlements in the KAP-SLM operational area to enhance the broad support from indigenous peoples for the KAP-SLM, to provide detailed baseline data for the planning and the M&E and to integrate additional and/or specific problems to be addressed into the IPP. The results of these consultations will be used to redefine the IPP during the course of its implementation. Such an open and well facilitated discussion process, which goes along with the formation of the IPP implementing bodies, will further enhance the communication and cooperation between the indigenous peoples in the operational areas and the KAP-SLM. To monitor and evaluate the impacts of the IPP, draft impact indicators are elaborated, which should be redefined as one of the first activities of the proposed participatory impact monitoring on the base of the baseline data established during the pilot-phase. Due to the fact that no detailed demographic data on the Ogiek and Sengwer exists and the fact that the limitation of the operational areas of KAP-SLM has not been finalised, it is difficult to estimate how many indigenous people are affected by the KAP-SLM. For the purpose of the planning and costing a rough estimate has been used: Operational Area Administrative Districts Coverage (in %) Indigenous Peoples Trans-Nzoia 55 Sengwer 15,000 West Pokot 15 Sengwer 10,000 Keiyo 15 Sengwer 5,000 Cherangani Hills Marakwet 15 Sengwer 15,000 Baringo 60 Ilchamus 20,000 Koibatek 30 0 Tugen Hills Keiyo 10 0 Butere Mumias 25 0 Siaya 20 0 Kakamega 20 0 Nandi 15 Ogiek 5,000 Vihiga 15 0 Bondo 5 0 Yala Uasin Sishu ?? Ogiek 5,000 Kiambu 60 0 Nyandarua 15 0 Nakuru 10 0 Kajiado 10 0 Kinale-Kikuyu Narok 5 Ogiek 5,000 Page 47 47 The main actors of the IPP of the KAP-SLM are KARI, the Ministry of Agriculture (MA), the Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries (MLF), the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (MENR), the Ministry of Water and Irrigation (MWI), the Ministry of Lands (ML), the Ministry of Home Affaires (MHA), the Ministry of Planning and national Development (MPND), the Ministry of Education (ME), the Ministry of Gender, Sports, Culture and Social Services (MGSCSS), the Ministry of Special Programmes (MSP), the Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife (MTF), the Ministry of Justice (MJ) the Office of the President (OP), the Kenya National Commission for Human Rights (KNCHR), the indigenous peoples ’ organisations and the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus themselves. During a pilot phase (until 12/2006), the main focus will be on the establishment of the institutional framework, the sensitization of all stakeholders in general and the affected populations in particular and the gathering of baseline data. As this will involve all Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus settlements in the operational areas, the IPP should be further discussed in detail and - in case the need arises - amendments suggested to the steering committee. In general, it is assumed that the 11 activities of the IPP of the KAP-SLM are able to guarantee that the KAP-SLM is able to satisfy international requirements in general and the OP 4.10 of the World Bank in particular and that · the KAP-SLM reduces poverty for all ethnic groups and lower the dependence on and degradation of natural resources, · the KAP-SLM promotes an effective management system of lands and natural resources, which offers positive impacts to the entire population and the biodiversity, · the KAP-SLM respects the dignity, rights and culture of the indigenous peoples, and · the KAP-SLM assures that the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus receive culturally appropriate benefits equal to other ethnic groups. Page 48 4 8 I n d i g e n o u s p e o p l e s p l a n o f t h e K e n y a A g r i c u l t u r a l P r o d u c t i v i t y a n d s u s t a i n a b l e l a n d m a n a g e m e n t ( K A P - S L M ) p r o j e c t I s s u e A c t i v i t y R e s p o n s i b i l i t y B y W h e n C o s t i n U S $ I n d i c a t o r s E s t a b l i s h a n e n v i r o n m e n t t h a t e n a b l e s s u s t a i n a b l e l a n d a n d r e s o u r c e m a n a g e m e n t 1 . E s t a b l i s h t h e c a p a c i t i e s n e c e s s a r y t o i m p l e m e n t t h e I P P . · T r a i n i n g o f s t a f f f r o m K A P - S L M , t h e r e l e v a n t g o v e r n m e n t a l s t r u c t u r e s a n d M i n i s t r i e s ( s e e p a g e 4 7 ) a n d I P O r g a n i s a t i o n ( I P O ) K A P - S L M 8 / 2 0 0 6 1 0 , 0 0 0 · T h e b e n e f i c i a r i e s o f t h i s t r a i n i n g a r e a b l e t o i m p l e m e n t t h e I P P 2 . E s t a b l i s h a n e q u a l a c c e s s t o l a n d a n d n a t u r a l r e s o u r c e s · E s t a b l i s h d e t a i l e d i n f o r m a t i o n o n l a n d a n d n a t u r a l r e s o u r c e s u s e d b y t h e I P i n t h e o p e r a t i o n a l a r e a s ( O A ) · E v a l u a t e t h e c l a i m s a n d f i n d m u t u a l s o l u t i o n s · A s s i s t a l l I P c o m m u n i t i e s t o c r e a t e C B O · C r e a t e c o m m u n i t y f o r e s t s f o r a l l s u i t a b l e I P c o m m u n i t i e s i n o r n e a r f o r e s t s i n t h e O A · K i c k - s t a r t i n c o m e g e n e r a t i n g a c t i v i t i e s ( b e e - k e e p i n g , h e r b a l m e d i c i n e , f i s h i n g , e t c . ) i n a l l I P s e t t l e m e n t s K A P - S L M , M L , I P O K A P - S L M , M L , K N C H R , I P O K A P - S L M , M G S C S S K A P - S L M , M E N R K A P - S L M 1 0 / 2 0 0 6 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 9 / 2 0 0 6 1 / 2 0 0 7 1 / 2 0 0 7 5 0 , 0 0 0 5 , 0 0 0 C o m p 1 C o m p 1 C o m p 2 · T h e r e s u l t s a r e p u b l i s h e d a n d p e r c e i v e d b y t h e I P a s a c c u r a t e · B y 6 / 2 0 0 7 > 7 5 % o f t h e s u i t a b l e I P s e t t l e m e n t s h a v e c o m m u n i t y f o r e s t t i t l e s · B y 6 / 2 0 0 7 i n m o r e t h a n 5 0 % o f t h e s u i t a b l e I P s e t t l e m e n t s i n c o m e g e n e r a t i n g a c t i v i t i e s h a v e b e e n i m p l e m e n t e d b y K A P - S L M 3 . E s t a b l i s h a n e q u a l a c c e s s t o s e c u r i t y , t o s o c i a l i n f r a s t r u c t u r e a n d t e c h n i c a l s e r v i c e s · E s t a b l i s h d e t a i l e d i n f o r m a t i o n o f s e c u r i t y p r o b l e m s a n d d e v e l o p m e n t d i s a d v a n t a g e s o f t h e I P i n t h e O A ( t o g e t h e r w i t h a c t i v i t y 2 . 1 . ) · E v a l u a t e t h e c l a i m s a n d f i n d m u t u a l s o l u t i o n s · I m p l e m e n t t h e s o l u t i o n o n s e c u r i t y ( m e d i a t i o n , c o n f l i c t r e s o l u t i o n , e t c . ) · I m p l e m e n t t h e s o l u t i o n o n d e v e l o p m e n t · E n s u r e s u s t a i n a b i l i t y w i t h l o c a l g o v e r n m e n t s o n t h e d e v e l o p m e n t a c t i v i t i e s K A P - S L M , O P , I P O , O r g a n i s a t i o n s o f a f f e c t e d n e i g h b o u r s o f t h e I P s e t t l e m e n t s ( O N ) O P , K A P - S L M , I P O , O N O P , K A P - S L M , I P O , O N M P N D ; K A P - S L M , I P O M P N D ; K A P - S L M , I P O , l o c a l g o v e r n m e n t s 1 0 / 2 0 0 6 1 1 / 2 0 0 6 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 6 / 2 0 0 7 O n g o i n g ( s e e 2 ) 5 , 0 0 0 C o m p 3 C o m p 2 C o m p 2 · B y 1 2 / 2 0 0 7 t h e r e p o r t e d c a s e s o f k i l l i n g , l o o t i n g a n d c a t t l e r u s t l i n g i n I P s e t t l e m e n t s h a s r e d u c e d s i g n i f i c a n t l y a n d t h e I P f e e l b e t t e r p r o t e c t e d · B y 1 2 / 2 0 0 7 n o I P s e t t l e m e n t r e p o r t s t h a t p u p i l s a r e n o t a l l o w e d t o e n t e r s c h o o l · B y 1 2 / 2 0 0 7 i n 5 0 % o f t h e I P s e t t l e m e n t s a t l e a s t o n e d e v e l o p m e n t a c t i v i t y h a s b e e n i m p l e m e n t e d Page 49 4 9 I n d i g e n o u s p e o p l e s p l a n o f t h e K e n y a A g r i c u l t u r a l P r o d u c t i v i t y a n d s u s t a i n a b l e l a n d m a n a g e m e n t ( K A P - S L M ) p r o j e c t I s s u e A c t i v i t y R e s p o n s i b i l i t y B y W h e n C o s t i n U S $ I n d i c a t o r s E s t a b l i s h e q u a l t e c h n i c a l o p p o r t u n i t i e s 4 . P r o v i d e t h e I P w i t h t e c h n i c a l c a p a c i t i e s t o p a r t i c i p a t e a c t i v e l y i n s u s t a i n a b l e l a n d a n d n a t u r a l r e s o u r c e m a n a g e m e n t . · S e n s i t i s e I P i n O A · E l a b o r a t e o r u p d a t e t r a i n i n g c u r r i c u l a f o r t h e s p e c i f i c n e e d s o f t h e I P · D e v e l o p t r a i n i n g m a t e r i a l s i n i n d i g e n o u s l a n g u a g e s · C a r r y o u t t r a i n i n g a n d p r o v i d e b a c k s t o p p i n g I P O K A P - S L M & I P O I P O I P O & S e r v i c e p r o v i d e r 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 O n g o i n g 5 , 0 0 0 5 , 0 0 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 8 0 , 0 0 0 3 · T h e c u r r i c u l a i s p e r c e i v e d b y i n t e r n a t i o n a l e x p e r t s a s s u i t a b l e · T h e I P a r e p e r c e i v e d b y t h e e x t e n s i o n o f f i c e r s a s m o r e i n t e r e s t e d a n d b e t t e r q u a l i f i e d a n d a r e p a r t i c i p a t i n g m o r e a c t i v e l y i n a c t i v i t i e s a n d m e e t i n g s 5 . P r o v i d e t h e r e l e v a n t G o K s t a f f a n d o t h e r s t a k e h o l d e r s w i t h t h e t e c h n i c a l c a p a c i t i e s t o c o o p e r a t e s u c c e s s f u l l y a n d i n a c u l t u r a l l y a p p r o p r i a t e m a n n e r w i t h t h e I P · C a r r y o u t s e n s i t i s a t i o n s f o r a l l g o v e r n m e n t a l s t a f f , N G O , s e r v i c e p r o v i d e r s a t d i s t r i c t l e v e l i n t h o s e d i s t r i c t s i n t h e O A w i t h I P s e t t l e m e n t s · D e v e l o p a n d i n c l u d e c o m p o n e n t s o n i n t e r c u l t u r a l c o m m u n i c a t i o n , i n d i g e n o u s p e o p l e s a n d h u m a n r i g h t s i n t o t r a i n i n g c u r r i c u l a f o r g o v e r n m e n t a l s t a f f · C a r r y o u t t r a i n i n g i n i n t e r c u l t u r a l c o m m u n i c a t i o n . K A P - S L M M G S C S S & r e l e v a n t M i n i s t r i e s M G S C S S 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 6 / 2 0 0 7 O n g o i n g 1 6 , 0 0 0 4 0 0 · B y 1 2 / 2 0 0 7 t h e n u m b e r a n d e x t e n t o f j u s t i f i e d I P c o m p l a i n s a b o u t s o c i a l d i s c r i m i n a t i o n e t c . f r o m g o v e r n m e n t a l s t a f f , e x t e n s i o n p e r s o n n e l a n d K A P - S L M s e r v i c e p r o v i d e r s h a v e r e d u c e d b y m o r e t h a n 5 0 % . 6 . F a c i l i t a t e p r i o r i t y a c c e s s o f I P t o K A P - S L M r e l a t e d j o b s . · C a r r y o u t a s s e s s m e n t o n r e l e v a n t j o b o p p o r t u n i t i e s a n d t h e c a p a c i t i e s o f t h e I P · A s s i s t I P i n t h e a p p l i c a t i o n p r o c e s s · P r o v i d e o n t h e j o b - t r a i n i n g f o r I P s t a f f K A P - S L M , I P O I P O K A P - S L M & I P O 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 1 / 2 0 0 7 O n g o i n g 5 , 0 0 0 1 6 , 0 0 0 5 C a m p 5 · T h e n u m b e r o f I P n e w l y e m p l o y e d i n r e l e v a n t j o b s i s e q u a l o r h i g h e r t h e i r s h a r e i n t h e o v e r a l l p o p u l a t i o n i n t h e a r e a o f i n t e r v e n t i o n . 7 . E s t a b l i s h f o r t h e I P a n e q u a l a c c e s s t o d e c i s i o n m a k i n g p r o c e s s e s i n t h e d o m a i n o f s u s t a i n a b l e l a n d a n d r e s o u r c e m a n a g e m e n t . · S e n s i t i z a t i o n o f a l l s t a k e h o l d e r s · E l e c t i o n o f r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s a t a l l r e l e v a n t l e v e l s · P r o v i d e p l a c e s f o r I P i n a l l r e l e v a n t c o m m i t t e e s e t c . a t n a t i o n a l , w a t e r c a t c h m e n t a n d d i s t r i c t l e v e l · E n c o u r a g e I P t o p a r t i c i p a t e a c t i v e l y · C a r r y o u t b i - a n n u a l s t e e r i n g m e e t i n g s o n I P P i m p l e m e n t a t i o n a t d i s t r i c t l e v e l · C a r r y o u t a n n u a l s t e e r i n g m e e t i n g a t n a t i o n a l l e v e l · P r o v i d e t h e I P t h e p o s s i b i l i t y t o a d d r e s s g r i e v a n c e s S e e 1 , 4 & 5 I P O K A P - S L M I P O K A P - S L M K A P - S L M K A P - S L M S e e 1 , 4 & 5 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 O n g o i n g O n g o i n g O n g o i n g O n g o i n g S e e 1 , 4 , 5 S e e 4 0 0 2 5 , 0 0 0 2 5 , 0 0 0 2 5 , 0 0 0 · I P r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s a r e p l a y i n g a n i n c r e a s i n g l y a c t i v e r o l e · T h e s h a r e o f I P a m o n g t h e m e m b e r s o f d e c i s i o n m a k i n g b o d i e s i s e q u a l o r h i g h e r t h a n t h e i r s h a r e a m o n g t h e a f f e c t e d p o p u l a t i o n · T h e P I M d o c u m e n t s t h a t t h e I P a r e s a t i s f i e d w i t h t h e I P P i m p l e m e n t a t i o n a n d K A P - S L M 3 F r o m y e a r 2 - 6 U S D 1 6 , 0 0 0 p e r y e a r , w h i c h i s U S D 2 , 0 0 0 p e r O A d i s t r i c t w i t h I P f o r t r a i n i n g o f p e r s o n n e l , t r a n s p o r t , m a t e r i a l e t c . 4 U S D 2 , 0 0 0 f o r e a c h o f t h e O A d i s t r i c t s w i t h I P t o h o l d s e n s i t i s a t i o n w o r k s h o p . 5 U S D 2 , 0 0 0 f o r e a c h o f t h e d i s t r i c t s t o t r a i n a n I P O m e m b e r i n t h e e l a b o r a t i o n o f j o b a p p l i c a t i o n s e t c . Page 50 5 0 I n d i g e n o u s p e o p l e s p l a n o f t h e K e n y a A g r i c u l t u r a l P r o d u c t i v i t y a n d s u s t a i n a b l e l a n d m a n a g e m e n t ( K A P - S L M ) p r o j e c t I s s u e A c t i v i t y R e s p o n s i b i l i t y B y W h e n C o s t i n U S $ I n d i c a t o r s 8 . E s t a b l i s h a p a r t i c i p a t o r y i m p a c t m o n i t o r i n g f o r K A P - S L M i n O A s w i t h i n d i g e n o u s p e o p l e s . · S e n s i t i z a t i o n o f t h e I P · T r a i n i n g o n m e t h o d o l o g y , q u a n t i t a t i v e r e s e a r c h a n d d a t a b a s e m a n a g e m e n t · C a r r y o u t a n a n n u a l p a r t i c i p a t o r y i m p a c t m o n i t o r i n g s t a r t i n g f r o m 1 / 2 0 0 8 · C a r r y o u t a n e x t e r n a l e v a l u a t i o n o f I P P i m p l e m e n t a t i o n a n d t h e P I M S e e 5 K A P - S L M , I P O I P O K A P - S L M S e e 5 6 / 2 0 0 7 O n g o i n g 2 0 0 8 , 2 0 1 1 S e e 5 2 0 , 0 0 0 C o m p 5 6 C o m 5 7 · T h e d a t a b a s e i s a c c e s s i b l e a n d p e r c e i v e d b y t h e K A P - S L M M & E u n i t a s u s e f u l i n s t r u m e n t a n d b y t h e I P a s a c c u r a t e d e s c r i p t i o n o f t h e i r r e a l i t y · T h e P I M r e p o r t s a r e u s e d f o r f i n e - t u n i n g a n d d o c u m e n t a p o v e r t y r e d u c t i o n r a t e o f I P v i l l a g e s e q u a l o r h i g h e r t h a n t h e a v e r a g e E s t a b l i s h e q u a l c u l t u r a l o p p o r t u n i t i e s 9 . E s t a b l i s h a n a t i o n a l p o l i c y o n i n d i g e n o u s p e o p l e s . · C r e a t e c o m m i s s i o n o n I P p o l i c y · C o n s u l t w i t h I P · E s t a b l i s h d r a f t p o l i c y · N a t i o n a l w o r k s h o p o n d r a f t p o l i c y · I m p l e m e n t t h e p o l i c y I P P S t e e r i n g c o m m i t t e e C o m m i s s i o n & o t h e r I P O C o m m i s s i o n & M P A l l s t a k e h o l d e r s G o K 3 / 2 0 0 7 6 / 2 0 0 7 9 / 2 0 0 7 1 2 / 2 0 0 7 1 / 2 0 0 8 5 , 0 0 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 2 0 , 0 0 0 0 · A l l s t a k e h o l d e r s a r e r e p r e s e n t e d i n a l l m e e t i n g s · T h e d o c u m e n t i s d i s c u s s e d i n e a c h I P s e t t l e m e n t a n d p e r c e i v e d b y e x p e r t s a s i n a c c o r d a n c e w i t h t h e O P 4 . 1 0 . 1 0 . A s s i s t t h e I P a s s o c i a t i o n i n c a p a c i t y b u i l d i n g t o r e d u c e t h e l o s s o f t r a d i t i o n a l k n o w l e d g e , c u l t u r e a n d l i v e l i h o o d p a t t e r n s · I d e n t i f y I P O i n t h e O A · P r o v i d e t r a i n i n g t o i n c r e a s e o r g a n i z a t i o n a l , t e c h n i c a l a n d f i n a n c i a l c a p a c i t i e s o f I P A s s o c i a t i o n s · C a r r y o u t s e n s i t i z a t i o n c a m p a i g n s i n I P v i l l a g e s · P r o m o t e I P c u l t u r e · P r o m o t e t h e p r o t e c t i o n a n d v a l o r i s a t i o n o f i n d i g e n o u s t r a d i t i o n a l k n o w l e d g e K A P - S L M K A P - S L M I P O I P O , M G S C S S I P O , N a t i o n a l M u s e u m s 1 2 / 2 0 0 6 1 1 / 2 0 0 5 s e e 4 4 , 0 0 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 S e e 4 S e e 4 S e e 4 · T h e I P a s s o c i a t i o n s a r e p e r c e i v e d a s r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s o f t h e I P a n d b e c o m e i n c r e a s i n g l y a c t i v e o n a l l l e v e l s 1 1 . F o s t e r t h e c r e a t i o n o f f o r u m s f o r c o m m u n i c a t i o n a n d e x c h a n g e b e t w e e n I P a n d o t h e r g r o u p s a n d a c c o m p a n y t h i s p r o c e s s o f m u t u a l u n d e r s t a n d i n g . · S e n s i t i z a t i o n o f t h e I P a n d o t h e r p e o p l e l i v i n g i n t h e r e g i o n · F a c i l i t a t e t h e c r e a t i o n o f f o r u m s · F a c i l i t a t e d i s c u s s i o n s a n d e x c h a n g e v i s i t s K A P - S L M , M G S C S S , I P O K A P - S L M , M G S C S S K A P - S L M , M G S C S S O n g o i n g O n g o i n g O n g o i n g 1 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 · T h e P I M a n d o t h e r r e p o r t s d o c u m e n t a n i n c r e a s i n g c o o p e r a t i o n b e t w e e n t h e I P a n d t h e i r n e i g h b o u r s i n v i e w o f j o i n t a c t i v i t i e s i n t h e d i r e c t i o n o f p o v e r t y r e d u c t i o n , b i o d i v e r s i t y c o n s e r v a t i o n a n d s t r e n g t h e n i n g t h e m u l t i c u l t u r a l s o c i e t y 6 T h e K A P - S L M M & E u n i t ( c o m p o n e n t 5 ) w i l l p r o v i d e U S D 1 , 0 0 0 p e r y e a r a n d d i s t r i c t i n t h e O A w i t h I P s e t t l e m e n t s = U S D 3 2 , 0 0 0 i n t o t a l . 7 T h e K A P - S L M c o m p o n e n t 5 w i l l c o m m i s s i o n t h i s i n t h e c o n t e x t o f t h e g e n e r a l s o c i a l s a f e g u a r d s u p e r v i s i o n m i s s i o n s . I t i s e x p e c t e d t h a t e a c h m i s s i o n w i l l c o s t a r o u n d U S D 1 0 , 0 0 0 = U S D 2 0 , 0 0 0 i n t o t a l . Page 51 51 5. Communication framework This communication framework elaborates principles, strategies and structures on how the KAP-SLM and the affected indigenous peoples should interact during project implementation to satisfy the criteria of free, prior and informed consultations. Before the different levels of the communication framework are outlined, it might be useful to remind of some basic principles of intercultural communication in general and the work with indigenous peoples in particular. All actors should · aim to share control and responsibility, even if those, one should share control with, are perceived as not qualified, inexperienced and driven by different objectives. One will have to work with them anyway, so one should try to increase their capacities and encourage them to participate actively to speed up processes. · monitor and evaluate all the time . IPPs are a new tool in Kenya, so it is necessary for all actors to assist the implementing structures to achieve the common goal of equal opportunities, poverty reduction and biodiversity conservation. It is not only the responsibility of the KARI staff and the KAP-SLM to ask the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus in all processes for their opinion and invite them to participate, but also the responsibility of the indigenous peoples to contribute as much as possible to the implementation of the IPP and the KAP-SLM at large. · keep people informed, listen to what they say. No one was born with a better knowledge than others and everybody has something to say. Since sustainable land and resource management affects everybody and is based on the contribution of everybody, everybody needs to be informed so that they can become involved in all kinds of activities. · be prepared to learn new ways of doing things . Since sustainable land and natural resource management is based on the cooperative management of all people in a micro-catchment area, everybody has a say and is able to contribute something. To observe how other people handle issues is always an advantage, because by learning new ways of doing things, one is better prepared to address new challenges in the future and to understand the actions of others. · be totally professional and committed at all times. · not allow people to use the project for selfish reasons. There is always the risk that certain people take over a project to personalise the benefits related to it. These problems mostly occur when people are not fully involved in what is going on, don’t come to meetings, don’t listen to talks and sign documents without reading them. As long as one rests silent or passive, those in charge might do what they want. So it is everybody’s responsibility to take part in the decision making process. · be patient, but demand commitment and effort. The communication between different groups especially in rural areas is not an easy task. Due to the limited number of people working on the subject and in the area, one might have had bad experiences in the past. One should leave bad memories behind and presume that the others have learned as one has also increased its capacity. · respect beliefs and customs. Sustainable land and natural resource management and the IPP are focusing on the cooperative management of natural resources and the Page 52 52 sustainable utilisation of cultural and biological diversity for the greater good of all. A first step to sustain diversity is the respect for the different beliefs and customs. The implementation of the IPP and the communication between the project and the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus will be governed by a steering committee, which should meet once a year (activity 8.6 of the IPP). It should consist of · 2 representative from the KAP-SLM Project (Coordinator), · 1 representative from the ministry of agriculture, · 1 representative from the ministry of livestock and fisheries development, · 1 representative from the ministry of water and irrigation, · 1 representative from the ministry of environment and natural resources, · 1 representative from the ministry of lands, · 1 representative from the ministry of home affairs, · 1 representative from the ministry of planning and national development, · 1 representative from the ministry of education, · 1 representative from the ministry of gender, sports, culture and social affaires, · 1 representative from the ministry of special programmes, · 1 representative from the ministry of tourism and wildlife, · 1 representative from the ministry of justice, · 1 representative from the office of the president, · 1 representative from the Kenya national commission for human rights · One representative from each of the 8 districts in which KAP-SLM interacts with indigenous peoples (= 8 in total) · 3 representatives from the IPOs (one for each group [Ogiek, Sengwer, Ilchamus]) · Three elected representatives from each of the 8 districts in which KAP-SLM interacts with indigenous peoples (= 24 in total). The KAP-SLM officer, who is assigned as coordinator, will be in charge to inform the members on the progress made, information received, activities and meetings planned, and wi ll connect regularly with the indigenous peoples’ representatives from the different districts. At district level a district IPP-committee will link up the KAP-SLM project, the indigenous peoples and the district administration. It should meet twice a year and work as focal point for all IPP related issues at district level. It should be informed about all kinds of KAP-SLM activities and communicate relevant information through the indigenous peoples’ representatives to the indigenous peoples’ communities. It should also gather information and feedbacks from the indigenous peoples’ communities to channel them to the relevant governmental structures, the national steering committee or the KAP-SLM project implementation unit. It should consist of · 1 representative from the KAP-SLM Project (Coordinator), · 1 representative from District Officer, · 1 representative from the agricultural department, · 1 representative from the livestock department, · 1 representative from the forest department, Page 53 53 · 1 representative from the lands department, · 1 representative from the security department or from the police, · 1 representative from the development office, · 1 representative from the department of social affaires, · 10 elected r epresentatives from the indigenous peoples’ communities. The elected representatives from the community will be in charge to facilitate the communication between the indigenous peoples’ communities in their area and the district IPP committee, the national steering committee and the project. They should be elected during the pilot phase of the IPP after a further introduction and general discussion on the IPP, the communication channels etc. to ensure that the elected representatives have broad community support and are elected on the base of free, prior and informed consultations. To harmonise IPP work between the different levels, the indigenous peoples representatives in each of the ten districts in the operational area with indigenous peoples should elect among them two coordinators to represent the indigenous peoples of the district in the national steering committee and to coordinate communication and work among the indigenous peoples of the district. Following the general guidelines for a successful communication outlined above, the representatives should remember that they are representatives of the people by whom they are elected and due to that feed back all information they receive and consult their communities as often as possible and prior to any major decisions. The IPP creates a level playing field for the indigenous peoples, the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus have to decide themselves how they use this communication framework to voice their needs and interests. 6. Grievance processes As the communication is mostly channelled through the KAP-SLM and government structures, a situation might arise in which certain information are not communicated or not adequately addressed. In that line, the provision of accessible procedures to address grievances by the affected indigenous peoples’ communities arising from project implementation is an important element to enhance and sustain the quality of the services and communication. In selecting a grievance structure, the indigenous peoples should take into account their customary dispute settlement mechanisms, the availability of judicial recourse and the fact that it should be a structure considered by all stakeholders as an independent and qualified actor. It should be a single organisation for all indigenous peoples’ communities affected by KAP-SLM. During the IPP workshop the participants came up with the view that the indigenous representatives in the IPP steering committee should elect a coordinator, who will than also act as coordinator for grievance from indigenous peoples’ communities within the KAP-SLM operational areas. The advantage is that it does not create a new structure, while the risk arises, that the IP coordinator is controlling the process and also the control structure of the process. Anyway, this is the decision of the indigenous peoples’ representatives. Page 54 54 7. Monitoring and evaluation mechanisms The monitoring and evaluation of the IPP implementation as well as the KAP-SLM implementation in operational areas inhabited by indigenous peoples is an important management tool, which should include arrangements for the free, prior, and informed consultations with the affected indigenous p eoples’ communities. The implementation of the participatory impact monitoring (PIM) at district level will be an important element to assist the various structures to fine-tune their intervention in view to maximise culturally appropriate benefits and provides space for the indigenous peoples’ communities to voice their concerns. The PIM will be based on the data gathered by KARI, the organisations of the indigenous peoples and the relevant governmental structures (lands, forests, security, development and social) at district level during the baseline study (activity 2.1 and 3.1 of the IPP) and an initial sensitisation and training of the indigenous peoples’ communities during the pilot phase of the IPP (activity 8.1. and 8.2. of the IPP). It is assumed that at least during the first year of the PIM (2008), the indigenous peoples’ organisations will play a key role as facilitator of the PIM process before the indigenous members of the IPP commissions at district level are able to take over this task. As this is a participatory process, the selection of the facilitator is of course the decision of the communities, but it is advised to choose people who are able to elaborate on the basis of the PIM reports, which reflect the situation on the ground in a transparent and plausible way. The PIM reports at district level should be produced before June 30 th of the years and then be returned to all indigenous peoples’ communities for feedback etc. before being handed over to the IPP-committees at district level before August 30 th . In September of each year (from 2008 on) the IPP district committees will meet to discuss among other issues the PIM reports, elaborate an evaluation at district level and prepare recommendations on how to fine-tune the IPP and the KAP-SLM further. The district PIM-reports, the district IPP evaluation and the recommendation should be communicated to the national steering committee before October 30 th . The IPP coordinator of KAP-SLM will publish the district PIM reports, the district IPP evaluations and recommendation through the KARI webpage, communicate them to the steering committee members, the World Bank task team and the interested public. They will be the basis for the annual evaluation of the IPP implementation carried out by the national steering committee in view of the performance indicators outlined in the IPP and the overarching principals of this IPP. 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(1997) Income and Assets as Impact Indicators . Washington, DC: Management Systems International. Little, P.D.(1998), Maasai Identity on the Periphery. American Anthropologist 100 (2): 444-468. Little, P.D., K. Smith, B.A. Cellarius, D.L. Coppock, and C.B. Barrett, (2001), Avoiding Disaster: Diversification and risk management among East African herders. Development and Change 32 (3): 401–433. Longewan (2002): Participatory Learing Approach; Village Development Plan. Makoloo, Maurice Odhiambo; (2005). Kenya: Minorities, indigenous peoples and ethnic diversity. Minority Right Group. Marshall, E (1994) Food sharing and body part representation in Okiek faunal assemblages. Journal of Archaeological Science 21 (1) :65-77. Matter, Scott (forthcoming) Imperfect State: The Complexity of Power, Politics, and Land Rights at Enoosupukia, Kenya. Matter, Scott, 2004. 'We have this land as our right': ethnicity, politics, and land rights at Enoosupukia, Kenya' MA Thesis, McGill University McPeak, John & Little, Peter D. (2004) Cursed If You Do,Cursed If You Don’t: The Contradictory Processes of Pastoral Sedentarization in Northern Kenya in: XXXX p. 88-104 Ministry of Finance and Planning: Baringo District Development Plan 2002-2008. Ministry of Lands (2005). National Land Policy Formulation Process. (www.landpolicy.or.ke). Niamir, Maryam (2004) Traditional African Range management techniques: Implication for rangeland development; In: Community Forestry: Herders’ Decision-making in Natural Resource Management in Arid and Semi-Arid Africa. FAO. Nkonya1, Ephraim; Gicheru, Patrick; Woelcke, Johannes; Okoba, Barrack; Kilambya, Daniel; Gachimbi, Louis, Lutta, Mohammed (2005): Economic and financial analysis of the agricultural productivity and sustainable land management project in Kenya. Progress Report. Nomi, Ron (2004). The Ogiek: The Guardians of the forest. Nomadic News 2004 (9): 57-61. Onotto, Jillo (2003) The Waata. Nomadic News 2003(1):59. Ostberg, W.1988. We eat trees: tree planting and land rehabilitation in West Pokot District, Kenya. A baseline study, p. 640. Working Paper No. 82. Uppsala, Sweden, International Rural Development Centre, Swedish Univ. Agric. Sciences. Page 57 57 Rottland, E and R. Vossen ( 1977) . Grundlagen für eine Klärung des Dorobo-Problems. In W. J. G. Mohlig, E Rottland, and B. Heine (eds.), Zur Sprachgeschichte und Ethnohistorie in Afrika. Berlin: Dietrich Verlag. Sang, Joseph .K. (2002). The Ogiek Land Question. http://www.cpsu.org.uk/downloads/Joesph%20Sang.pdf Sena, Charles & Towett, Joseph (2003). The Ogiek. Nomadic News 2003(1):19-20. Swallow, Brent & Bromley, Daniel (1992) Institutions, governance and incentives in common property regimes for African rangelands. Tiampati, Michael (2002) Sengwer: A people in identity crisis. Nomadic News 2002 (2) 63-64. Tokida, Kunihiro (2002) Rural Development Planning with Community Involved-Verification Projects: Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Tokyo, Japan. Tuweit, Joseph (2004). The Ogiek of North-Tindiret. Burnt Forest: Ogiek Consortium. World Bank (2005) Project appraisal document on a proposed grant from the Global Environmental Facility Trust Fund for an Agricultural Productivity and Sustainable Land Management Project (Draft August 29, 2005). Page 58 58 Itinerary Itinerary for the IPP Day Date Place Activity 1 8/12/05 Y’dé-Nairobi Review of PAD and other literature, Transport. 2 9/12/05 Nairobi Transport. Discussion with KARI. Planning of fieldtrips, etc. Team building with other consultants and relevant KARI staff. Discussion with Centre for Minority Rights Development (Korrir Singoeie) and Indigenous Information Network (Lucy Mulenkie). 3 10/12/05 Nairobi Review of documents. Discussion with World Bank Task Team. 4 11/12/05 Nairobi Review of documents. 5 12/12/05 Tugen Hills Transport. Discussion with stakeholders in Nakuru: Sengwer Indigenous Development Project; Sengwer Education Bursary Fund; Hunter-Gatherer Forum; Ogiek Welfare Council; Ogiek Peoples Development Programme. 6 13/12/05 Tugen Hills Consultation with local stakeholders: District Department of Social Services (Jane Obiero); Consultation with IP: Village Meeting with Ilchamus in Kailerr. 7 14/12/05 Tugen Hills Consultation with local stakeholders: District Forest and Environmental Service; District office of Ministry of Livestock (Laman Labatt) Consultation with IP: Meeting with Ilchamus on Ol Kokwai. 8 15/12/05 Tugen Hills Consultations with local stakeholders: Tugen Populations in and near Lake Kamnarok 9 16/12/05 Cherangany Consultant with local stakeholders: SCC-Vi Agroforestry (Bjorn Horuath); District Development Office (Gladys Kinuah); District Department of Lands and Land Settlement (Tom Chepkwesi & Isaac Kavue); Catholic Church Land & Peace Programme (Mathew Bole); District Department of Social Services (Jane Nyangota) 10 17/12/05 Cherangany Consultant with IP: Meeting with Sengwer in Kapolet Forest and Talau Location 11 18/12/05 Cherangany Consultant with IP: Meeting with Sengwer in Kamologon (Embobut forest) 12 19/12/05 Nakuru Consultant with IP: Meeting with Ogiek in Kipkurere forest 13 20/12/05 Nakuru Consultant with IP: Meeting with Ogiek in Enoosupukia forest 14 21/12/05 Nairobi Feedback session with KARI; Discussion with Julian Bauer on Watha in the Taita Hills project site. 15 22/12/05 Nairobi-Y’dé Elaboration of draft IPP 16 23/12/05 Yaoundé Elaboration of draft IPP 17 24/12/05 Yaoundé Elaboration of draft IPP 18 25/12/05 Yaoundé Elaboration of draft IPP 19 26/12/05 Yaoundé Elaboration of draft IPP 20 7/1/06 Y’dé-Nairobi Transport 21-28 8-15/1/06 Nairobi Discussions with KARI 29 16/1/06 Nairobi Preparation of IPP workshop 30 17/1/06 Kapanguera Travel 31 18/1/06 Kapanguera IPP workshop 32 19/1/06 Kap’era -Y’dé Travel 33 20/1/06 Yaoundé Finalisation of IPP Page 59 59 Peoples and organisations directly consulted Ogiek Charles Sena; Ogiek Peoples National Assembly; ( info@orip.or.ke ) Joseph Towett; Ogiek Peoples National Assembly & Ogiek Welfare Council ( ogieknet@cratornet.com ). Sarone ole Sena ( sarone_ole_sena@wvi.org ). Daniel Kobei ; Ogiek Peoples Development Programme ( dkobei@yahoo.com ; opdp2001@yahoo.com ). Village Meeting Enoosupukia Forest: Simon Ngayami ( SimonSeleyian@yahoo.com ; 0721-976794); Kuyiato Nashur; Simana Kereto; Mayiani Ole Mebaron; Timothy Ole Mebaron; Naguoi Omerae; Nurran Kereto; Lepapa Omerae; Eunice Ngayami. Village Meeting Kipkurere Forest: Joseph Tuwei (0720-808130); Kipkoech Sang (0724-554315); Kiprotich Koringo (0723-753440); William K. Tuwgi (0721- 735330); William K. Katam (0720-385919); Mercy Jepkosgei (0725-943949); Samuel K. Songok; William K. Koech; Kepkendot Mutai; Johana Bett; Benjamin Maiyo; Kibkerege Koech; Richard K. Langat; David K. Sitienei. Sengwer David Kiptum Yator; Sengwer Indigenous Development Project; Sengwer Education Bursary Fund; Hunter-Gatherer Forum; ( ykiptumsengwer@hotmail.com ; yat.or@lycos.com ; sengwer.idp@multitechweb.com ). Moses Leleu Laima (Sengwer Cerangany Cultural Group; P.O. Box 94-30215; Kesogon via Kitale; 0734-683050) Paul Kebet; Cherangany Hills Forest Conservation; (0721-353944) Village Meeting Talau Location: 20 male and 10 female. Village Meeting Kamologon (Embobut forest): Thomas; Paul Kip Kenoi; Sammy Kip Chemeri; Toroitich; William; Chehimo Kip Koo; Paulina; Josephine; Elisabeth; Selly. Village Meeting Kapolet Forest: Jacob K. Chehol ( Sengwer Land Allocation Committee; 0735-493161); Josilah J. Cheruiyot (Livestock & Fisheries); Charles Kiberen (Sengwer Land Allocation Committee); Barnabas Ng’esenwo (Public Officer Marakwet District); Joseph Cheruiyot (Senwer Community Health Centre); Jacob K.Roi (Sengwer Water, Sanitation and Environment Committee); Viola Chepngetich (Sengwer Youth Committee 0722-428781); Frida Chepkoech (Sengwer Youth Committee); William Kiptoo (Village Elder); Kiptoo Keleke (Sengwer Ilchamus Orlando Loweri; Lake Baringo Self-Help Group (0723-990652 & 0725-860187; c/o Baringo Island Camp P.O. Box 1141; Nakuru) Page 60 60 Francis L. Olekeis; Kailer Village Development Committee; (P.O. Box 80 Marigat; Tel: 0735-870161) Samson Kakimon, Kailer Village Development Committee; (P.O. Box 56 Marigat; Tel: 0736-444359) Village Meeting on Ol Kokwa : 8 male, 4 female (remained mostly passive). Village Meeting Kailer : Francis Lekingidia; Jackson Naremo; Veronica Tikinya; Esther Tenges; Mariku-Nkera Likimariki; Christine Lekesio; Rosemany Naremo; Nolkoronkaya Lekaitalin; Jane Sululia; Mary Suluka; Maria Lekituli; Jane Nareno; Eunice Lenonoi; Leviah Lesange; Salinaah Kenei; Lepooya James; Lekae Samuel; Valychiffe Pilinah; Tom Sekege; Lekchike Peter; Samson Lenonor; Godama Sayroki; Nicholas Lekinaniki; Lenaguienyi Wilson; Lokuda Lekesio; Kinozol Moiben and Keiz Francis. Indigenous Peoples Organisations Naomi Kipuri, African Union Sub-commission on Indigenous People; ( kipuri3000@yahoo.com ) Fisherpeoples Network: Mr. Mhuswala (0733-423706) Indigenous Information Network: Lucy Mulenkie. Centre for Minority Rights Development: Korrir Singoeie ( Korir.singoei@cemiride.info ; 722-776994) Experts Peter Little; University of Kentucky; ( pdlitt1@uky.edu ; Email 7&10/12/05) Abdillahi Aboud; Egerton University; ( Eu-crsp@africaonline.co.ke ; Email 10/12/05). Meeting 13/12/05. Clement Lenachuru; Egerton University; ( olenashuru@yahoo.com ; Email 10/12/05) Josephat Cheng'ole Mulindo; KARI Marigat, Baringo District ( cjmulindo@yahoo.com ); Email 10/12/05) Johnson Changeiywo; Egerton University; ( jchangeiywo@yahoo.com ). Maina Josephat; Ministry of Livestock Marigat (0735-170951) Laban Labatt; Ministry of Livestock Marigat (0735-115117 & 0722-364449) Bjorn Horvath; VA-Life Project Kibale ( bjorn.viafpk@mac.com ) Scott Matter; McGill University ( scott.matter@mail.mcgill.ca ) Jacqueline Klopp: Columbia University ( jk2002@columbia.edu ) Julian Bauer; EcoTerra (0733-633000; pjb@ecoterra.net ) Page 61 6 1 P a r t i c i p a n t s I P P W o r k s h o p K a k a m e g a 1 8 / 1 / 2 0 0 6 N o . N a m e O r g a n i s a t i o n A d d r e s s T e l e p h o n e E - m a i l 1 . J . P . C h e r u i y o t S e n g w e r B o x 1 7 9 1 N a k u r u 0 7 3 3 9 2 4 4 9 2 2 . C . M . K i u r a I . D . S . U O N ( S o c i a l A s s ) B o x 3 0 1 9 7 N R B 0 7 2 2 7 8 4 3 8 1 c k i u r a @ g m o i . c o m 3 . V i o l a h C . C h e p k w o n y S e n g w e r B o x 3 1 6 K a p e n g u r i a 0 7 2 2 4 2 8 7 8 1 4 . V i n c e n t O . C h e r u i y o t S e n g w e r B o x 1 4 2 K a p c h e r o p 0 7 2 2 9 9 9 4 0 5 5 . O p a n a h C h e o p h a s S C C / V I A g r o f o r e s t r y B o x 2 0 0 6 K i t a l e 0 7 3 3 5 1 6 7 6 3 v i a k p @ a f r i c a o n l i n e . c o . k e 6 . M . L . L a i m a S e n g w e r B o x 9 4 - 3 0 2 1 5 K e s o g o n 0 7 3 4 4 6 3 0 5 0 7 . J . D . O b i e r o S o c i a l s e r v i c e s B o x 9 , K B T 0 7 2 2 9 3 2 0 6 3 8 . G o d f r e y W . W a f u l a N E M A - T r a n s N z o i a B o x 9 9 , K i t a l e 0 7 3 4 4 2 3 5 7 4 g w a f u l a 2 0 0 4 @ n e m a . g o . k e 9 . S o l o m o n K . C h e r o n g o C h e m u d e p - o r g a n i s a t i o n ( S e n g w e r ) B o x 4 8 0 , K a p e n g u r i a 0 7 3 5 7 1 2 7 5 8 c h e m u d e p 2 0 0 4 @ y a h o o . c o m ; c h e r a n g a n y . m d p @ y a h o o . c o m 1 0 . C h e s e r e k K . D a v i d S e n g w e r B o x 2 1 8 K a p s o w a r 1 1 . D . M . K o b e i O g i e k p e o p l e s B o x 6 2 2 , N a r o k 0 7 2 2 4 3 3 7 5 7 d k o b e i @ y a h o o . c o m 1 2 . T o w e t t K i m a i y o O g i e k W . c o u n c i l B o x 1 2 0 6 9 , N a k u r u 0 7 2 2 2 3 6 3 2 4 o n g i e k @ m u l t i t e c h e k . c o m 1 3 . O r i a n d o . M . L e w e r y I l c h a m u s B o x 1 1 4 1 , N a k u r u 1 4 . J a n e L e m u k u i I l c h a m u s B o x 1 1 4 1 , N a k u r u 1 5 . L . N . G a c h i m b i K A R I - N A R L B o x 1 4 7 3 3 , N R B 0 7 2 2 7 9 5 8 8 4 i n m a s p @ s k y w e b . c o . k e 1 6 . I s a y a V . S i j a l i K A R I - N A R L B o x 1 4 7 3 3 , N R B 0 7 2 2 7 6 4 7 5 1 i r r i g a t i o n @ i c o n n e c t . c o . k e 1 7 . S a m s o n L e k a k i m o n I l c h a m u s B o x 1 7 4 , M a r i g a t 0 7 3 6 4 4 4 3 5 9 1 8 . P . T . G i c h e r u K A R I - N A R L B o x 1 4 7 3 3 , N R B 4 4 4 3 3 7 6 k s s @ i c o n n e c t . c o . k e 1 9 . J o e l L e m a p u n g a K A I B o x 1 4 1 , N a k u r u 2 0 . V e r o n i c a h T i k i n y a K a i l e r B o x 8 0 , M a r i g a t 2 1 . J o s e p h T u w e i O g i e k p e o p l e B o x 1 0 4 B u r n t F o r e s t 0 7 2 0 8 0 8 1 3 0 2 2 . J o e l K o e c h O g i e k p e o p l e B o x 1 0 4 B u r n t F o r e s t 0 7 2 0 8 0 8 1 3 0 2 3 . M i c h a e l N a r e m o I l c h a m u s c o m m u n i t y B o x 8 0 , M a r i g a t 0 7 3 6 4 8 5 0 8 1 2 4 . O l e k e i s L . F r a n c i s I l c h a m u s c o m m u n i t y B o x 8 0 , M a r i g a t 0 7 3 5 8 7 0 1 6 1 2 5 . F r a n c i s K . L e e k i t u l i I l c h a m u s c o m m u n i t y B o x 8 0 , M a r i g a t 0 7 3 5 4 9 7 5 3 9 2 6 . P . N . K i n y a n j u i F o r e s t B o x 9 9 , K i t a l e 0 7 2 1 4 0 0 0 5 2 Page 62 6 2 2 7 . J . K o s g e i T e k e r o u C h a i r m a n S e n g w e r B o x 6 0 6 , K i t a l e 0 7 3 5 4 9 3 1 0 1 2 8 . Y a t o r K i p t u m S e n g w e r I n d i g e n o u s p e o p l e p r o j e c t B o x 3 8 9 4 , K i t a l e 0 7 3 4 6 8 9 9 5 8 S e n g w e r . i d p @ m u l t i t e c h . c o m 2 9 . O k o b a B a r r a c k K A R I - N A R L B o x 1 4 7 3 3 , N R B 0 7 3 3 9 7 8 7 4 6 O k o b a 2 0 0 0 @ y a h o o . c o m 3 0 . M a u r e e n N y a n g w ’ a r a K A R I H Q T S B o x 5 7 8 1 1 N B R 0 7 2 2 5 7 6 0 6 9 m k n y a n g w a r a @ k a r i . o r g 3 1 . S i m o n N g a y a m i O g i e k B o x 5 0 , N a r o k 0 7 2 1 9 7 6 7 9 4 s i m o n s e l e y i a n @ y a h o o . c o m 3 2 . N a s e r i a n K u r r a r u O g i e k B o x 5 0 , N a r o k 0 7 2 1 9 7 6 7 9 4 3 3 . R u t h E m a r u k o I I N B o x , 7 4 9 1 8 , N R B 0 7 2 2 8 4 5 7 0 3 l o k a a l e i @ y a h o o . c o m 3 4 . S a m u e l O p a r M O A B o x 1 7 8 1 , K i t a l e 0 7 2 2 7 6 4 5 0 3 3 5 . E z r a C h i l o b a C E M I R I D E B o x 1 4 6 9 2 - 0 0 1 0 0 N R B 0 2 0 - 6 0 9 6 8 2 e b a l o c h i @ y a h o o . c o . u k 3 6 . E s t h e r W . M a i n a K A R I - N A R L B o x 1 4 7 3 3 , N R B 4 4 4 3 3 7 6 k s s @ i c o n n e c t . c o . k e 3 7 . E u t y c u s N d e r i t u K A R I - N A R L B o x 1 4 7 3 3 , N R B 4 4 4 4 2 5 6 i n m a s p @ s k y w e b . c o . k e 3 8 . P e t r o n i l l a K i m a t h i K A R I - N A R L B o x 1 4 7 3 3 , N R B 4 4 4 0 9 0 3 k s s @ i c o n n e c t . c o . k e 3 9 . K a i S c h m i d t - S o l t a u C o n s u l t a n t B o x 7 8 1 4 Y ’ d é C a m e r o o n 2 3 7 - 9 8 0 8 8 2 5 S c h m i d t S o l @ a o l . c o m 4 0 . Page 63 63 REPUBLIC OF KENYA MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE STAKEHOLDERS MEETING ON SUSTAINABLE LAND MANAGEMENT PROJECT WORKSHOP HELD AT GOLF CLUB, KAKAMEGA 18 th JANUARY 2006 . Page 64 64 MORNING SESSION INTRODUCTION AND THE OPENING OF THE WORKSHOP – BY DR. GICHERU OF KARI The participants introduced themselves and the organization they represent. The participants comprised of the IP and the KAP-SLM project – researchers and the other experts. He went through the workshop objective before presenting the KAP SLM objectives. The project is funded by GEF through the World Bank and will be implemented by KARI along with the other stakeholders. The stakeholders will comprise people and groups from IP, government ministries and institutions, researchers etc. He advised everybody to brainstorm on the Agenda of the workshop so that everybody is clear with what is to be discussed during the workshop. The concept of the SLM was presented to the participants whereby he explained that SLM is based on 6 pillars .i.e. · Maintaining and enhancing production · Reducing production risk · Preventing land and water degradation · Securing economic viability · Social acceptability · Local and global environmental benefits The proposed project · Title : Agricultural Productivity and Sustainable Land Management in Kenya · Objective: seeks to promote sustainable use of natural resources for higher productivity and incomes for the rural farmers of Kenya and the maintenance of critical ecosystem functions in fragile areas. · Key development goal: contribute to the modernization of Kenya’s agricultural sector and improvement of the lives and livelihoods of its rural communities through the development, acquisition and application of improved and profitable agricultural technologies and production practices. · Global Environment objective: mitigate land degradation in selected priority watersheds in order to ensure continued ecosystem functions and sustain rural livelihoods. · Mode of operation: promotion of sustainable land management technology packages and practices that have local and global benefits. · ecosystem integrity. · This will involve the integrated utilization of soil, water, air, and floral and faunal bio-diversity for physical and socio-economic development, paying particular attention to the maintenance and restoration of ecosystem integrity Specific activities · To evaluate the current socio-economic status (livelihood patterns) and natural resources management practices within selected watersheds/catchments · To develop, promote and scale-up sustainable land management best practices and technologies to achieve greater productivity Page 65 65 · To evaluate the impact and assist in designing policies that influence the incentives for the farmers and communities to adopt improved land management practices. · To enhance the institutional capacity of stakeholders to undertake participatory and multidisciplinary sustainable land management practices and extension of best management practices. · To facilitate the exchange of information on best practices in sustainable land management among farmers, communities, scientists, development partners, and policy makers. · To promote public-private sector partnerships in sustainable land management for maximizing environmental services and economic empowerment of communities Project Components Component 1. Promotion of Best Management Practices and Best Management Technologies for improved livelihoods: SLM practices and technologies that are suitable for scaling-up (swc, water harvesting, reseeding of degraded lands, high yielding and ecologically adapted crop and livestock varieties and genotypes, soil fertility maintenance practises etc) Component 2. Promotion of Alternative livelihoods systems : · identify, develop an inventory and document economically viable livelihood options · create an environment conducive to the adoption of improved plant nutr12ient technologies (promote a more efficient procurement, distribution, and marketing of inputs and that enhance effective utilization of farm outputs) · increase the local awareness and use of the indigenous products, processing and enhanced marketing strategies, develop markets for non-timber forest products and other products, and ways of value-adding Component 3. Community empowerment and capacity building · strive to empowering farmers, community based organizations, extension providers and the implementers both in knowledge and resources to better implement natural resource programs. · demonstration value of this project, community-based awareness building and knowledge sharing will be supported through farmer-led extension and farmer-to-farmer information sharing. Component 4. Institutional and policy analysis · Examine legislative and policy frameworks to identify any inconsistencies, perverse incentives and opportunities for further policy support for sustainable land management · participatory involve government agencies and national level institutions to seek to remove the broader policy and legal barriers to improved land management DISCUSSIONS AND CLARIFICATIONS OF DR. GICHERU PRESENTATION ISSUES Page 66 66 - The participants acknowledged the project that it will bring down the level of poverty in Kenya - Participants were concerned about how the IP will be recognized by the government - The IP were informed that the issue of alternative livelihoods will be addressed during the project - Involvement of the top government officials was a concern to the IP participants since the policy makers were not present. However, KARI will organize the launching workshop where high level Government officials will be invited. - Participants sought clarifications about KAPP and it’s relation with current KAP-SLM project and how KAPP will impact on indigenous people REACTIONS - The project will mainstream the IP in the project and ensure their improved livelihoods - KAP-SLM promised to involve IP’s during launching of the project and IPs will make contribution in the presence of the senior government officials - KAPP and KAP SLM are sister projects complementing each other one on sustainable land management and the other on adaptive research and transfer of technologies to the farmers. INDIGENOUS PEOPLES PLAN (IPP) OF KAP-SLM – By Dr. Schmidt-Soltau Introduction “Almost all African states host a rich variety of different ethnic groups (…). All of these groups are indigenous to Africa. However, some are in a structural subordinate position to the dominating groups and the state, leading to marginalisation and discrimination. It is this situation that the indigenous concept, in its modern analytical form, and the international legal framework attached to it, addresses”. African Commission’s Working Group of Experts on Indigenous Populations 1. IP are found in the Operational area of the project: - Cherangany Hills – Sengwer - Kinale Catchment – Ogiek - Yala river Catchment – Ogiek - Tugen Hills – Inchamis - Taita Hills – few Watha 2. Living condition of indigenous peoples The Ilchamus, Ogiek and Sengwer have less access to land and natural resources and have less access to security Are less represented in decision making processes at all levels Have less access to social infrastructure and technical services Development Vision: The Sengwer, Ogiek and Ilchamus don’t request special treatment, but equal opportunities. 3. Has the increased dependence on farming and livestock rearing, and the desire to access social services and decision making processes turned the Ogiek, Sengwer and Page 67 67 Ilchamus into simple citizens of Kenya like others - a few ethnic groups among many others? Decidedly not! 4. Reasons for IPP As the project might impact on indigenous peoples’ rights, lands, livelihoods and culture the Government of Kenya has to ensure that the KAP-SLM fully respects the dignity, human rights, economies, and culture of indigenous peoples; T6o ensure that the KAP-SLM has a broad community support from the affected indigenous peoples; to qualify for funding from the World Bank. Is it likely that the KAP-SLM will achieve all this without a specific set of action? Certainly not! 5. To achieve this, this IPP develops measures to avoid potentially adverse effects on the indigenous peoples' communities; or when avoidance is not feasible, minimize, mitigate, or compensate for such effects. to ensure that the indigenous peoples receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate and gender as well as intergenerationally inclusive. 6. The main actors of the IPP of the KAP-SLM KARI, Ministry of Agriculture, Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries, Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, Ministry of Water and Irrigation, Ministry of Lands, Ministry of Home Affairs, Ministry of Planning and National Development, Ministry of Gender, Sports, Culture and Social Services, Indigenous Peoples’ Organisations and the Ogiek, Sengwer and Ilchamus themselves. 7. IPP Action Plan (1) Establish an environment that enables sustainable land and resource management: Establish the capacities necessary to implement the IPP; Establish an equal access to land and natural resources; Establish an equal access to security, social infrastructure and technical services. 8. IPP Action Plan (2) Establish equal technical opportunities Provide the IP with technical capacities to participate actively in sustainable land and natural resource management; Provide the relevant GoK staff and other stakeholders with the technical capacities to cooperate successfully and in a culturally appropriate manner with the indigenous peoples; Facilitate priority access of indigenous peoples to KAP-SLM related jobs; Establish for the IP an equal access to decision making processes in the domain of sustainable land and natural resource management; Page 68 68 Establish a participatory impact monitoring for KAP- SLM in indigenous peoples’ areas. 9. IPP Action Plan (3) Establish equal cultural opportunities Establish a national policy on indigenous peoples; Assist the indigenous peoples’ organisations in capacity building to preserve the loss of traditional knowledge, culture and livelihood patterns. Foster the creation of forums for communication and exchange between IP and other ethnic groups and accompany this process of mutual understanding. 10. Expected outcomes of IPP It is assumed that these eleven activities are able to guarantee that the KAP-SLM is able to satisfy international requirements (OP 4.10 of the World Bank); reduces poverty for all ethnic groups and lower the dependence on & degradation of natural resources; promotes an effective management system of lands and natural resources, which offers positive impacts to the entire population and the biodiversity; respects the dignity, rights and culture of the indigenous peoples; assures that the indigenous peoples receive culturally appropriate benefits equal to any other ethnic groups. Discussions · Definitions of IP’s peoples as per the African charter. The participants highlighted the need for KARI support so that the IP’s are accepted by the government-policies. · There is need to include ministry of education as a stakeholder since the level of illiteracy of IP’s is quite high. The other ministries to be included as stakeholders are: Office of the President, Ministry of Special Programmes, Ministry of Justice, Ministry of Wildlife,Human Rights Commision · Participants acknowledged the work done by Dr. Kai as very inclusive Reactions (i) KAP-SLM will not ignore participation of IP’s during the project implementation with the stakeholders. (ii) KAP-SLM will work with the ministries mentioned above as stakeholders since they are critical in the implementation of KAP SLM. Question The need to have Office of the President as a stakeholder, considering insecurity is very important in the areas occupied by IPs was raised. · Participants wanted the Project activities implementaed immediately · Destruction of Kaporet forest, it was said that the problem was caused by the forest settlement. Other communities encroached the forest even before Sengwer were settled by the Government. · It was alleged that forest department has been involved in the forest destruction, instead of conserving it. · The problem of Kaporet forest is not settlement of Sengwer as it was earlier said but the colonial policies which displaced the Sengwer from their ancestral lands. Page 69 69 · The issues of title deeds were raised and the Project was requested to look at it during the project duration. · The participants raised the concern of lack of demarcation of their land e.g. Ichamus area. · The issue of grazing has brought great enmity e.g. Pokot, Samburu etc. · Unsustainable hunter, gathering livelihood has become something of the past. · The participants raised the issues of job employment as discriminative to the IP’s e.g. Sengwer. This has demoralized education of children. · Illiteracy and poverty has caused land selling by the IP’s. Reactions · KAP-SLM will build capacity to the IP’s to look into the issues raised above. · KAP-SLM will also include all the stakeholders mentioned by the participants. Other discussions KARI should support the IP’s by highlighting to the government to ratify international instruments e.g. 120 convention 169, African charter. · The government recognition of IP’s was highly acknowledged. · All participants acknowledged the work of KARI and Dr. Kai efforts · It was suggested by the participants that the GOK should do something to bar the logging companies from destroying the forest e.g. Mau forest. · Formulation of communities committees to be set-up in the catchment areas to capture IP’s issues. · It was also suggested that IP to be included in all the structures of the project. i.e. at Catchment level (communities) and the National committees. · Setting of working groups (3 groups according to the 3 main elements of the IPP action plan) and a KARI person to be included AFTERNOON PLENARY AND GROUPS PRESENTATIONS · Population census to be done in the IP’s areas · Culturally the population issue is very difficult - The IPs are having problems in getting Identity Cards and Birth certificates. The GOK should do something about this issue. · Participants wanted to know organization structure of the project and how it will look like. · Participants were concerned of interferences by other communities e.g. in Sengwer land. Reactions · Baseline survey will be done during the project and the issue of IP population census can be captured · Steering committee will be set and will be chaired by KARI KAP-SLM. · Finalization of the project structure is not yet done. · Detailed IPP is going to be done and not yet availed to the IPP’s. CHANNELING GRIEVANCES Page 70 70 · Concern over a parallel structure was brained stormed and was agreed that it will be put in place when the flow of information will be found not to work. It was suggested that for the time being a grievances office to be set up within the IP structure. CLOSING REMARKS FROM DR. GICHERU He thanked all the participants and promised to incorporate all the feedbacks in the main report. He thanked the participants for accepting to come to the meeting on behalf of KARI and promised the participants that KAP SLM will do what it takes can to support IP’s and he closed the workshop. Time Activity by whom Tuesday 17th January 2006 6 pm Arrival, All 6-8 pm Registration and distribution of workshop material Secretariat Wednesday, 18th January 2006 7.30-8.30 am Breakfast All 8.30 am Introductions and Opening the workshop Dr. P. Gicheru 9.00 am Brief on proposed KAP-SLM Project KAP-SLM Team 9.45 am Presentation of draft IPP for KAP-SLM Dr. Kai Schmidt-Soltau 10.30 am HEALTH BREAK All 11.00 am General Discussions and Group Formation All 1.00 pm LUNCH BREAK 2.00 pm Group Discussions Stakeholders 3.30 pm Plenary - Feedback Session Stakeholders 4.00 pm HEALTH BREAK All 4.30 pm Decision making on IPP of KAP-SLM Stakeholders 5.00 pm Next Steps Stakeholders 6.00 pm Rounding up and closure of workshop Dr. P. Gicheru Thursday 19th january 2006 8.00 am Departure All Page 71 71 OP. 4.10: Indigenous Peoples Note: OP and BP 4.10 together replace OD 4.20, Indigenous Peoples , dated September 1991. These OP and BP apply to all projects for which a Project Concept Review takes place on or after July 1, 2005. Questions may be addressed to the Director, Social Development Department (SDV) . 1. This policy [1] contributes to the Bank’s [2] mission of poverty reduction and sustainable development by ensuring that the development process fully respects the dignity, human rights, economies, and cultures of Indigenous Peoples. For all projects that are proposed for Bank financing and affect Indigenous Peoples,[3] the Bank requires the borrower to engage in a process of free, prior, and informed consultation.[4] The Bank provides project financing only where free, prior, and informed consultation results in broad community support to the project by the affected Indigenous Peoples.[5] Such Bank-financed projects include measures to (a) avoid potentially adverse effects on the Indigenous Peoples' communities; or (b) when avoidance is not feasible, minimize, mitigate, or compensate for such effects. Bank-financed projects are also designed to ensure that the Indigenous Peoples receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate and gender and intergenerationally inclusive. 2 . The Bank recognizes that the identities and cultures of Indigenous Peoples are inextricably linked to the lands on which they live and the natural resources on which they depend. These distinct circumstances expose Indigenous Peoples to different types of risks and levels of impacts from development projects, including loss of identity, culture, and customary livelihoods, as well as exposure to disease. Gender and intergenerational issues among Indigenous Peoples also are complex. As social groups with identities that are often distinct from dominant groups in their national societies, Indigenous Peoples are frequently among the most marginalized and vulnerable segments of the population. As a result, their economic, social, and legal status often limits their capacity to defend their interests in and rights to lands, territories, and other productive resources, and/or restricts their ability to participate in and benefit from development. At the same time, the Bank recognizes that Indigenous Peoples play a vital role in sustainable development and that their rights are increasingly being addressed under both domestic and international law. 3. Identification. Because of the varied and changing contexts in which Indigenous Peoples live and because there is no universally accepted definition of "Indigenous Peoples," this policy does not define the term. Indigenous Peoples may be referred to in different countries by such terms as "indigenous ethnic minorities," "aboriginals," "hill tribes," "minority nationalities," "scheduled tribes," or "tribal groups." 4. For purposes of this policy, the term "Indigenous Peoples" is used in a generic sense to refer to a distinct, vulnerable, social and cultural group [6 ] possessing the following characteristics in varying degrees: (a) Self-identification as members of a distinct indigenous cultural group and recognition of this identity by others; Page 72 72 (b) collective attachment to geographically distinct habitats or ancestral territories in the project area and to the natural resources in these habitats and territories;[7] (c) customary cultural, economic, social, or political institutions that are separate from those of the dominant society and culture; and (d) an indigenous language, often different from the official language of the country or region. A group that has lost "collective attachment to geographically distinct habitats or ancestral territories in the project area" (paragraph 4 (b)) because of forced severance remains eligible for coverage under this policy. [8] Ascertaining whether a particular group is considered as "Indigenous Peoples" for the purpose of this policy may require a technical judgment (see paragraph 8). 5. Use of Country Systems. The Bank may decide to use a country's systems to address environmental and social safeguard issues in a Bank-financed project that affects Indigenous Peoples. This decision is made in accordance with the requirements of the applicable Bank policy on country systems. [9] Project Preparation 6. A project proposed for Bank financing that affects Indigenous Peoples requires: (a) screening by the Bank to identify whether Indigenous Peoples are present in, or have collective attachment to, the project area (see paragraph 8); (b) a social assessment by the borrower (see paragraph 9 and Annex A ); (c) a process of free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities at each stage of the project, and particularly during project preparation, to fully identify their views and ascertain their broad community support for the project (see paragraphs 10 and 11); (d) the preparation of an Indigenous Peoples Plan (see paragraph 12 and Annex B ) or an Indigenous Peoples Planning Framework (see paragraph 13 and Annex C ); and (e) disclosure of the Indigenous Peoples Plan or Indigenous Peoples Planning Framework (see paragraph 15). 7. The level of detail necessary to meet the requirements specified in paragraph 6 (b), (c), and (d) is proportional to the complexity of the proposed project and commensurate with the nature and scale of the proposed project's potential effects on the Indigenous Peoples, whether adverse or positive. Screening 8. Early in project preparation, the Bank undertakes a screening to determine whether Indigenous Peoples (see paragraph 4) are present in, or have collective attachment to, the project area. [10] In conducting this screening, the Bank seeks the technical Page 73 73 judgment of qualified social scientists with expertise on the social and cultural groups in the project area. The Bank also consults the Indigenous Peoples concerned and the borrower. The Bank may follow the borrower's framework for identification of Indigenous Peoples during project screening, when that framework is consistent with this policy. Social Assessment 9 . Analysis. If, based on the screening, the Bank concludes that Indigenous Peoples are present in, or have collective attachment to, the project area, the borrower undertakes a social assessment to evaluate the project's potential positive and adverse effects on the Indigenous Peoples, and to examine project alternatives where adverse effects may be significant. The breadth, depth, and type of analysis in the social assessment are proportional to the nature and scale of the proposed project's potential effects on the Indigenous Peoples, whether such effects are positive or adverse (see Annex A for details). To carry out the social assessment, the borrower engages social scientists whose qualifications, experience, and terms of reference are acceptable to the Bank. 10. Consultation and Participation. Where the project affects Indigenous Peoples, the borrower engages in free, prior, and informed consultation with them. To ensure such consultation, the borrower: (a) establishes an appropriate gender and intergenerationally inclusive framework that provides opportunities for consultation at each stage of project preparation and implementation among the borrower, the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities, the Indigenous Peoples Organizations (IPOs) if any, and other local civil society organizations (CSOs) identified by the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities; (b) uses consultation methods [11] appropriate to the social and cultural values of the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities and their local conditions and, in designing these methods, gives special attention to the concerns of Indigenous women, youth, and children and their access to development opportunities and benefits; and (c) provides the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities with all relevant information about the project (including an assessment of potential adverse effects of the project on the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities) in a culturally appropriate manner at each stage of project preparation and implementation. 11. In deciding whether to proceed with the project, the borrower ascertains, on the basis of the social assessment (see paragraph 9) and the free, prior, and informed consultation (see paragraph 10), whether the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities provide their broad support to the project. Where there is such support, the borrower prepares a detailed report that documents: Page 74 74 (a) the findings of the social assessment; (b) the process of free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities; (c) additional measures, including project design modification, that may be required to address adverse effects on the Indigenous Peoples and to provide them with culturally appropriate project benefits; (d) recommendations for free, prior, and informed consultation with and participation by Indigenous Peoples' communities during project implementation, monitoring, and evaluation; and (e) any formal agreements reached with Indigenous Peoples' communities and/or the IPOs. The Bank reviews the process and the outcome of the consultation carried out by the borrower to satisfy itself that the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities have provided their broad support to the project. The Bank pays particular attention to the social assessment and to the record and outcome of the free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities as a basis for ascertaining whether there is such support. The Bank does not proceed further with project processing if it is unable to ascertain that such support exists. Indigenous Peoples Plan/Planning Framework 12. Indigenous Peoples Plan. On the basis of the social assessment and in consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities, the borrower prepares an Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP) that sets out the measures through which the borrower will ensure that (a) Indigenous Peoples affected by the project receive culturally appropriate social and economic benefits; and (b) when potential adverse effects on Indigenous Peoples are identified, those adverse effects are avoided, minimized, mitigated, or compensated for (see Annex B for details). The IPP is prepared in a flexible and pragmatic manner, [12] and its level of detail varies depending on the specific project and the nature of effects to be addressed. The borrower integrates the IPP into the project design. When Indigenous Peoples are the sole or the overwhelming majority of direct project beneficiaries, the elements of an IPP should be included in the overall project design, and a separate IPP is not required. In such cases, the Project Appraisal Document (PAD) includes a brief summary of how the project complies with the policy, in particular the IPP requirements. 13. Indigenous Peoples Planning Framework. Some projects involve the preparation and implementation of annual investment programs or multiple subprojects.[13] In such cases, and when the Bank's screening indicates that Indigenous Peoples are likely to be present in, or have collective attachment to, the project area, but their presence or collective attachment cannot be determined until the programs or subprojects are identified, the borrower prepares an Indigenous Peoples Planning Framework (IPPF). Page 75 75 The IPPF provides for the screening and review of these programs or subprojects in a manner consistent with this policy (see Annex C for details). The borrower integrates the IPPF into the project design. 14. Preparation of Program and Subproject IPPs. If the screening of an individual program or subproject identified in the IPPF indicates that Indigenous Peoples are present in, or have collective attachment to, the area of the program or subproject, the borrower ensures that, before the individual program or subproject is implemented, a social assessment is carried out and an IPP is prepared in accordance with the requirements of this policy. The borrower provides each IPP to the Bank for review before the respective program or subproject is considered eligible for Bank financing. [14] Disclosure 15. The borrower makes the social assessment report and draft IPP/IPPF available to the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities in an appropriate form, manner, and language.[15] Before project appraisal, the borrower sends the social assessment and final IPP/IPPF to the Bank for review. [16] Once the Bank accepts the documents as providing an adequate basis for project appraisal, the Bank makes them available to the public in accordance with The World Bank Policy on Disclosure of Information , and the borrower makes them available to the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities in the same manner as the earlier draft documents. Special Considerations Lands and Related Natural Resources 16. Indigenous Peoples are closely tied to land, forests, water, wildlife, and other natural resources, and therefore special considerations apply if the project affects such ties. In this situation, when carrying out the social assessment and preparing the IPP/IPPF, the borrower pays particular attention to: (a) the customary rights[17] of the Indigenous Peoples, both individual and collective, pertaining to lands or territories that they traditionally owned, or customarily used or occupied, and where access to natural resources is vital to the sustainability of their cultures and livelihoods; (b) the need to protect such lands and resources against illegal intrusion or encroachment; (c) the cultural and spiritual values that the Indigenous Peoples attribute to such lands and resources; and (d) Indigenous Peoples' natural resources management practices and the long-term sustainability of such practices. Page 76 76 17. If the project involves (a) activities that are contingent on establishing legally recognized rights to lands and territories that Indigenous Peoples have traditionally owned or customarily used or occupied (such as land titling projects), or (b) the acquisition of such lands, the IPP sets forth an action plan for the legal recognition of such ownership, occupation, or usage. Normally, the action plan is carried out before project implementation; in some cases, however, the action plan may need to be carried out concurrently with the project itself. Such legal recognition may take the following forms: (a) full legal recognition of existing customary land tenure systems of Indigenous Peoples; or (b) conversion of customary usage rights to communal and/or individual ownership rights. If neither option is possible under domestic law, the IPP includes measures for legal recognition of perpetual or long-term renewable custodial or use rights. Commercial Development of Natural and Cultural Resources 18. If the project involves the commercial development of natural resources (such as minerals, hydrocarbon resources, forests, water, or hunting/fishing grounds) on lands or territories that Indigenous Peoples traditionally owned, or customarily used or occupied, the borrower ensures that as part of the free, prior, and informed consultation process the affected communities are informed of (a) their rights to such resources under statutory and customary law; (b) the scope and nature of the proposed commercial development and the parties interested or involved in such development; and (c) the potential effects of such development on the Indigenous Peoples' livelihoods, environments, and use of such resources. The borrower includes in the IPP arrangements to enable the Indigenous Peoples to share equitably in the benefits [18] to be derived from such commercial development; at a minimum, the IPP arrangements must ensure that the Indigenous Peoples receive, in a culturally appropriate manner, benefits, compensation, and rights to due process at least equivalent to that to which any landowner with full legal title to the land would be entitled in the case of commercial development on their land. 19. If the project involves the commercial development of Indigenous Peoples' cultural resources and knowledge (for example, pharmacological or artistic), the borrower ensures that as part of the free, prior, and informed consultation process, the affected communities are informed of (a) their rights to such resources under statutory and customary law; (b) the scope and nature of the proposed commercial development and the parties interested or involved in such development; and (c) the potential effects of such development on Indigenous Peoples' livelihoods, environments, and use of such resources. Commercial development of the cultural resources and knowledge of these Indigenous Peoples is conditional upon their prior agreement to such development. The IPP reflects the nature and content of such agreements and includes arrangements to Page 77 77 enable Indigenous Peoples to receive benefits in a culturally appropriate way and share equitably in the benefits to be derived from such commercial development. Physical Relocation of Indigenous Peoples 20. Because physical relocation of Indigenous Peoples is particularly complex and may have significant adverse impacts on their identity, culture, and customary livelihoods, the Bank requires the borrower to explore alternative project designs to avoid physical relocation of Indigenous Peoples. In exceptional circumstances, when it is not feasible to avoid relocation, the borrower will not carry out such relocation without obtaining broad support for it from the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities as part of the free, prior, and informed consultation process. In such cases, the borrower prepares a resettlement plan in accordance with the requirements of OP 4.12 , Involuntary Resettlement , that is compatible with the Indigenous Peoples' cultural preferences, and includes a land-based resettlement strategy. As part of the resettlement plan, the borrower documents the results of the consultation process. Where possible, the resettlement plan should allow the affected Indigenous Peoples to return to the lands and territories they traditionally owned, or customarily used or occupied, if the reasons for their relocation cease to exist. 21. In many countries, the lands set aside as legally designated parks and protected areas may overlap with lands and territories that Indigenous Peoples traditionally owned, or customarily used or occupied. The Bank recognizes the significance of these rights of ownership, occupation, or usage, as well as the need for long-term sustainable management of critical ecosystems. Therefore, involuntary restrictions on Indigenous Peoples' access to legally designated parks and protected areas, in particular access to their sacred sites, should be avoided. In exceptional circumstances, where it is not feasible to avoid restricting access, the borrower prepares, with the free, prior, and informed consultation of the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities, a process framework in accordance with the provisions of OP 4.12 . The process framework provides guidelines for preparation, during project implementation, of an individual parks and protected areas' management plan, and ensures that the Indigenous Peoples participate in the design, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation of the management plan, and share equitably in the benefits of the parks and protected areas. The management plan should give priority to collaborative arrangements that enable the Indigenous Peoples, as the custodians of the resources, to continue to use them in an ecologically sustainable manner. Indigenous Peoples and Development 22. In furtherance of the objectives of this policy, the Bank may, at a member country's request, support the country in its development planning and poverty reduction strategies by providing financial assistance for a variety of initiatives designed to: Page 78 78 (a) strengthen local legislation, as needed, to establish legal recognition of the customary or traditional land tenure systems of Indigenous Peoples; (b) make the development process more inclusive of Indigenous Peoples by incorporating their perspectives in the design of development programs and poverty reduction strategies, and providing them with opportunities to benefit more fully from development programs through policy and legal reforms, capacity building, and free, prior, and informed consultation and participation; (c) support the development priorities of Indigenous Peoples through programs (such as community-driven development programs and locally managed social funds) developed by governments in cooperation with Indigenous Peoples; (d) address the gender [19] and intergenerational issues that exist among many Indigenous Peoples, including the special needs of indigenous women, youth, and children; (e) prepare participatory profiles of Indigenous Peoples to document their culture, demographic structure, gender and intergenerational relations and social organization, institutions, production systems, religious beliefs, and resource use patterns; (f) strengthen the capacity of Indigenous Peoples' communities and IPOs to prepare, implement, monitor, and evaluate development programs; (g) strengthen the capacity of government agencies responsible for providing development services to Indigenous Peoples; (h) protect indigenous knowledge, including by strengthening intellectual property rights; and (i) facilitate partnerships among the government, IPOs, CSOs, and the private sector to promote Indigenous Peoples' development programs. Notes 1. This policy should be read together with other relevant Bank policies, including Environmental Assessment ( OP 4.01 ), Natural Habitats ( OP 4.04 ), Pest Management ( OP 4.09 ), Physical Cultural Resources ( OP 4.11 , forthcoming), Involuntary Resettlement ( OP 4.12 ), Forests ( OP 4.36 ), and Safety of Dams ( OP 4.3 7). 2. "Bank" includes IBRD and IDA; "loans" includes IBRD loans, IDA credits, IDA grants, IBRD and IDA guarantees, and Project Preparation Facility (PPF) advances, but does not include development policy loans, credits, or grants. For social aspects of development policy operations, see OP 8.60 , Development Policy Lending , paragraph 10. The term "borrower" includes, wherever the context requires, the recipient of an IDA grant, the guarantor of an IBRD loan, and the project implementing agency, if it is different from the borrower. 3. This policy applies to all components of the project that affect Indigenous Peoples, regardless of the source of financing. 4. "Free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities" refers to a culturally appropriate and collective decision-making process subsequent to meaningful and good faith consultation and informed participation regarding the preparation and implementation of the project. It does not constitute a veto right for individuals or groups (see paragraph 10). 5. For details on "broad community support to the project by the affected Indigenous Peoples," see paragraph 11 . Page 79 79 6. The policy does not set an a priori minimum numerical threshold since groups of Indigenous Peoples may be very small in number and their size may make them more vulnerable. 7. "Collective attachment" means that for generations there has been a physical presence in and economic ties to lands and territories traditionally owned, or customarily used or occupied, by the group concerned, including areas that hold special significance for it, such as sacred sites. "Collective attachment" also refers to the attachment of transhumant/nomadic groups to the territory they use on a seasonal or cyclical basis. 8. "Forced severance" refers to loss of collective attachment to geographically distinct habitats or ancestral territories occurring within the concerned group members' lifetime because of conflict, government resettlement programs, dispossession from their lands, natural calamities, or incorporation of such territories into an urban area. For purposes of this policy, "urban area" normally means a city or a large town, and takes into account all of the following characteristics, no single one of which is definitive: (a) the legal designation of the area as urban under domestic law; (b) high population density; and (c) high proportion of non-agricultural economic activities relative to agricultural activities. 9. The currently applicable Bank policy is OP /BP 4.00, Piloting the Use of Borrower Systems to Address Environmental and Social Safeguard Issues in Bank-Supported Projects . Applicable only to pilot projects using borrower systems, the policy includes requirements that such systems be designed to meet the policy objectives and adhere to the operational principles related to Indigenous Peoples identified in OP 4.00 (see Table A1.E ). 10. The screening may be carried out independently or as part of a project environmental assessment (see OP 4.0 1, Environmental Assessment, paragraphs 3, 8). 11. Such consultation methods (including using indigenous languages, allowing time for consensus building, and selecting appropriate venues) facilitate the articulation by Indigenous Peoples of their views and preferences. The "Indigenous Peoples Guidebook" (forthcoming) will provide good practice guidance on this and other matters. 12. When non-Indigenous Peoples live in the same area with Indigenous Peoples, the IPP should attempt to avoid creating unnecessary inequities for other poor and marginal social groups. 13. Such projects include community-driven development projects, social funds, sector investment operations, and financial intermediary loans. 14. If the Bank considers the IPPF to be adequate for the purpose, however, the Bank may agree with the borrower that prior Bank review of the IPP is not needed. In such case, the Bank reviews the IPP and its implementation as part of supervision (see OP 13.05 , Project Supervision ). 15. The social assessment and IPP require wide dissemination among the affected Indigenous Peoples' communities using culturally appropriate methods and locations. In the case of an IPPF, the document is disseminated using IPOs at the appropriate national, regional, or local levels to reach Indigenous Peoples who are likely to be affected by the project. Where IPOs do not exist, the document may be disseminated using other CSOs as appropriate. 16. An exception to the requirement that the IPP (or IPPF) be prepared as a condition of appraisal may be made with the approval of Bank management for projects meeting the requirements of OP 8.50 , Emergency Recovery Assistance. In such cases, management's approval stipulates a timetable and budget for preparation of the social assessment and IPP or of the IPPF. 17. "Customary rights" to lands and resources refers to patterns of long-standing community land and resource usage in accordance with Indigenous Peoples' customary laws, values, customs, and traditions, including seasonal or cyclical use, rather than formal legal title to land and resources issued by the State. 18. The "Indigenous Peoples Guidebook" (forthcoming) will provide good practice guidance on this matter. 19. See OP / BP 4.20, Gender and Development. Annex A: Social Assessment 1. The breadth, depth, and type of analysis required for the social assessment are proportional to the nature and scale of the proposed project’s potential effects on the Indigenous Peoples. Page 80 80 2. The social assessment includes the following elements, as needed: (a) A review, on a scale appropriate to the project, of the legal and institutional framework applicable to Indigenous Peoples. (b) Gathering of baseline information on the demographic, social, cultural, and political c haracteristics of the affected Indigenous Peoples’ communities, the land and territories that they have traditionally owned or customarily used or occupied, and the natural resources on which they depend. (c) Taking the review and baseline information into account, the identification of key project stakeholders and the elaboration of a culturally appropriate process for consulting with the Indigenous Peoples at each stage of project preparation and implementation (see paragraph 9 of this policy). (d) An assessment, based on free, prior, and informed consultation, with the affected Indigenous Peoples’ communities, of the potential adverse and positive effects of the project. Critical to the determination of potential adverse impacts is an analysis of the relative vulnerability of, and risks to, the affected Indigenous Peoples’ communities given their distinct circumstances and close ties to land and natural resources, as well as their lack of access to opportunities relative to other social groups in the communities, regions, or national societies in which they live. (e) The identification and evaluation, based on free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples’ communities, of measures necessary to avoid adverse effects, or if such measures are not feasible, the identification of measures to minimize, mitigate, or compensate for such effects, and to ensure that the Indigenous Peoples receive culturally appropriate benefits under the project. Annex B Indigenous Peoples Plans 1. The Indigenous Peoples Plan (IPP) is prepared in a flexible and pragmatic manner, and its level of detail varies depending on the specific project and the nature of effects to be addressed. 2. The IPP includes the following elements, as needed: (a) A summary of the information referred to in Annex A, paragraph 2, (a) and (b). (b) A summary of the social assessment. (c) A summary of results of the free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples’ communities that was carried out during project preparation (Annex A) and that led to broad community support for the project. (d) A framework for ensuring free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples’ communities during project implementation (see paragraph 10 of this policy). Page 81 81 (e) An action plan of measures to ensure that the Indigenous Peoples receive social and economic benefits that are culturally appropriate, including, if necessary, measures to enhance the capacity of the project implementing agencies. (f) When potential adverse effects on Indigenous Peoples are identified, an appropriate action plan of measures to avoid, minimize, mitigate, or compensate for these adverse effects. (g) The cost estimates and financing plan for the IPP. (h) Accessible procedures appropriate to the project to address grievances by the affected Indigenous Peoples’ communities arising from project implementation. When designing the grievance procedures, the borrower takes into account the availability of judicial recourse and customary dispute settlement mechanisms among the Indigenous Peoples. (i) Mechanisms and benchmarks appropriate to the project for monitoring, evaluating, and reporting on the implementation of the IPP. The monitoring and evaluation mechanisms should include arrangements for the free, prior, and informed consultation with the affected Indigenous Peoples’ communities.