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When ancestral lands fall victim to an international border

Voices from the forest-farm interface: Friday video series (Part VI)
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Part VI of VII-part series: WHAT THE WORLD CAN LEARN FROM WEST AFRICA’S UNHEARD

 

Hansen Apewe Abaloori, Akaa, Kassena–Nankana West District, Upper East Region, Ghana

People in the community of Akaa, in Kassena-Nankana District in Ghana’s Upper East Region, remember the days before officials just across the border in neighbouring Burkina Faso, surveyed the land to mark the southern edge of the Nazinga Wildlife Reserve in their country. It was after the survey that people in Akaa learned that much of their ancestral land would no longer be available to them because it lay on the Burkinabe side of the frontier, a line drawn more than a century earlier on the colonial map. Communities on the Ghanaian side such as Akaa suddenly found the international border being enforced and their access to family lands cut off. They were never given an explanation for the survey.

The loss of those lands has never ceased to cause problems for the people of Akaa. As Hansen Abaloori tells us, not only are they unable to access tree resources on the family lands, they no longer have enough land to fallow. And so, their soils have grown infertile; their harvests poor.

 

WATCH Part I: Trees “for the grandchildren” in a community forest

WATCH Part II: Losing farmland and forest to a national park

WATCH Part III: Keeping the peace in a national park buffer zone

WATCH Part IV: Trees and wildfire worries

WATCH Part V: Firewood for income in a degrading landscape

 

 

This research was supported by International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD)
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