Communication 588/15 Minority Rights Group International and Environnement
Ressources Naturelles et Développement (on behalf of the Batwa of Kahuzi-Biega
National Park, DRC) v. Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
Summary of the Complaint
1.
The Secretariat of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights (the
Secretariat) received on 7 November 2015, a complaint filed by Minority
Rights
Group
International
(MRG)
and
Environnement
Ressources
Naturelles et Développement (ERNB) (the Complainants), on behalf of the
Batwa of Kahuzi-Biega National Park (the Victims).
2.
The Complaint was filed against the State of the Democratic Republic of Congo
(hereinafter referred to as the Respondent State or the DRC), a State that
ratified the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (the African
Charter) on 23 July 1987.
3.
From the Complainants' presentation, it is understood that:
The Batwa of the Kahuzi-Biega National Park are a hunter-gatherer community
who have lived in the forests of the Kahuzi Mountains for centuries. Their
livelihoods, homes, traditional and cultural way of life, and well-being depend
on these forests and lands. They are recognized by other ethnic groups in the
region as the original inhabitants of the forests.
4.
They allege that in July 1937, the Belgian colonial administrator had by Decree
No.
81 / AGRI
established
"the Mount Kahuzi Zoological
and
Forestry
Reserve" a small natural reserve belonging to the Congolese State. But the
Batwas remained on these lands and occupied them continually and practised
their traditional lifestyles. In 1957, the Kahuzi reserve was extended to include
the Biega forest, thus covering a total land surface area of 600 km2.
5.
In November 1970, Law No. 70-316 transformed the zone into a National Park
code-named " the Kaliuzi-Biegn National Park". This change of name came along
with a measure interdicting any human presence in the Park based on a
proposal by the Congolese Institute for the Conservation of Nature (ICCN).
This proposal was supposedly intended to protect gorillas in the eastern low
altitude region. The Batwa families who were using the lands according to
their traditional customary ways of life, were expelled from the forest without
any
appropriate
means
of
consultation,
nor
were
they
adequately
compensated before or after the evictions meted out to them.
,_.. ..
5
\
.
I
/
I.
g
1
.
.
!
L
14
'.f
\
.
;.
;,.
,f
.
§!
,r