Dominion Farms arrived in Kenya's Yala Swamp basin in 2004 with big
promises. The company claimed it would turn a defunct state
demonstration farm into a modern rice plantation, provide locals with
good jobs, and build hospitals and schools. The American owner of the
company, Calvin Burgess, presented himself as a 'man of God', on a
mission to bring US-style progress to Africa. The locals, sold on this
grand vision, decided – with some hesitation and dissent – to allow
Dominion to farm on 3,700 ha of their lands.
But a decade later, the communities have harvested nothing but hardship.
"When Burgess came, we did not object to him taking the lands that had
already been allocated to the Government years before for the
development of an experimental farm," says Erastus Odindo, a local
farmer. "But Dominion Farms has put a fence around much more land than
that. The company has taken over all of our community lands without our
consent and blocked our access to water."
Odindo and other local farmers lost nearly all of the lands that they use for grazing their cattle.
"Burgess mocked our farming methods and said we should abandon our
traditional cattle breed because it was backwards," says Odindo. "But
now he's put a fence around our grazing lands and is using the lands for
his own local cattle. We are losing doubly because he then sells the
cattle on the local market and undercuts us."
The agreements that Dominion Farms signed with local authorities were
for a large scale rice farm. But the company has also gone into cattle,
vegetables, bananas and fish.
"The company produces and sells the same foods we local farmers
produce," says Odindo. "First Dominion took our lands and water away
from us, and now it is taking our markets. And they are not doing
agriculture in a more efficient way than us local farmers. All the
machines they have are just for making noise."
Dominion's rice farm now extends right up to the edge of Odindo's
village. "When the company sprays pesticides by plane, it comes directly
into our homes, poisoning people and contaminating our water supply,"
he says. "Workers also face regular exposure to pesticides."
The local communities accuse Dominion of polluting their soil, water
and air, and of badly damaging the area's biodiversity. They say that it
is now difficult to access clean water because of the pollution by
pesticides and chemical fertilisers, and that this is damaging the
health of mothers and children.
Odindo says that the company's promises of good jobs have also proven
to be a mirage. Most workers are employed on a casual basis, with only a
few watchmen hired as permanent staff. Their pay is irregular and
sometimes late. "The company hasn't been paying wages over the past two
months and people have been wondering if it's in financial problems,"
says Odindo.
But Dominion still seems intent on grabbing more lands. Having already
taken control of all the lands collectively managed by the communities,
the company is now aggressively pursuing deals with private land
holders. Odindo says that they believe that Dominion is working with
Kenyan millionaires to secure land for large agriculture projects, such
as a sugar cane plantation that the company is in the initial stages of
implementing.
Meanwhile Dominion Farms is also pursuing a new project for a rice
plantation in Taraba State, Nigeria, that would be several times the
size of its Yala Swamp venture. Odindo hopes that the communities in
Nigeria can learn from what his community has gone through and not be
duped by Dominion's promises.
from here
Commentary and analysis to persuade people to become socialist and to act for themselves, organizing democratically and without leaders, to bring about a world of common ownership and free access. We are solely concerned with building a movement of socialists for socialism. We are not reformists with a programme of policies to patch up capitalism.
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