What COVID-19 movement restrictions mean for nomadic pastoralists in the Sahel

Published by:
Country:
Mauritania
Focus Region:
Sub-Saharan Africa
Focus Topic:
Climate / Weather / Environment
Land / Water / Resource Management
Agricultural Value Chains / Agri-Businesses

Better land governance could be a solution to challenges pastoralists face in the region.

 

Ould Ne Salem, a nomadic pastoralist from southeast Mauritania, has been stuck in the country since the outbreak of COVID-19 earlier this year. Like many other nomadic herders in the region, Ould Ne Salem often travels between Mauritania, Senegal and Mali, but he is now facing an almost unprecedented situation: the closure of borders and restrictions on movement due to the pandemic.

In mid-March, borders were closed between Mauritania and all neighbouring countries, as well as between the country’s willayas, or regions. For mobile pastoralists, this is a situation fraught with consequences. They are unable to move their livestock and earn money, and it exacerbates their already difficult situation: Mauritania and surrounding countries suffer from recurrent drought, which heavily affects their livelihoods. This combination of human and natural factors has led to a high concentration of livestock in pastoral areas, causing problems of overgrazing and conflicts over agricultural land.

68-year-old Ould Ne Salem says he has not faced a more difficult situation since the great drought of Sahel in 1969.

Left: Kane Aliou, coordinator of GNAP, a platform defending the rights of pastoralists. Right: Nomadic pastoralist, Ould Ne Salem, from the Hodh El Gharbi Region in southeast Mauritania. ©FAO/Kane Aliou

 

“We have been stranded for almost three months because of the border closure between Mali and Mauritania. We cannot move our livestock, graze our animals or sell them. The animals were hungry, and we had to wait for the rain so that they could finally eat,” Ould Ne Salem says.

A crisis within a crisis

Alongside the COVID-19 restrictions and the drought, Ould Ne Salem highlights yet another problem: a growing conflict between pastoralists who do not own land in either of the two countries. Some, desperate due to the lack of food for their animals, help themselves to farmers’ fields in the region. This causes irreparable tensions with the local population, which eventually becomes problematic for all nomadic pastoralists.

Ould Ne Salem himself is one of the landless nomadic pastoralists, but he refuses to use natural resources belonging to local farmers. He has witnessed the rise of conflicts, which sometimes results in death and injuries, without being able to do anything to help.

“The crisis has worsened because of pastoralists who take straw and wood without permission, destroying the environment in order to obtain resources,” he says.

How can conflict be prevented?

Cross-border movements is often part of the seasonal cycle of pastoralists, providing access to dry- or wet-season grazing resources, or to winter or summer pastures. Due to the nomadic nature of pastoralist activity, herders have specific government-delineated rights to use natural resources in defined corridors of land. They are allowed to cross borders and use land depending on bilateral and international agreements among countries.

One key way of easing conflict in the Sahel countries is to improve land governance. To this end, FAO has supported the creation of multi-stakeholder platforms that bring together people and organisations who have interests in improved land management, including residents, members of local government and organisations that defend the rights of vulnerable groups like pastoralists. The platforms make it possible to establish a dialogue among these actors, who previously never had the opportunity to interact and consult each other, in order to build inclusive land policies that respect everyone’s rights.

In Mauritania, where the land situation is very sensitive, a national platform as well as a local platform has been set up. The Groupement National des Associations Pastorales (GNAP) is a very active member of the national multi-stakeholder platform, advocating for improved governance of tenure for marginalised groups, such as pastoralists.

“These are alarming situations for nomadic pastoralists and for users of natural resources,” says GNAP’s coordinator, Kane Aliou. “The platforms could play an important role in terms of raising awareness and building the capacity of farmers to prepare themselves to manage other crises.”

Drought and the recent restrictions on movement have led to problems of overgrazing and conflicts over agricultural land. Platforms to open dialogue on land governance could be one solution to these conflicts. ©FAO/Sonia Nguyen

Aftermath of COVID-19

The situation that has arisen from COVID-19, with herders unable to move and competing for increasingly scarce resources, has shone a light on just how important it is to safeguard the rights of pastoralists. Although fundamental to the survival of nomadic pastoralists, corridors reserved as pastoral spaces are increasingly overlooked, particularly in times of crisis.

Residents say that land governance platforms could be the solution, providing a forum to begin a dialogue on these problems. It could also allow for the implementation of a post-crisis resilience strategy, developed by the inhabitants themselves.

COVID-19 is just one of the most recent challenges that pastoralists have had to deal with in the Sahel region. Migratory movements have become increasingly restricted in recent years, due to several factors including terrorism, ethnic conflicts and the effects of climate change on land and resources. These recent events are just a wake-up call: now is the time to improve land governance in the region, in order to boost the resilience of pastoralists in Mauritania and neighbouring countries.

SOURCE:
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
COVER PHOTO:
Moving between regions and countries is fundamental for the livelihoods of nomadic pastoralists. However, since the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions came into force, this has been impossible, severely affecting their way of life. Credit: ©Steph Lucas/Shutterstock.com