The Botswana government does not recognize any specific groups as indigenous to the country, maintaining instead that all citizens of the country are indigenous. Some groups in Botswana maintain that they are indigenous, including the Bushmen (sometimes called the San; known in Botswana as the Basarwa) who, in July 2010, numbered some 54,000.
There are no specific laws on indigenous peoples’ rights in Botswana nor is the concept of indigenous peoples included in the Constitution; however, Botswana is a signatory to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
13 days ago - Despite a court order halting the relocation of a San community from Ranyane, the...

401 days ago - Location: Central Kalahari Game Reserve, CKGR, Ghanzi, BotswanaOn December 13th, 2006 a verdict was...

651 days ago - The Kalahari Bushmen are celebrating a major victory in their struggle to return home...

881 days ago - Botswana’s government this week approved a massive $3 billion diamond mine in the Central...

1480 days ago - In this Month’s Underreported Struggles: 7,000 delegates gather in Peru for the IV Continental...

1491 days ago - Botswana’s government is once again threatening the Kgeikani Kweni, the First Peoples of the...

1631 days ago - In the month’s Underreported Struggles: 20,000 Lepchas Vow to Die for Their Community; Nicaragua...

1693 days ago - Following their return to the Central Kalahari Game Reserve last month, the diamond company...
2013 days ago
2125 days ago - Survival International has released a report comparing the arguments used to justify the dispossession...

2165 days ago - Nearing the beginning of July, twenty-one Gana and Gwi Bushmen were arrested for hunting...
2378 days ago - BOTSWANA: JOY AS BUSHMEN WIN LANDMARK LEGAL CASE Survival international Scenes of jubilation greeted...
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