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Strangers, honey and hardship: the lot of Angolan refugees in enterprise
beekeeping in North West Zambia
The influx into Zambia of refugees fleeing civil war in Angola began in
1966. They were, from the beginning, protected under international
conventions. Their integration into Zambian communities was gradual and they
have throughout tried to maintain independent livelihoods through hunting,
fishing or utilisation of wild products.
Beekeeping has played an important role in the local economy over the past
100 years. Realising the potential of this industry, the state licensed a
private company, North Western Bee Products, to commercialise collection and
marketing of honey and other bee products. NWBP has since occupied important
niche in this market. Researchers investigated the role of this company and
the situation of the self-settled refugees and hosts in Zambia's North Western
Province. The study took the form of a questionnaire, focus groups, interviews
and observations over a seven-month period. Findings indicated that:
- refugees suffered severe economic disadvantages arising from their
status. They held less land and gained less income than their hosts.
Refugee beekeepers had fewer hives and produced less honey than Zambians
- official policies in favour of encouraging repatriation undermine a sense
of security among refugees
- NWBP operates a monopoly which does not best serve the interests of those
the project was set up to help
- inadequate marketing and transport infrastructure in the North Western
Province further weakens the project
- poor planning and neglect by donors and officials breeds poverty among
both refugee and resident beekeepers
- both also lack institutional leverage to amend the situation. For both,
'resources are nice, but rights are better'.
Wider implications for policy on refugees were that:
- all-out repatriation policies blight the future of integration as a
'durable solution' to the presence of refugees
- more research is needed on the dynamics of repatriation, integration and
self-settlement of refugees in Africa
- the effects of commercial income-generating projects on the poor need to
be carefully assessed and monitored
- the end of the Cold war has changed the way conflicts are resolved in the
'Third World' but refugees remain marginalised. It is up to donors to ensure
that adequate representation of the needs of refugees is guaranteed.
Contributor(s): T. Mabwe
Source(s):
1. Refugee Self-settlement vs. Settlement on Government Schemes: long term
consequences for security, integration and economic development of Angolan
refugees in Zambia. United Nations Research Institute for Social Development
(UNRISD) Discussion Paper 17 November, by A. Hansen (1990)
2. The long term impact and consequences of two refugee settlement
options: the case of Angolan Refugees in Zambia. IDRC-University of Zambia
Refugee Research Project Paper presented at the International Refugee
Conference, Arusha, Tanzania by N.D. Mijere (1990)
>
Funded by:
ESCOR/DFID, (1995)
Date:
98 May 21
Further Information:
T. Mabwe
Refugee Studies Programme
Queen Elizabeth House
21 St Giles
Oxford
OX13LA, UK
Tel:
+44 (0) 1865 2670722 Email: rsp@qeh.ox.ac.uk
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