42 - October 15, 2001 thru 21 October,
2001, Vol XI
Sufferings
of the People of Sahara
The inhabitants of the western region (like al-Jauf, Mareb and Shabwa)
are still living a bedouin lifestyle, depending on traveling on the quest
of pasture and water for their livestock, which are the principal source
of living for the people of the desert.
The bedouins live in the Sahara inside tents and huts that protect
them from sun and wind. The life of the bedouins is a conventional and
simple one since they depend on cooking their food on wood. Moreover, the
meals they serve are mostly the same throughout the year, as milk produced
by livestock and its derivatives are the principal meals served at all
times.
Children of the Sahara
Passing through the Mareb desert where the oil and gas fields are located,
one could see the bedouin children graze their livestock while trying to
keep their livestock from mixing with the other livestock belonging to
the other tribes, although pasturing in the desert is accessible to all,
according to the tribal traditions and norms. Furthermore, due to the difficult
living circumstances of the people of Sahara, they have no access to education
and most of them are illiterate. The young bedouins willing to have education
are sent to their relatives who live beside schools, while female bedouins
can not even dream of having an education. Regrettably, the oil and gas
companies operating near Mareb have not assisted thus far in building a
school or a health unit in return for the oil extracted from these people's
lands.
Polluted Environment
We stayed for two days in the desert traveling among the bedouins and
found that damaged oil wells and the waste materials dumped by the oil
companies there have badly affected the environment here. At early morning,
one could see clouds of smoke covering the air of the desert. It is difficult
to breath this polluted air.
Black Rains
Abdullah Hamoud Shawdaq told us that he has been living in the desert
for 20 years and there did not use to be any problem, but with the arrival
of the oil and gas companies everything changed. "Black rain has become
a nightmarish problem for the people of the desert since rainwater turned
to be as if mixed with oil, resulting in devastating the plants and grass
of the desert and causing different diseases to the inhabitants of the
desert," Shawdaq added.
Bedouins and the Right to live
The environment of the desert should be protected and the inhabitants
of the desert must be provided with schools and health units on an equal
basis with the other citizens of the country. Also, the oil companies operating
in the neighborhood of the bedouins should contribute to developing this
area. It is regrettable that these companies are conscious of the fatal
consequences of the pollution they have caused, but turn a blind eye to
these people who do not know their rights.
|