Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Border War

Burkina Faso is not the typical place one decides to visit. It is land-locked nation in West Africa. But some people have been visiting from neighbor countries for a different reason: to escape the fighting between Malian forces and the Tuareg rebels. (A similar year-old Tuareg-led revolt has hit neighboring Niger).
The Tuareg are a nomadic group. Their latest attack has been motivated by what they feel is unwarranted interferences in their traditional territories.
This brings up an interesting question that I don't have a really good answer to: who owns what land?
We have traditional borders but what do they mean? Looking back at the history of the U.S., Native American ideology states that no one owns the land which explains why Manhattan was sold for a few dollars....why would you be paid for something that doesn't belong to you?!
We are seeing that groups are proclaiming rights to their territorial home. How do we draw the borders and who has rights to them?

2 comments:

NIGER1.COM said...

www.niger1.com

Jonathan Starr said...

I suppose that the most traditional casus belli is based on land rights.

And typically wealth has been derived from the land.

Perhaps, as we move more into an Information Age (in Africa as well as the rest of the world) we will become less dependent on land for wealth (?!).

Jonathan