Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, a member
of Chad's Mbororo pastoralists, speaks at the U.N. climate
negotiations in Marrakesh, Morocco. TRF/Fabiola Ortiz
"It is just a woman. We cannot
take what she says seriously," male officials have told Hindou
Oumarou Ibrahim. But "I take the opportunity to put my ideas on the
table"
When Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, a
member of Chad's Mbororo pastoralists, first went to talk to the
men of her community about climate change, she found herself
sitting on the floor.
"The chiefs who take all the
decisions are men. Talking to them was not easy," she remembers. "I
had to sit down on the floor while the chiefs were sitting on
chairs. (But) I greeted them and said I needed to talk to them
about a very important thing, I needed to talk about our
future."
Since then, Ibrahim, 32, has
become a rarity in her culture: an educated woman who takes the
stage at home and internationally to speak out on the need for
action on climate change, and on rights for women and indigenous
groups.
Mbororo pastoralists cross a
river with their herds. Photo: Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim
"Being an indigenous woman in
Africa is a double marginalisation," she told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation on the sidelines of the U.N. climate talks in Morocco,
which finished last weekend.
Ibrahim was born the third of
five brothers and sisters in her family and, unusually, was allowed
to go to school by her father. Such opportunities are rare for
girls in the culture of the Mbororo, a group of pastoralists living
in the Sahel across Chad, Cameroon, Niger, Nigeria and the Central
African Republic, she said.
Education has enabled her to
become a spokeswoman in her community, working to engage women in
local decisions, she said. She is now a co-chair of the
International Indigenous People's Forum on Climate Change and head
of an association for indigenous women in Chad.
But being heard, as a woman, has
not been easy, she said. Even today, when she tries to approach men
in authority, she is often dismissed.
"It is just a woman. We cannot
take what she says
seriously," male officials have
told her. But "I take the opportunity to put my ideas on the
table," she said.
Men in her culture want to be
the ones making decisions, "but they also need to hear what women
have to say. We should be respected," she said at the climate
talks, where she spoke on a variety of panels.
Over the last decade, she said,
her pastoralist community has seen climate change emerge as a major
concern.
"We can
compare how the environment is changing just by seeing how many
liters of milk we can get from the cows," she said, noting that the
quantity has halved compared to a few years ago, a major concern in
a culture that depends heavily on the animals for food.
Now "we
don't have enough milk," Ibrahim said. "We are trying now to eat
more cereals but most of us don't know or have never eaten
(them)."
Drying
waterholes are also a problem for the Mbororo, who travel long
distances across national borders in the Sahel, Ibrahim
said.
A view of an Mbororo pastoralist
camp in Chad. Photo: Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim
"When we move we stop next to a
waterhole. We stay around three or four months before moving to
another place. I remember I used to swim in the waterholes and the
cows could drink the water," she said.
But "now we don't find these
waterholes anymore. They have disappeared forever," she
said.
Changing pasture plants -
including one that makes cattle sick - and rising temperatures are
also a major concern, she said.
Collecting enough food and water
is taking an increasing amount of time for women, she
added.
"They have to double the work
they are doing. They have to go very far and have to walk for a
very long time," she said, to gather water and increasingly rare
medicinal plants.
MAPPING RESOURCES
In response to those growing
challenges, Ibrahim has worked to help the Mbororo community have a
stronger voice in government decision making in Chad and to better
manage their own natural resources.
One of the most interesting
projects she's been part of, she said, was creating a
three-dimensional map of Mbororo resources that tapped into
traditional knowledge.
The process of creating the map
gave community members - particularly women - new self-confidence
and should give the community greater control over its land, she
said.
"The men from the communities
helped in saying at which points the mountains, the rivers and the
sacred places are located. And the women said where the places are
they collect water and food. We gave voices to men and women
equally in this project," she said.
Afterward, "we presented this
project to policymakers telling them that we know how to manage our
land and natural resources. So when the government comes with a
project, they will have to consult us and we can inform them where
we agree that projects could be implemented," she said.
The effort, in partnership with
Chad's government, the national technical agriculture center and
Chad's meteorological agency, should help protect indigenous
rights, Ibrahim said.
"The human rights aspect should
be at the heart of the actions that countries take to implement
climate solutions," she said. When it comes to climate change, "I
want action on the ground, not only words in papers," she
said.
credit: Thomson
Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson
Reuters
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