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Kenyans fear Dakatcha Woodlands biofuel growth
23 March 2011
By Will Ross
BBC News, Dakatcha
Sitting in the shade of a tree beside his thatched mud hut in in Kenya’s Dakatcha Woodlands, Joshua Kahindi Pekeshe is defiant.
“We are not going to let this land go even if it suggests shedding blood,” he informed the BBC.
“Land is very essential to us. We farm and get our livelihood from it. On this land we bury our dead.”
He is one of the numerous people opposed to the production of a big biofuel plantation in the area, about an hour’s drive inland from the coastal town of Malindi.
It is an arid area and home to some 20,000 individuals along with globally threatened animal and bird species.
Ambitious objectives
An Italian company has actually asked the authorities for consent to lease 50,000 hectares there to grow jatropha, whose seeds are rich in oil that can be turned into bio-diesel.
This plant, originally from South America, has long been grown in Africa as a hedge to keep out animals - goats remain well away as it is poisonous. The area affected is community land which is being kept in trust by the regional council.
Kenya Jatropha Energy Ltd is 100%-owned by the Milan-based Nuove Iniziative Industriali SRL.
It has actually rented almost a million hectares in Africa
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