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POPULATION GROWTH AND POLITICAL
CONFLICT Chapter 6. Plan A:
Business as Usual
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a
Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton
& Co., NY: 2003).
Population growth can lead to political
conflict not only between societies but also within them. Some
insights into this were offered in an engaging World Watch
magazine article by James Gasana, who was Minister of
Agriculture and Environment in Rwanda in 1990-92 and then Minister
of Defense in 1992-93. As the chair of a national agricultural
commission in 1990, he had warned that without "profound
transformations in its agriculture, [Rwanda] will not be capable of
feeding adequately its population under the present growth rate.
Contrary to the tradition of our demographers, who show that the
population growth rate will remain positive over several years in
the future, one cannot see how the Rwandan population will reach 10
million inhabitants unless important progress in agriculture, as
well as other sectors of the economy, were achieved. Consequently,
it is time to fear the Malthusian effects that could derive from the
gap between food supply and the demand of the population and social
disorders, which could result."34
Gasana's warning of possible social disorder was prophetic.
He further described how siblings inherited land from their parents
and how, with an average of seven children per family, plots that
were already small got much smaller. Many tried to find new land,
moving onto marginal land, including steeply sloping mountains. By
1989, almost half of Rwanda's cultivated land was on slopes of 10 to
35 degrees, land that is universally considered uncultivable.35
In 1950, Rwanda's population was 1.9
million. By 1994, it was nearly 8 million, making it the most
densely populated country in Africa. As population grew, so did the
demand for firewood. By 1991, the demand was more than double the
sustainable yield of local forests. As a result, trees disappeared,
forcing people to use straw and other crop residues for cooking
fuel. With less organic matter in the soil, land fertility
declined.36
As the health of the land
deteriorated, so did that of the people dependent on it. Eventually
there was simply not enough food to go around. A quiet desperation
developed among the people. Like a drought-afflicted countryside, it
could be ignited with a single match. That match was the crash of a
plane on April 6, 1994, shot down as it approached the capital of
Kigali, killing President Juvenal Habyarimana. The crash unleashed
an organized attack by Hutus, leading to an estimated 800,000
deaths, mostly of Tutsis. In the villages, whole families were
slaughtered lest there be survivors to claim the family plot of
land. Gasana notes that the deaths were concentrated in communities
where caloric intake was the lowest. Population pressure contributed
to the tensions and the slaughter, although it was by no means the
only factor.37
He sees four lessons that
can be learned from this tragic chapter in Africa's history. First,
rapid population growth is the major driving force behind the
vicious circle of environmental scarcities and rural poverty.
Second, conserving the environment is essential for long-term
poverty reduction. Third, to break the links between environmental
scarcities and conflict, win-win solutions—providing
all sociological groups with access to natural resources—are
essential. And fourth, preventing conflicts of the kind that ravaged
Rwanda in 1994 will require a rethinking of what national security
really means.38
Many other countries in
Africa face a similar situation, including Nigeria, the continent's
most populous country with 121 million people. President Olusegun
Obasanjo is trying desperately in his strife-torn country to
maintain peace between the Christian south and the Muslim north and
among various tribes. However, as the desert claims 350,000 hectares
of rangeland and cropland each year, people are forced southward
into already densely populated areas. The same population pressures,
land degradation, and hunger that ignited social tensions in Rwanda
are building in Nigeria.39
Many African
countries, largely rural in nature, are on a similar demographic
track. Tanzania's population of 37 million in 2003 is projected to
increase to 69 million by 2050. Eritrea, where the average family
has seven children, is projected to go from 4 million to 11 million
by 2050. In the Congo, the population is projected to triple, going
from 53 million to 152 million.40
Africa
is not alone. India faces a possible intensification of the conflict
between Hindus and Muslims. In India, as a second generation
subdivides already small plots, pressure on the land is intense. So,
too, is the pressure on water resources.
With India's
population projected to grow from just over 1 billion in 2000 to 1.5
billion in 2050, a collision between rising human numbers and
falling water tables is inevitable. In the absence of effective
leadership, India could face social conflicts that would dwarf those
in Rwanda. As Gasana notes, the relationship between population and
natural systems is a national security issue, one that can spawn
conflicts along geographic, tribal, ethnic, or religious lines.41
Disagreements over the allocation of water
among countries that share river systems is a common source of
international political conflict, especially where populations are
outgrowing the flow of the river. Nowhere is this potential conflict
more stark than among the three principal countries of the Nile
River valley—Egypt,
Sudan, and Ethiopia. Agriculture in Egypt, where it rarely rains, is
almost wholly dependent on water from the Nile. Egypt now gets the
lion's share of the Nile's water, but its current population of 71
million is projected to reach 127 million by 2050, thus greatly
expanding the demand for grain and for water. Sudan, whose 33
million people also depend heavily on the Nile, is expected to have
60 million by 2050. And the number of Ethiopians, in the country
that controls 85 percent of the headwaters of the Nile, is projected
to expand from 69 million to 171 million.42
Since little water is left in the Nile when it reaches the
Mediterranean Sea, if either Sudan or Ethiopia takes more water,
Egypt will get less, making it increasingly difficult to produce
food for an additional 55 million people. Although there is an
existing water rights agreement among the three countries, Ethiopia
receives only a minuscule share. Given its aspirations for a better
life, and with the headwaters of the Nile being one of its few
natural resources, Ethiopia will undoubtedly want to take more. With
income per person there averaging only $90 a year compared with
nearly $1,300 in Egypt, it is hard to argue that Ethiopia should not
get more of the Nile water.43
To the
north, Turkey, Syria, and Iraq share the waters of the Tigris and
Euphrates river system. Turkey, controlling the headwaters, is
developing a massive project on the Tigris to increase the water
available for irrigation and power. Syria and Iraq, which are both
projected to more than double their respective populations of 17
million and 25 million, are concerned because they too will need
more water.44
In the Aral Sea basin in
Central Asia, there is an uneasy arrangement among five countries
over the sharing of the two rivers, the Amu Darya and the Syr Darya,
that drain into the sea. The demand for water in Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan already exceeds
the flow of the two rivers by 25 percent. Turkmenistan, which is
upstream on the Amu Darya, is planning to develop another
half-million hectares of irrigated agriculture. Racked by
insurgencies, the region lacks the cooperation needed to manage its
scarce water resources. On top of this, Afghanistan, which controls
the headwaters of the Amu Darya, plans to use some of the water for
its own development. Geographer Sarah O'Hara of the University of
Nottingham, who studies the region's water problems, says, "We talk
about the developing world and the developed world, but this is the
deteriorating world."45
We can now see
early signs of potential conflicts emerging. Population pressure and
land hunger in northern China are pushing migrants across the border
into sparsely populated Russia. Illegal Chinese migrants are seeking
jobs in Siberia, much as Mexican workers do in the southwestern
United States. Expanding commerce between the two countries is also
increasing the Chinese presence, particularly in the Russian
communities near the Chinese border. As population pressure drives
people across national borders, it can create ethnic conflicts
within the recipient societies and strain relations between the
countries of origin and destination.46
ENDNOTES: 34. James Gasana, "Remember Rwanda?" World Watch,
September/October 2002, pp. 24-32.
35. Ibid.
36.
Population from United Nations, op. cit. note 1; demand for firewood
from Gasana, op. cit. note 34.
37. Gasana, op. cit. note 34.
38. Ibid.
39. Population from United Nations, op.
cit. note 1; conflict from "Nigeria: Focus on Central Region Tiv,
Jukun Clashes," U.N. IRIN, 24 October 2001, and from "Nigeria; Focus
on Indigene-Settler Conflicts," U.N. IRIN, 10 January 2002; loss of
cropland from Government of Nigeria, Combating Desertification and
Mitigating the Effects of Drought in Nigeria, National Report on the
Implementation of the United Nations Convention to Combat
Desertification (Nigeria: November 1999), p. 6.
40. United
Nations, op. cit. note 1.
41. Ibid.; Gasana, op. cit. note
34.
42. United Nations, op. cit. note 1.
43.
Population from ibid.; income per person from International Monetary
Fund, World Economic Outlook Database, Washington, DC, updated April
2003.
44. United Nations, op. cit. note 1.
45.
Ibid.; O'Hara quoted in Michael Wines, "Grand Soviet Scheme for
Sharing Water in Central Asia is Foundering," New York Times, 9
December 2002.
46. Chinese migration to Russia from Benjamin
Fulford, "When Worlds Collide," Forbes Global, 17 February 2003.
Copyright © 2003 Earth Policy
Institute
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