2. In February 1996, Botswana government ministers announced at a community meeting in the central Kalahari that the reserve's residents would be required to leave the area. Local people reacted strongly to this request, arguing that they should be allowed to stay where they were. They pointed out that the Central Kalahari Game Reserve was established to protect the land-- and resource--use rights of local people (May 1996) .
3. The Pehuenche of southern Chile are being threatened by a series of hydroelectric dams planned for the Bío-Bío river. One dam has been built , and another, entailing the removal of about 1000 Pehuenche, is in final stages of preparation prior to ground-breaking. The initial dam was financed by the International Finance Corporation, a section of the World Bank Group. When problems developed, the IFC hired anthropologist consultant Theodore Downing to investigate, and then, prodded by the owner-power company, ENDESA, S.A., refused to allow Downing to disclose his findings to the Pehuenche, effectively preventing the Pehuenche from learning about plans affecting their cultural survival (March 1998) .
Letters from AAA President Jane H. Hill to Dr. James D. Wolfensohn, president of the World Bank Group and IFC, and Carole F. Lee, Vice President and General Counsel, IFC, are also provided.
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