National Geographic - Bushmen May Get Rich - Hoodia Gordonii
Africa's Bushmen May Get Rich From Diet-Drug Secret
Leon Marshall in Johannesburg for National Geographic News
April 16, 2003
The wheel of fortune could be turning for southern Africa's San,
or Bushmen.
Sidelined over decades because of their dwindling numbers and ancient
way of life, the San have been reduced to a few struggling communities
living on the fringes of society. But now their traditional knowledge
may be their salvation; they stand to make a lot of money—and gain
much respect—from the international marketing of an appetite-suppressant
they have been using for thousands of generations.
The drug named P57 is based on a substance scientists found in
the desert plant Hoodia gordinii. The San call the cactus !khoba
and have been chewing on it for thousands of years to stave off
hunger and thirst during long hunting trips in their parched Kalahari
desert home.
Satisfying Sips
A melon plucked from the ground provides a drink. The San once
found water in plants and rainy-season pools. Now they draw it from
the deep wells, or boreholes, that opened the Kalahari Desert to
cattle grazing and allowed the San to settle in permanent villages.

To see more of Chris Johns' images of the San, hear him describe
southern Africa's Bushmen and their struggle to survive in their
own land—and hear the unique clicking sounds of San communication,
one of the world's oldest languages, please visit Last Stand for
Southern Africa's First People: Bushmen on the National Geographic
magazine Web site: Go>>
A deal has been signed between the South African San Council and
the country's Scientific and Industrial Research Council (CSIR),
which identified the appetite-suppressing ingredient in Hoodia during
research into indigenous plants in 1996. At a small ceremony recently
held in the Kalahari desert near the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park,
which South Africa shares with Botswana, the San and the CSIR made
a deal to share royalties earned by commercial sale of the San's
ancient knowledge of the plant.
The overly nourished millions of people in the developed world
spend billions of dollars a year on preparations and remedies to
combat obesity. Effective new products that help shed weight are
always in high demand.
Children danced and sang as members of the San community watched
their leaders sign the deal. The chairman of the San Council, Petrus
Vaalbooi, said, "We are thankful that the traditional knowledge
of our forefathers is acknowledged by this important agreement,
and that we are making it known to the world. As San leaders we
are determined to protect all aspects of our heritage."
The landmark deal signed by the San could blaze the trail for indigenous
communities elsewhere in the world. Many traditional cultures have
ancient knowledge of the healing powers of plants—intellectual property
that is often not recognized, let alone protected for commercial
gain.
Defining Moment for the San
For the San the agreement could be a defining moment as it could
mark a turn for the better in ways other than a financial windfall.
In terms of the deal, the CSIR will pay the San 8 percent of milestone
payments made by its licensee, UK-based Phytopharm, during the drug's
clinical development over the next few years. This could come to
more than a million dollars.
The biggest revenue stream could come from 6 percent royalties
the San would receive if and when the drug is marketed by the international
drug giant Pfizer, which has in turn been licensed by Phytopharm.
Given the international demand for obesity drugs, the market for
P57 could run to billions of dollars.
The South African San Council was stung into action by a reported
remark by a Pfizer representative to the effect that the San had
used the Hoodia but that they were extinct. This was in answer to
questions by journalists whether the San could expect compensation
for their contribution to the prospective blockbuster drug.
South African human rights lawyer Roger Chennels, who took up the
San's case, said they immediately challenged the CSIR. "The negotiations
were tough, but the San had the moral high ground. Once their moral
ownership of the intellectual property rights was recognized, and
once they wisely agreed to enter into a partnership, the dealings
became reasonable," Chennels said.
Though the South African San Council was set up in 2001 to represent
the country's Khomani, !Xun, and Khwe tribes, a trust has been set
up (please see side bar) that will share the money with other San
groups in neighboring Namibia, Botswana, Zambia, and Angola. This
is in recognition of the fact that indigenous knowledge, as with
the Hoodia plant, is mostly shared by tribes across national boundaries.
The San are southern Africa's oldest human inhabitants, having
lived in the sub-continent for at least the past 20,000 years and
possibly going back 40,000 years. But from the many, possibly even
millions, who once roamed the plains and mountains, only about 100,000
remain.
Brink of Extinction
The South African San Institute (SASI), a non-governmental organization
that mobilizes resources for the benefit of the San, explains they
have been driven to the brink of extinction first by African agro-pastoralists
who started arriving from central Africa from about 1,800 years
ago, and then by European settlers who arrived from the mid-17th
century.
SASI says few San are able to live by hunting and gathering today.
Most work as farm laborers. A few groups run nature conservancies,
but others live unemployed in marginal settlements, with no income
other than small pensions from the state.
Nigel Crawhall, a San linguist who heads up SASI's culture and
heritage management program, believes the Hoodia-drug deal could
help rescue what remains of San culture.
The SASI program is essentially about trying to mend San society
and reconstruct San culture, and so set its remaining communities
on a more sustainable path.
The San have largely lost their sense of community and identity
by being dispossessed of their territories and becoming physically
dispersed. They have suffered language loss and some of their important
social institutions have become dysfunctional.
Reconstructing San society and culture is an intricate process
which is aimed at getting dialogue going between the elders who
still have knowledge of some of the old ways and the younger generation
who have lost it. The purpose is to get them talking about what
had gone lost and what not, and about safeguarding that which is
important. It is a process of self-discovery, says SASI.
Apart from the prospective financial benefits from the Hoodia deal,
Crawhall says, there is much it could do to assist this difficult
process, also by way of creating a more helpful relationship between
the San and the world they live in.
He explains: "The San thought nobody was interested in them. Now
Hoodia has come along. They are excited and have even become a bit
secretive about their use of plants, even though most of this has
already been written up in books. But their young people do not
know about these uses, and that could change now that there is this
mass market of the developed world wanting to use their discovery
for body cosmetics.
"What struck them was that anybody would want to use such medicines
to lose weight. So there is also this interesting interface with
the outside world."
Fortuituous Confluence
To Crawhall, the Hoodia deal forms part of a fortuitous confluence
of factors which could spell a better future for the San. It fits
well with the consciousness of human rights that has come with South
Africa's new democratic constitution and which has already resulted
in important land-restitution breakthroughs for the San. It also
fits well with the growing international awareness of indigenous
minorities and their rights.
Chennels, who has also been fighting the San's legal battle for
restitution of their traditional land, says he believes the deal
represents notable recognition and acknowledgement of the importance
of the traditional knowledge and heritage of the San peoples.
"This groundbreaking, benefit-sharing agreement between a local
research council and the San represents enormous potential for future
bioprospecting successes based on the San's extensive knowledge
of the traditional uses of indigenous plants of the area.
"We are optimistic that this case will serve as a sound foundation
for future collaboration, not only for the San but also for other
holders of traditional knowledge," he said.
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