Photo: EC/ECHO/Malini Morzaria. Maasai could take advantage of Kenya’s new constitution to secure rights to land
Source: IRIN
LONDON, 4 April 2013 (IRIN) - In the great plains of northern Tanzania,
close to the world-famous Serengeti National Park, a bitter row has
broken out over an attempt to designate 1,500sqkm of Loliondo District
as a game-controlled area.
The Maasai herdsmen in the area say their cattle cannot survive without
access to traditional dry-season grazing in the area. The government
says the land is needed as a wildlife corridor between the Serengeti and
the Ngorongoro Conservation Area. Besides, the Minister for Natural
Resources told the press, 2,500sqkm had already been, as he put it,
“released to the local population”; the rest would be used for
conservation purposes for the benefit of the nation.
Typical of recent land-grab controversies, this row involves the use of
rangelands rather than farmlands. While farmers can show quite clearly
that their lands are being used, semi-arid grasslands in areas like
Loliondo cannot support animals year-round, so surveys often show the
areas lying apparently empty.
Such tracts of land are often attractive for commercial agriculture - in
Ethiopia, for instance, a number of controversial large-scale
agricultural concessions have been granted along the Awash River. But
the Loliondo dispute is not about commercial agriculture; it’s a
so-called “green grab”, where access to land is lost for conservation
purposes.
Here, one widely accepted good - the right of people to continue using
their traditional lands - has collided with another - the need to
conserve nature and biodiversity.
Many faces of conservation
The great majority of nations have signed the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity,
which sets as a target: “by 2020, at least 17 percent of terrestrial
land and inland water and 10 percent of coastal and marine areas are
conserved through effectively and equitably managed, ecologically
representative and well-connected systems of protected areas and other
effective area-based conservation measures.”
Neil Burgess of the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre said,
“These targets, set by nearly every nation on the earth, are the most
ambitious conservation plan out there. It's a massive potential
conservation plan - it's a lot of land, a lot of sea. Depending on how
it's done, depending on how countries choose to do this, it could be a
big land grab, it could be a big seas grab, or it could enhance
community rights, it could give benefits to the communities - it could
do a whole lot of different possible things.”
From 26-27 March, at a meeting on conservation and land grabbing
organized in London by the International Institute for Environment and
Development and other conservation groups, participants struggled with
the question of how best to reconcile conservation, development and
people’s rights to their way of life, and in particular what kind of
land tenure arrangements achieve the best outcomes.
Some countries, like Chile, have gone down the route of extreme private
ownership. Some of the country’s most important protected areas are in
private parks and reserves, the largest of which - 630,000 hectares of
Patagonia - belongs to a foreign national, the American businessman Doug
Tompkins, founder of the North Face clothing company. The owners of
these parks can and do use their private property rights to keep them
clear of squatters and encroachment, but they can also, if they choose,
abandon conservation and allow mining or logging on the land. The only
recourse for indigenous communities looking to keep their traditional
areas is to ask the government to buy the land on their behalf - and
even the government cannot force an unwilling owner to sell.
Other legal systems offer a more fluid approach to ownership and tenure.
The Philippines, for example, has a bewildering array of instruments
for holding land, such as designating it as “ancestral domain”. But
these kind of conditional rights rarely have the strength of private
ownership.
Jan van der Ploeg, of the University of Leiden, tried to help indigenous
groups in the Philippines get formal tenure on their traditional lands
in the hope it would help protect endangered species, but he came to the
conclusion that it would not work. “In the end,” he said, “if you
finally succeed in getting tenurial instruments for people, often
conservation output is very limited. People still persist in clearing
forest, and if a large company comes in, those legal rights simply don’t
mean anything.”
Community ownership
Africa in general does not have a historical tradition of private
ownership; land was more likely to be thought of as belonging to a
community or tribe, with individuals having the right to use it rather
than possess it completely. But very few African countries have
formalized this idea into any kind of group ownership or collective
tenure.
One that has is Kenya. In the late 1960s, Maasai living on the Kenyan
side of the border with Tanzania were offered the chance to establish
group ranches, defined as “a livestock production system or enterprise
where a group of people jointly own freehold title to land… and herd
their livestock collectively which they own individually.”
In practice, managing the communally owned land proved difficult, and
one group ranch after another was subdivided into smaller, individually
owned pieces. Eventually, many of the plots were sold for development.
But Kenya’s new constitution, adopted in 2010, is trying again. This
time, it offers what is to be called “community land” to any group
formed on the basis of ethnicity, culture or shared interest.
Stephen Moiko, of the International Livestock Research Institute, told
IRIN that a key difference this time is that the initiative will come
from the group. “It’s possible for communities to come up together and,
through a legal process, obtain ownership of key resources which they
depend on for their livelihoods, and it has legal mechanisms to protect
that land from alienation. I think the nice thing about this new
provision is that it recognizes the role of communities as owners and
protectors and users of local resources.”
“If communities came together in groups to own resources jointly, it
would be for their own benefit and this would enhance development,”
Oliver Waindi, Kenya Land Alliance deputy coordinator, told IRIN. At
present, “community ownership of resources is just on paper”, but a
National Land Commission was inaugurated on 27 February of this year to
raise awareness of the constitutional provision.
If the new form of tenure is a success, it could be the model for other
African countries. Chris Bakuneeta, a lecturer in biological sciences in
neighbouring Uganda, told IRIN, “In Uganda you can have a forest that
belongs to the community, especially where people go in to worship, but
they still don’t have any protection, because it is the community who
know the boundaries, and they don’t have a title deed to that land. I
would want to see the lawyers coming up with a legal mechanism to
protect this forest so that the local people can own it and have a legal
right over it.
“And that also applies to land that belongs to pastoral communities,
large expanses of land where those communities go to graze their cattle -
this land doesn’t have a land title. I would want a situation where
communities can register a land title, and they can use that to get a
loan, and everybody knows that if there is a benefit, it goes to these
people.”
The impact of group tenure rights on conservation efforts remains to be seen.