Land to the tillers: Responses to land grabs

TruthOut | 30 July 2013

Land to the Tillers: Responses to Land Grabs

By Beverly Bell and Tory Field

The outcome of last Sunday’s elections in Cambodia, in which Prime Minister Hun Sen hoped to extend his 28-year rule, is in dispute. Even if he continues in office, Hun Sen’s tight grip on civil society is threatened, in part, by public anger against land grabs. In the past decade, his government has handed 73% of Cambodia’s arable land, most of it belonging to small farmers, over to businesses.

On July 24, the Colombian Ambassador to the US, Carlos Urrutia, was forced to resign after the exposé of a shady deal in which he helped sell land to the agribusiness giant Cargill and others. The holdings in questions were covered by a 1994 law protecting land reform and small farmers.

One week prior, on July 19, the nation of Georgia banned the sale of land to foreigners.

Behind these stories, and many more that don’t get brought to our attention, are land reform movements, organizations of indigenous peoples, small farmers, and other citizens. They are responding to the increased sacking of land and other natural resources throughout the global South, and resultant spikes in landlessness and poverty.

National and transnational corporations, sometimes with collusion from the government of the country in question, are snapping up agricultural land to grow industrial-scale commodity crops. Investment firms (private equity, hedge, and pension funds) are in a buying frenzy, too, speculating that they will be able to turn a profit for their investors. An estimated 120 to 200 million acres of land have been sold in international investment deals in recent years, approximately two-thirds of them in Africa. Land is also being taken for biofuel plantations, mining, oil drilling, and other energy projects.

The deals may flat-out illegal, or farmers may be forced to sell due to their dire economic circumstances. Peasant farmers and indigenous peoples are especially vulnerable, as they often lack paper deeds to land they have inhabited for centuries.

Small- and medium-sized farmers are at risk in the global North, too, sometimes forced to sell out because of financial instability. City-dwellers around the world face a parallel situation through foreclosures and corporate development of urban land and public housing.

Some farmers around the world have been driven to despair over their loss of land, overwhelming debt, and inability to continue farming. It is estimated that in India alone, as many as 270,000 farmers have committed suicide since 1995. This averages about 40 farmers committing suicide daily, and the pace has only been accelerating.

There are other responses to the crisis in both the global South and North. Movements are fighting back to claim land, power, and rights. As just a few indicators:

In 2011, major demonstrations in the Indian state of Orissa stalled Posco’s seizure of community land for construction of another steel plant. The project is still in limbo.

To get involved in protecting farmland and homes:

You can find action items, resources, and a popular education curriculum on the Harvesting Justice website. Harvesting Justice was created for the US Food Sovereignty Alliance, check out their work here.

URL to Article
https://farmlandgrab.org/post/22377
Source
Truthout http://truth-out.org/news/item/17882-land-to-the-tillers-responses-to-land-grabs

Links in this article