Millions of
smallholder farmers worldwide have been left homeless and hungry because of
private investment promoted by policies such as tax breaks and cheap loans,
says report
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An Ivorian man harvests fruits from the Jatropha, which is used as a diesel substitute. The demand for biofuels is exacerbating land grabs, says ActionAid. Photograph: AFP |
Aid donors
and international institutions including the World Bank and World Economic
Forum (WEF) have been accused of promoting an environment that fuels land grabs
through policies and initiatives that pave the way for large-scale private
investment.
In a report
published on Tuesday, the NGO ActionAid says public money and policy incentives
such as tax breaks and cut-price loans are facilitating land deals that
threaten the lives and livelihoods of small-scale farmers in poor countries.
ActionAid
warns that the consequences of such deals, which are too often happening behind
closed doors and with little or no consultation with local communities, include
"forced evictions, human rights violations, lost livelihoods, divided
communities … rising food insecurity and, ultimately, increased poverty".
A spokesman
for the World Bank said it was also concerned about the risks of large-scale
land deals and stressed that it did not support investments that took advantage
of weak institutions in developing countries.
ActionAid's
report says weak governance and regulation of land use and agricultural
investments have left millions of smallholder farmers and indigenous people in
vulnerable situations "lack[ing] recognition over their land rights, even
if they have resided in or used the area for generations".
ActionAid's
campaign manager, Antoine Bouhey, said a "nexus of different
policies" at the global level, which encourage private investment as a
route to development, were also to blame.
"Governments
are turning to private capital to fill the massive shortfall in public spending
but too often this blind rush for investment is leading to land grabs which are
leaving communities landless, homeless and hungry. Growth cannot be achieved at
the expense of the poorest and most vulnerable," he said.
The NGO's
report points to the G8's New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition as one
of the international initiatives "via which taxpayer money and public
policies are fuelling land grabs" and failing to ensure strong safeguards
to protect the poorest.
The New
Alliance was condemned as a new form of colonialism this year, after African
governments agreed to change seed, land and tax laws to encourage private
investment.
Last month,
World Development Movement, the anti-poverty group, said the New Alliance was
in effect carving up Africa in the interests of big business.
ActionAid's
report also looks at how governments of developing countries are facilitating
large-scale land deals through direct intervention in sales and lease
agreements, and by introducing public policy incentives such as tax holidays
for agribusiness investors.
It says
such deals, often justified on the basis of attracting increased investment
into food and farming, have come at great human cost.
Public and
private investment should be redirected towards supporting sustainable
agricultural practices suited to the needs of smallholder farmers, particularly
women, says ActionAid. A "zero-tolerance approach" must be taken by
governments over land grabs and the incentives that fuel them.
Most of the
1.4 billion people worldwide who live on less than $1.25 a day reside in rural
areas and depend largely on agriculture for their livelihoods. Globally, an
estimated 2.5 billion people are involved in small-scale agriculture.
A World
Bank spokesman said the organisation provided roughly a third of all aid to
support countries in improving governance of land tenure. "Securing access
to land is critical for millions of poor people. Modern, efficient, and
transparent policies on land rights are vital to reducing poverty and promoting
growth, agriculture production, better nutrition, and sustainable
development," he said. "Our role is to be a leader in assisting
countries to improve land governance and the behaviour of private
investors."
Lisa
Dreier, a senior director working on food security and development at the WEF,
said its New Vision for Agriculture helped found the Grow Africa initiative,
which created 33,000 jobs and gave 2.6 million small farmers in Africa access
to technology, financing and new markets.
"Smallholder
farmers are key to the future success of Africa's agriculture and governments
can support them by implementing clear rules on land ownership that protect
smallholder rights and encourage investment," she added.
What is a
land grab?
"Many
land deals are, in fact, land grabs carried out without proper consultation,
consent and compensation," says ActionAid.
The NGO
uses a definition of land grabs that draws on the Tirana declaration, agreed at
a 2011 international conference. The declaration defines land grabs as deals
that are "in violation of human rights, particularly the equal rights of
women, not based on principles of free, prior and informed consent, or are in
disregard or fail to thoroughly assess social, economic and environmental
impacts, not based on transparent contracts … " or are not based on
"effective democratic planning, independent oversight and meaningful
participation".
Conclusive,
independent data on the scale of land grabs worldwide is hard to come by.
ActionAid's report looks at data from the international Land Matrix project,
which suggests that the vast majority of large-scale deals have been struck in
sub-Saharan Africa (41%), south-east Asia (32%), and the Americas and Caribbean
(19%).
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