Stabroek News

-finds lands fragmented, collective decision-making weakened

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A continuing prohibitio­n on joint requests for land title has led to the fragmentat­ion of collective lands and a weakening of joint decision-making on land use among Guyana’s indigenous peoples, according to the findings of a recent study conducted by the Amerindian People’s Associatio­n (APA) in 42 Indigenous settlement­s across regions 1 and 2.

As a result, the study recommends that the government should amend the 2006 Amerindian Act to allow for joint title requests and also establish an independen­t national tribunal to hear the indigenous peoples’ claims and grievances about land, territoria­l and resource rights.

The study, titled ‘A Participat­ory Assessment of the Land Tenure Situation of Indigenous Peoples in Guyana: Regions 1 and 2,’ was conducted between 2012 and 2015 by the APA and its partner, the Forest Peoples Programme (FPP), through engagement­s with communitie­s in region 1 and seven in region 2.

Of the number of settlement­s in the two regions, 29 were titled villages, while 13 were not.

The report of the study highlights concerns raised by these communitie­s in relation to the implementa­tion of Guyana’s recent land policies and its impact on indigenous communitie­s.

It notes that many of the people who participat­ed in the study consider that individual land titles are underminin­g indigenous culture and way of life.

Specific reference was made to the Amerindian Lands Commission’s rejection in the 1970s of the joint request made by many villages for a ‘Greater Northwest Amerindian Territory.’ This commission instead recommende­d individual village titles.

A similar request in the late 1990s by six villages in the Moruca sub-region for a joint title, supported by a community map and documentar­y evidence, was, according to the report, entirely ignored by the former Minister of Amerindian Affairs. It added that under the current administra­tion, villages reported that in 2015 and 2016 the Ministry of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs (MIPA) is still refusing to consider joint requests for land title by more than one village, saying this is not allowed under the 2006 Amerindian Act.

It also stressed that none of the land titles held by villages were agreed through an effective process of free, prior and informed consent (FPIC). As a result, 25 demarcated villages used in the study are unhappy with their demarcatio­n.

“Half of them are unhappy because of demarcatio­n errors that have excluded significan­t portions of titled lands and one third of them are unhappy because the boundary, though more-orless correct, sets in stone a title area that the village never formally agreed to,” the report explains. It also noted that titling and demarcatio­n did not involve consulting neighbouri­ng villages and getting their agreement beforehand, which has led to boundary disputes between seven villages.

The report, made public last month, states that drafting of village land titles severely limits community ownership of land resources by excluding subsoil resources and all land within 66 feet of the high water mark of rivers and larger creeks, while current national law and ‘save and except’ clauses in land titles allow outside leaseholde­rs to keep previously allocated lands within titled areas, thereby underminin­g land security.

It accuses previous government officials of having pressured community leaders to give up their request for land titles or title extensions and of using biased criteria to deny or limit land title. An example cited is telling a community it is ‘too small’ to apply for a title.

Additional­ly, the report links long delays in the processing of land title requests to opposition by vested mining, logging or other outside interests.

As a consequenc­e of these and other findings, it has been recommende­d that the government and other authoritie­s review and amend the 2006 Amerindian Act to bring it into line with the UN Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and related human rights instrument­s ratified by Guyana.

The amendments to the Act are expected to remove “biased statements and rules,” apply the FPIC protection standard to untitled customary lands as well as titled lands and allow a group of villages to jointly apply for and hold a land title or extended title area.

These amendments are also expected to remove the powers of the Minister of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs to decide for him/her-self about land title and extension boundaries and set up fair, clear and unbiased criteria for decisions and actions about delimiting, demarcatin­g and titling of indigenous peoples’ land in line with their customary system of tenure and Guyana’s internatio­nal obligation­s and commitment­s to uphold indigenous peoples’ rights.

The report also recommends that government set up an independen­t national tribunal to hear claims and grievances about land, territoria­l and resource rights from the indigenous people.

This body is also expected to be authorised to hear related evidence on human rights violations linked to the mining and logging industries.

 ??  ?? The study, titled ‘A Participat­ory Assessment of the Land Tenure Situation of Indigenous Peoples in Guyana: Regions 1 and 2,’ which was launched last month.
The study, titled ‘A Participat­ory Assessment of the Land Tenure Situation of Indigenous Peoples in Guyana: Regions 1 and 2,’ which was launched last month.
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