The Star Malaysia - Star2

Speedyp y deeds

- By KIM HARRISBERG

A TEAM of Zanzibari data collectors armed with tablets have h gathered enough informatio­n from hundreds of people on the Tanzanian archipelag­o to issue each of them a deed to their land in 20 minutes – a process that typically takes up to five years.

The project run by Kenya-based technology consulting company Spatial Collective has pro oduced official documenta ation for about 700 land parcels in a southern tow wn called Shakani since it launched last year.

“With title deeds, peop ple can get loans and they will have the security of know wing that, ‘This is mine and d no one will claim it’,” said d Justus Muhando, 30, Spat tial Collective’s technical lead d steering the project in Zanzibar.

Spatial Collective began work with the island’s land commission in 2018 when its researcher­s used drone imagery captured by the Zanzibar Mapping Initiative, a project led by the island’s land commission.

Using small drones, the initiative took high resolution imagery of 500,000 buildings on the archipelag­o, said Muhando.

Spatial Collective approached authoritie­s about building on that data to simplify the often slow, frustratin­g process of applying for proof of land ownership.

Now, Zanzibar’s land commission is working to finalise the digitised title deeds after a consultati­on period and hopes to roll the process out to the entire island in the coming months.

A lack of formal documentat­ion and poor implementa­tion of land laws threaten tenure in many countries, with more than five billion people globally lacking proof of ownership, according to the Lima-based Institute for Liberty and Democracy.

Less than 15% of homeowners in Zanzibar have documentat­ion to signify property ownership, say government officials.

The hope is that the project can help overcome the hurdles that made issuing title deeds through Zanzibar’s outdated, paper-based system a long and arduous process, said Shawana Soud Khamis, land adjudicati­on officer for the local land commission.

The new system should cut down on surveyor expenses, boundary disputes and delays in residents bringing in forms and documentat­ion, she said.

It will help the government properly issue land tax, a valuable revenue generator that has been difficult to enforce in the past, Khamis added.

And the initiative could give the islanders, especially those in vulnerable groups like women, long-overdue assurance that they have legal protection against evictions, she said.

“We have seen women suffer because men take over (their) land. Women don’t always have inheritanc­e and can lose everything – their homes and their farms,” said Khamis.

“We need to solve this problem.”

Community manpower

The project, called Securing Tenure On Zanzibar, goes through the same steps for issuing title deeds as the traditiona­l process, only much faster, said Muhando.

Spatial Collective trained 10 community members to assist with all the data collection and paid them for their work, he explained, with grants from organisati­ons such as Cities Alliance, a global partnershi­p fighting urban poverty.

Using a tablet, the data collector takes a landowner’s details, including name and identifica­tion number, and photograph­s the person and any other necessary documents using the tablet’s camera.

Spatial Collective also uses its drone imagery to identify the home on a map. All of this informatio­n is stored in a database accessible by the land commission, making any missing details easy to spot and fill in.

The data collectors also place numb bered beacons in the grou nd around the property’s p periphery to provide tang gible demarcatio­n of the prop perty until the deed is issu ed, avoiding disagreeme­n nts or conflicts over land d boundaries, Mu uhando said. Gaining G the community’s s trust was a priority fro the start, he noted. Spatial Collective held ommunity meetings with government offiials to explain the proect to the islanders. They also made radio announceme­nts that hey blasted out through speakers fixed on top of cars as they drove through Shakani, said Muhando. Othman Mzee Muslim, 54, a farmer and local l leader who worked with Spatial Collective to explain the project to the rest of the community, said that “at (the) very beginning, people were sceptical”.

“They thought we were coming to take the land, but after they saw us doing measuremen­ts for a sustained period of time people became open to it,” he said.

Landing an asset

When Zanzibar went into lockdown in March to slow the spread of the new coronaviru­s, and Muhando and his team had to go back to Kenya, they were worried the project would stall.

But in a surprise move, the government decided to pick up where it left off.

“The commission for land said, ‘We understand you need to leave, but we want to continue’,” said Primoz Kovacic, co-founder and managing director of Spatial Collective.

Now that lockdown has lifted, Muhando is back in Zanzibar.

Kovacic points to the government’s eagerness to keep the project going as evidence that the initiative has the potential to grow without Spatial Collective.

It also shows that the system can be applied to different countries, giving landowners a sense of security across the globe, he added.

“Land is an asset,” Kovacic said.

“If you have ownership of land, you have money under your feet. You can sell it, rent it, sub-divide it, mortgage it. Nobody can kick you out. You can sleep at night.” – Thomson Reuters Foundation

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Muhando oreceiveh is title interviewt an undergoing uters Thomson Re deeds. —Photos:
Foundation
aresident to of takesapho Muhando oreceiveh is title interviewt an undergoing uters Thomson Re deeds. —Photos: Foundation
 ??  ?? Young islanders learning to collect data using tablets, which will be used to secure title deeds.
Young islanders learning to collect data using tablets, which will be used to secure title deeds.

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