Manila Bulletin

PH tops land-rights killings – report

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MUMBAI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – More than two people were killed every week on average this year defending their right to land and resources, with the Philippine­s recording the highest number of casualties amid a government crackdown on rural communitie­s, a rights group said.

In the fight for land and the environmen­t, communitie­s around the world are locked in deadly struggles against

government­s, companies and criminal gangs exploiting land for products including timber, minerals and palm oil.

At least 116 people were killed from Jan. 1 to Nov. 30, according to advocacy group PAN Asia Pacific (PANAP). The victims included farmers, indigenous people and activists, with women making up a tenth of the total.

The Philippine­s accounted for 61 victims, followed by Brazil with 22, said the report released on Friday.

This has been “yet another year of continuing and intensifyi­ng attacks against rural communitie­s that are asserting their right to land and resources,” the report said.

“Alarmingly, global and regional developmen­ts that create conditions for greater land and resource grabbing continue to emerge and fuel social conflicts and unrest in rural areas.”

The number of victims this year is lower than the 171 killed in the same period last year, PANAP’s data showed.

A separate estimate by UK-based advocacy group Global Witness puts the number of victims at 170 so far this year.

The final tally could equal – or exceed that of 2016, which was the deadliest year on record with about 200 deaths, a spokeswoma­n told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

In Asia, land rights defenders were also killed in India and Myanmar, and in Latin America, killings were recorded in Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Guatemala and Venezuela, according to PANAP.

More than half the rights violations – including threats, assaults, arrests and displaceme­nt – involved mining companies. Plantation­s, power plants, infrastruc­ture projects and real estate developmen­ts were also hotspots for violations.

In the Philippine­s, killings and other forms of repression targeting farmers, indigenous peoples and activists “spiked dramatical­ly,” with massive displaceme­nts of rural communitie­s set to continue, the report said.

Harassment of women land activists in Southeast Asia is on the rise, the report said, while in Myanmar, the government has taken over vast swathes of land in Rakhine state after driving out hundreds of thousands of Rohingya.

China’s multi-trillion dollar Belt and Road Initiative, which aims to recreate the old Silk Road with massive infrastruc­ture projects connecting China to Europe and beyond, will also see land grabs and huge displaceme­nts, PANAP said.

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