The Manila Times

New Syrian land law raises red flags for rights groups, lawyers

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BEIRUT - ists are sounding the alarm over a new Syrian law on urban developmen­t, saying millions of displaced risk never returning home after losing claim to land left behind.

- monly known as Decree 10, allows the government to take private property to create zoned developmen­ts, compensati­ng owners with shares of the new projects.

It’s a nationwide expansion of 2012’s Decree 66, which plans the constructi­on of two glitzy complexes atop the bombedout suburbs of Damascus.

Similar land acquisitio­ns are used worldwide to redevelop neglected or battle-damaged areas.

But experts worry its applicatio­n in Syria, whose war has displaced more than five million people outside their homeland and six million internally, is riddled with violations.

“The margin of abuse is so big, and that’s what informs our concern,” says Sara Kayyali,

researcher.

If their land is part of a new developmen­t, owners inevitably lose the property itself and must complete bureaucrat­ic procedures within tight deadlines to get shares in exchange.

It’s a tall order for displaced Syrians, who are often missing paperwork, struggling financiall­y, or may not learn of requiremen­ts in time.

“The primary concern we are hearing from people who may be affected by this law is that they really don’t know whether they can return,” she says.

‘As if nothing happened’

The law itself makes no mention of the millions of displaced -a major red flag for Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Diana Semaan.

- tees their safety,” she warns.

“It tackles the issue as if nothing happened and everyone is in Syria, able to assign power of attorney or come themselves to claim property.”

Under Decree 10, once Syria’s government designates a developmen­t zone, authoritie­s have one month to publicly notify landowners of the shares option.

Those with deeds in government registries automatica­lly receive shares, but those without must prove ownership within 30 days.

Therein lies a major snag. Even before war erupted, a “significan­t proportion” of Syrians did not have legally valid documents proving land rights,

Syrians with deeds in official registries may still struggle to demonstrat­e ownership, as several

including in third city Homs.

“The loss of these records may enable the occupation and transfer of these properties to other individual­s and commer-

Many displaced

internally or across the border did not bring

documents with them.

And less than 40 percent of those displaced to northwest Syria by a government offensive on the Eastern Ghouta rebel bastion had saved theirs, according to a survey by Syrian civil society group The Day After.

A 2017 decree is meant to help replace deeds but Kayyali notes “extensive bureaucrat­ic and financial obstacles”.

“Given the extent of the displaceme­nt and loss of personal documents, the law won’t give people enough time to make a claim,” she says.

Even shares claimed successful­ly will likely be worth “much less” than seized land, says Amnesty’s Semaan.

“The valuation of property in the law is not properly thought through or fair for those affected,” she says.

‘ No hope’

- Syria’s opposition accuses the government of using military and legal means to conduct demographi­c engineerin­g along sectarian lines.

Decree 10 is part of a worrying trend that instead disenfranc­hises Syrians for political or financial reasons.

- lows the government to confiscate the property of anyone accused of “terrorism,” a term the regime uses for all its opponents.

Syrians in government territory won’t dare make property claims for Decree 10 on behalf of displaced people branded traitors, says Syrian lawyer Hussein Bakri, who wrote TDA’s assessment of the law.

“It doesn’t make sense for your relatives to represent you, because the strength of the security services means they will almost certainly be arrested,” says Bakri.

Decree 10, he says, “will inevitably lead to landowners losing rights and being dispossess­ed of their property to the benefit of regime loyalists and supporters.”

Such dispossess­ion may be just as much about money as politics,

The “dynamic” rate of propertyre­lated legislatio­n demonstrat­es the government’s desire to consolidat­e control of a rare resource in Syria’s war- ravaged

“Land has lots of advantages. What else can they do? Manu-

land. It’s very clear,” says Yazigi.

In the interim, those left stranded in areas outside regime control have little recourse, he says.

“This marks the end of any hope for these people to return. If they had some hope, now it’s over.”

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