May 22nd 2013, By PATRICK BEJA
Nairobi, Kenya: All public beaches as well as access routes to fishing sites and beaches should be re-opened, the Truth Justice and Reconciliation Commission recommends in its final report released on Wednesday evening.
Its far-reaching recommendations include seizure of illegally acquired land to redress the thorny land problem at the Coast.
In what will come as a relief to the long-suffering aggrieved, the TJRC report calls for urgent measures to revoke all illegally obtained titles. It directs the National Land
Commission to fast track the recovery of all irregularly or illegally
acquired land at the Coast and other parts of the country.
The
report calls on those responsible to encourage individuals and entities
to surrender illegally acquired land to help address the extensive
squatter problem at the Coast.
It recommends that the Lands
ministry begins a process of surveying, demarcating and registering all
remaining government lands, including those that were formerly owned or
managed by local authorities, all protected wildlife areas and
riverbanks, among other public lands.
The NLC is required to work with the ministry of Lands to undertake adjudication and registration exercises at the Coast and all other areas where it has not been conducted.
“Successive
governments have since independence failed to take tangible action to
deal with these deep-rooted feelings among the inhabitants of the Coast.
One of the critical issues, described by some as ‘a ticking time bomb’,
is the seemingly intractable land question,” says the report handed to
President Kenyatta on Tuesday.
The report also details resentment in the region over perceived targeting in anti-terrorism crackdowns and poor basic amenities.
“More
recently, other factors including the perceived mistreatment of
residents at the hands of police in the context of Kenya’s efforts in
the American-led ‘war on terror’, poor education levels and lack of
infrastructure have all served to fuel feelings that successive
governments do not care about the region,” said the report.
The TJRC
also revives the memory of the bitter tribal violence that rocked Coast
province, especially Likoni and Kwale in 1997 and calls for
implementation of judicial reports that recommended investigation or
prosecution of key officials from Coast province.
These included a
former State corporation chief and powerful politician whom the report
recommends should have been investigated over the deadly 1997-1998
violence “with a view of taking appropriate legal action.”
It says that land-related injustices took the form of illegal
alienation of public and trust lands and preferential treatment of
specific ethnic groups in settlement schemes at the expense of the most
deserving landless.
The report has traced the genesis of the
squatter problem at the Coast to the colonial era when the indigenous
coastals could not be registered as landowners.
The report details
how the Sultan of Zanzibar gave preference to his “subjects” who could
register land in the 10-mile Coastal Strip and up to 25 percent of the
indigenous Mijikenda were turned into squatters, unable to register the
land they had lived on for centuries.
Land rights
“The
British recognised claims of the Sultan of Zanzibar on his 16km coastal
strip. Only the Sultan’s “subjects” would register land in this area,”
says the report.
The Mijikenda are nine groups comprising Digo, Giriama, Duruma, Chonyi, Rabai, Jibana, Ribe, Kambe and Kauma.
The report says although some of the land was adjudicated under the Land
Titles Act and registered as private land, mostly by outsiders and
absentee landlords, the prevailing situation is that land occupied by
the indigenous Kenyans is still held under communal and customary
tenure.
This is because most of the land has not been adjudicated to determine the individual land rights.
“Further,
although several settlement schemes have been established over the
years by the government, they have not always benefited the locals,” TJRC says.
It said the inability of the locals to use land on which they live for economic purposes has led to extreme levels of poverty.
“While
affected communities expected redress through resettlement, restoration
of their land from the Kenyatta and subsequent post-independence
administrations, the government instead alienated more land from already
affected communities for the benefit of politically privileged ethnic
communities and the political elite,” says the report.
The report
says the illegal acquisition of land has led to deeply held resentment
against specific ethnic communities who benefited from resettlements at
the expense of those who believe to be the rightful landowners.
TJRC
observed that the Akiwumi commission of inquiry established in 1998 to
look into the ethnic clashes during the 1997 General Election had
demonstrated how the skewed land allocation and ownership had fueled
ethnic tensions and violent conflicts particularly in Coast and Rift
Valley regions.
The commission noted that land related grievances
have led to the emergence of militia groups to reclaim land. “In recent
years, many land related problems have degenerated into social unrest
and violence,” the report says.
Politicians often exploit the real or perceived land injustices especially around election time for personal gain.
TJRC
warned that the dangerous mix of land-related claims with political
aspirations of specific groups or individuals remains a powder keg that
could ignite at any time.
TJRC
established that the willing buyer willing seller land tenure approach
was grossly abused and was one of the factors causing disinheritance and
landlessness especially in the face of rising human populations.
The report of the Commission of Inquiry into the Illegal/Irregular Allocation of Public Land
revealed that some 200,000 illegal titles were created between 1962 and
2002. Of these, 98 percent were issued between 1986 and 2002.
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