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My perspective on the on-going preparations for a National Land
Audit
Mandivamba
Rukuni, Sokwanele
May 21, 2012
http://www.sokwanele.com/Zimbabwe_National_Land_Audit
This paper is
part of the Zimbabwe
Land Series
Introduction
In this article
I discuss how the land issue has been handled by the GNU
as from its formation in 2009. Although progress towards a National
Land Audit (NLA) has been very slow, a significant amount of technical
and preparatory work has been completed and continues to happen.
I will start by taking a historical approach relating what I know
has happened so far. That will include an update on 'preparatory'
activities for the land audit and my views on the technicalities
of such an audit if this has to all add up to the rehabilitation
of the land sectors. The need to undertake a National Land Audit
(NLA) in Zimbabwe is provided for in the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) of 2008 calling for a comprehensive,
transparent and non-partisan land audit, for accountability and
eliminating multiple farm ownership. Other objectives include fairness
in land allocation; ensuring security of tenure; and crafting ways
of financing land compensation, as well as other interventions towards
greater productivity of land.
Auditing land
in Zimbabwe: While the Fast Track Land Reform Programme was underway,
the government commissioned three audits - the Utete Commission
and the Buka Audit in 2003 and the SIRDC and Ministry of Lands and
Rural Resettlement (MLRR) audit in 2006. The SIRDC/MLRR audit covered
all eight of the country's provinces and also benefited from the
findings of the earlier audits. The audits unearthed a wide range
of issues such as the level of farm take up, vacant plots, double
allocation of farms, multiple farm ownership, details of beneficiaries,
land utilization, farm structures and equipment, improvements made
by the new beneficiaries, land disputes, and illegal consolidation
of subdivisions. But many issues remained contentious and unclear.
The GPA's National Land Audit is meant to clarify the situation
'once and for all' by verifying and authenticating land records
in the country. The NLA will therefore review existing records to
verify land categories and ownership. It would provide a comprehensive
and accurate assessment of the situation on the ground, allowing
for proper land administration moving forward.
Summary
of progress to date
There is no
doubt that the mood and the dialogue on the NLA has changed significantly
since 2009. In 2009 the land issue was burning a lot hotter than
is the case in 2012. The land issue is still very much politically
sensitive, especially given that it is a key component of the GPA.
But the nation continues to move on. There is greater presssure
to rehabilitate the land for productivity, investment and economic
recovery than just fulfil a political process. A significant proportion
of dispossessed white farmers are placing greater emphasis on receiving
their compensation than on restitution.
Back in 2009
there was hardly an aspect of the land issue that the GNU partners
agreed on. Today there is evidence of convergence (not necessarily
agreement) on issues such as the need for secure land rights, compensation
(at least for improvements), and the need for more intensive land
use planning. There is also an openning up of public dialogue on
the land issue with, for instance, the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee
on Land and Agriculture engaging both the public and the civil service.
This was not feasible in 2009 when the only major dialogue was an
in-house Ministry of Lands policy and strategy session held in Kariba.
The donors interested in supporting the GNU on land organised themselves
under the auspices of the Multi-Donor Trust Fund administered by
the World Bank. The Donor Land Audit Working Group was quite active
in 2009 meeting regularly and commissioning a number of studies.
But there was no direct engagement with the Government then.
Things started
happening a little faster in 2010 when the European Union (EU) Delegation
to Zimbabwe offered the MLRR support through the UNDP for a 'pilot
land audit' covering the sugar growing sector in the south eastern
lowveld. The MLRR reviewed the idea and made a counter proposal
that instead of a 'pilot' focussing on one sector, UNDP draft a
methodology for a NLA. This eventually led to the NLA 'start-up
activities' programme discussed below. But meanwhile the MLRR in
2010 submitted its own proposal to the GNU Cabinet on a NLA framework.
That document is unlikely to go public until Cabinet resolves on
a way forward. In 2011, however, Cabinet also requested the MLRR
to submit proposals for a Land Audit Commission and the Cabinet
has now seen both the NLA framework and a proposal for a Commission.
A final decision and the way forward, however, is still to come.
The
Start-Up Programme for the National Land Audit
The MLRR implemented
the Start-up activities under the financing agreement between the
Ministry of Finance, UNDP and the EU. A total of €423,000 EU-STABEX
funds were expended for the activities. The agreement provided for
a division of labour between the UNDP and the World Bank (WB) in
the implementation of the activities. Activities commenced in June
2010 up to the end of March 2011. An additional USD500,000 of donor
support towards technical and expert reviews of land reform issues
was also provided for in the agreed work plan of the Analytical
Multi-Donor Trust Fund (A-MDTF). The start-up had five outputs and
progress to date is as follows:
a) Land category
verification: The land registry has been updated after reconciling
the land transactions that have occurred since the land reform on
all types of land. This was the single most important output of
the start-up given that the entire A1 land resettlement data was
not centrally captured. Data and information was available only
at district and provincial levels were the committees responsible
for land distribution had transacted. Teams from the MLRR with technical
support form UNDP have taken about 18 months to collect and update
the land register. A land audit would have been meaningless without
this step.
b) Development
of NLA methodology: A set of data collection instruments were developed
and these will need stakeholder input and validation, as well as
ground testing before their use (either by the Commssion or the
MLRR) when the audit is finally given a go-ahead by Cabinet.
c) Stakeholder
consultations: This aspect is budgeted for in the programme to allow
discussion and input by stakeholdes on the methodology and audit
strategy. This is now expected to happen under further preparatory
activities;
d) Regional and international best practices on land reform and
land audits: Visits to Brazil and Kenya were undertaken by the MLRR
with technical guidance from UNDP and it is expected that this has
improved understanding of issues around security of tenure and bankability,
as well as addressing land reform issues and land administration;
e) Review of land policies was planned for but has not yet happened.
The idea is to prepare status and option papers for review by policy
makers and stakeholders specifically to cover: security of tenure,
compensation to farmers, and land administration.
What
is the relationship between a land audit and comprehensive agrarian
reform?
The most significant
issue on land that Zimbabwe faces is how to proceed with a comprehensive
agrarian restructuring. I am generally an optimist myself and believe
that this is feasible in the medium to long term. I, however, differ
with most on how to characterise the challenge. It is human nature
to wish for past pleasures and scenarios such as rebuilding the
agrarian sector to more-or-less what it was before 2000, but this,
in my opinion is highly unlikely. At the other extreme are those
who see the challenge as simply supplying the new farmers with inputs
and finance and then the past glory of being a bread-basket re-emerges.
My position is not exactly a middle position, but informed by the
very radical transformation of the agrarian sector that took place
- from one dominated by large farmers to one where the small to
medium-scale farms are predominant. It is not good enough to revive
the research, extension, agri-finance, and marketing institutions.
These have to und ergo a corresponding transformation in line with
the new agrarian structure. Providing credit to 200,000 or so new
small farmers, as an example, is radically different to providing
the same service to 4,000 farmers who had a whole era behind them
for integrated support by government and the business sector. Research,
extension, marketing and other services need to learn how to service
new and more numerous farmers with a limited business and banking
track record.
I know that
in the long run systems will adapt, but it is more strategic to
recognise these transformational challenges and design them into
recovery programmes.
So how will
the land audit assist in all this? My opinion is that more progress
will be made with the land audit by anticipating the key strategic
issues that either need prior thought and positioning before the
audit, or that need answers from the audit. It is common knowledge
that part of the resistance to the land audit is because some land
beneficiaries fear losing their land if, for instance, they are
found to be under-utilising it. If there was sufficient dialogue
ahead of the audit providing some policy guidance on the issue,
this may reduce the perceived risk. Such policy positions are best
arrived at by consulting with the affected groups, providing such
clarity as a definition of 'under-utilisation' and its various manifestations
and therefore the implications for each. The issue of multiple farm
ownership, the various forms it takes and implications for each
is another example. There are several other more strategic issues
which need similar engagement ahead of the audit and these include
land tenure, land compensation, and land administration structures
and systems.
Zimbabwe has
historically had a well defined system of land administration, including
cadastral survey records, land registries and surveyors. Due to
a lack of investment, these systems have decayed and land records
are being lost. The nation urgently needs a state of the art land
information system as part of Government's drive for e-Government
and e-Citizenry.
Conclusions
It is unlikely
that a NLA will happen ahead of the Constitution and elections.
It is still important for the MLRR, professional and technical actors
to continue preparing for the audit, especially given the need for
rehabilitation and upgrading production and productivity levels.
In the next article I turn to the issue of compensation as part
of the rehabilitation process and discuss how these two are closely
related in the current legislation. I will explain developments
to date and offer options moving forward. The land sectors - agriculture,
forestry, wildlife, and the tree and plantation sectors - will all
have greater prospects for growth and development if the compensation
issue is fast tracked and practical solutions put on the table,
debated and agreed upon.
References
Rukuni M, Nyoni
J, and Sithole E (2009) Policy Options For Optimization of the Use
of Land for Agricultural Productivity and Production in Zimbabwe.
A Report prepared for the ASTRG, MDTF. World Bank.
GoZ, 2006.
National A2 Land Audit Report, Ministry of Lands, Land Reform and
Resettlement, Harare.
MLRR, 2009.
Land Policy Review and Land Audit: Options and Strategy, A Synthesis
of the Ministry of Lands and Rural Resettlement Planning Retreat
held Carribbea Bay Hotel, Kariba, 11th - 13th June.
Utete C, 2003.
"Report of the Presidential Land Review Committee on the implementation
of the fast-track land reform programme 2000- 2002?, Harare. Government
Printers.
Buka Report,
2003. A Preliminary Audit Report of Land Reform Programme
Ministry of
Lands, Land Reform and Resettlement (MLLRR) and Scientific Industrial
Research Centre (SIRDC), 2008. Consolidated National A2 Audit Report,
Harare.
Scoones, I.,
Marongwe, N., Mavedzenge. B., Mahenehene,J., Murimbarimba. and Sukume,
C. (2010) Zimbabwe's Land Reform: Myths and Realities, Weaver Press,
Harare
Papers
published so far in this series:
All papers in
the Zimbabwe Land Series are available in PDF format from our document
library (http://www.sokwanele.com/biblio).
Download today's paper by clicking on this link. Comments may be
left on this and previous papers by visiting our blog, This is Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwe
Land Series: Introduction (Sokwanele, 5 April 2012)
Why the land issue continues to define Zimbabwe's past present and
future (Rukuni, 5 April 2012)
Land policy in Zimbabwe:
a framework for discussion papers (Doré, 10 April 2012)
Land as a 'racial' issue
and the lost opportunities to resolve the matter (Rukuni, 12
April 2012)
The Nationalist Narrative
and Land Policy in Zimbabwe (Doré, 4 May 2012)
My perspective on the on-going preparations for a National Land
Audit (Rukuni, 21 May 2012)
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