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BOLIVIA:
Government Takes
Up Challenge of Land Reform
Franz
Chávez
LA PAZ, (IPS) - The Bolivian
government of Evo Morales plans
to strengthen and speed up
agrarian reform, to reduce the
heavy concentration of land
ownership, and to combat
speculation and illegal sales of
land along the border to foreign
nationals.
"The new government has the
democratic legitimacy to carry
out a profound agrarian reform
effort, after the institutions
responsible for redistributing
land have been reorganised,
since they were staffed by known
representatives of powerful
landowners and agribusiness,"
the deputy minister of
Coordination with Social
Movements, Alfredo Rada, told
IPS.
>From his office at the
government palace, Rada has
undertaken the difficult task of
overhauling an agrarian reform
process that had been virtually
paralysed by the influence of
agribusiness interests in the
eastern region of Santa Cruz.
Left-leaning President Morales
will cancel decrees issued by
his predecessors Gonzalo Sánchez
de Lozada (1993-1997 and
2002-2003), Hugo Banzer
(1971-1978 and 1997-2001) and
Carlos Mesa (2003-2005), because
they represented a setback by
allowing land ownership to be
further concentrated, said Rada.
Law 1,715 of the National
Service of Agrarian Reform was
promulgated on Oct. 18, 1996 to
put fair land distribution into
practice, an aim which had been
on the statute books for decades
but never realised.
The law establishes procedures
for eliminating vast,
unproductive land holdings, and
for reviewing and updating
property rights over all land,
whether it belongs to
smallholders or agribusiness
interests.
In nine years, the Bolivian
State has reviewed land
ownership of only 14 million
hectares, or 13.1 percent of the
107.2 million hectares of land
dedicated to agricultural and
livestock production and
forestry, according to the
latest figures from the National
Institute for Agrarian Reform (INRA).
At this rate it will take
another 66 years to complete the
job, which according to analysts
has been blocked by economic and
political interests.
The deadline established by the
law for granting formal land
titles to peasant farmers and
for the communally owned lands
of indigenous people is October
this year. However, although 74
million dollars have been spent,
including financial aid from
international organisations, the
process appears to be at a
standstill.
"There was no political will to
apply this law, but now we hope
for firm, radical determination
to implement it," the president
of the non-governmental Land
Foundation (Fundación Tierra),
Miguel Urioste, told IPS.
The inauguration of indigenous
activist Evo Morales, the leader
of the country's coca farmers,
as president on Jan. 22 has
reawakened the sense of
entitlement of indigenous
communities, which are demanding
the expropriation of land from
Brazilian and Paraguayan
entrepreneurs who have bought up
extensive areas along the
northern and northeastern
borders with Brazil.
Bolivian legislation forbids
foreign citizens to own property
within 50 kilometres of the
border, and indigenous and small
farmers' organisations are
calling for these lands to be
expropriated for their benefit.
Lawmaker Isaac Ávalos of the
governing leftwing Movement
Towards Socialism (MAS) said
that some 600,000 hectares have
been occupied illegally, and the
minister of Rural, Agricultural
and Livestock Development, Hugo
Salvatierra, announced that
properties under illegal
ownership would be expropriated.
Prosecutors, migration
authorities and police have been
deployed by the government to
investigate accusations of the
illegal presence of foreign
nationals within the
50-kilometre border zone,
especially in the provinces of
Germán Bush and Angel Sandoval,
in Santa Cruz.
This could be a crucial test for
the government of Morales, who
was elected with 53.7 percent of
the vote.
According to Rada, the
government, with the support of
the armed forces, "will restore
sovereignty in areas invaded by
foreign citizens, and will do it
in a decisive manner."
On the diplomatic front, the
government will talk to
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva about the problem,
and request his cooperation in
preventing illegal land sales
and trafficking in gold, timber,
and other natural resources from
Bolivia's Amazon jungle region.
At the beginning of his
five-year term, Morales stated
his intention to promote fair
land distribution, and quoted
the example of landowners who
put one cow out to pasture on
50,000 hectares of land.
Last week, Morales called on
large landholders to share their
idle land with poor small
farmers, while guaranteeing
state recognition for productive
landholdings of 1,000 to 5,000
hectares that are dedicated to
economic and social ends.
The agrarian reform of 1953,
born of the1952 revolution, was
adversely affected by corruption
and pressure groups. By 1996, 55
million hectares had been handed
over to large landholders, and
45 million hectares to small
farmers, according to a study by
the Land Foundation.
This unequal distribution led to
intervention of the body
responsible for land concessions
in 1992. In 1996 it was replaced
by INRA, created by law 1,715.
However, this new institution
did no better than the previous
one.
Bolivia's Landless Movement
(MST) was formed in 2000,
inspired by Brazil's Landless
Workers' Movement. Its first act
was to seize an extensive
property called Pananti, in the
southern department of Tarija.
But the occupation of land ended
on Nov. 9, 2001 with the deaths
of six landless farmers, killed
by thugs sent in by landowners.
>From Tuesday to Friday, the
second United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO)
International Conference on
Agrarian Reform and Rural
Development is discussing land
tenure problems in the southern
Brazilian city of Porto Alegre.
According to a report by the
United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP), just 100
families own 25 million
hectares, while 2 million small
farmers have access to only 5
million hectares.
According to the 2001 census,
three million Bolivians live in
rural areas, out of a total
population of 8.2 million.
But administrative measures will
not present a final solution to
land problems, said Urioste, who
believes that it is up to the
Constituent Assembly, which will
convene in August to rewrite the
constitution, to examine the
question of the ownership of
land and natural resources, such
as forests, water, minerals, oil
and gas.
"These will be the main topics
for debate, particularly land
ownership rights. According to
the Constitution, land belongs
to the State and not to any
specific region or social or
business sector," Urioste said.
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