'Come clean' over land
'Come clean' over land
2 February 2001
USP Pacific
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'COME CLEAN' OVER LAND, NLTB TOLD
* See Pasifik Nius item 3185
SUVA (Pasifik Nius): A development economist has
appealed to Fiji's
Native Land Trust Board to "come
clean" on its real motives if a
long-lasting solution to
the land problem is to be found for
the
country.
Condemning some landowners and the NLTB
over "exploitation and
intimidation" of mainly
Indo-Fijian tenant farmers, University of the
South
Pacific's Dr Mahendra Reddy said the girmit era of
indentured
labour may return to Fiji.
Writing in the
Daily Post today, Dr Reddy said: "While tenant
farmers
remain the descendants of the indentured
labourers, the masters are no
longer the whites, but the
indigenous community aided by their trustees
[the
NLTB]."
Exploitation by landowners and the NLTB had taken
various forms and he
cited examples such as:
* Raising rent levels without a proper rent-fixing formula or mechanism.
* Asking for "exorbitant premiums", ranging
from F$6000 to $15,000 a
lease upon renewal of leases
under the term "consideration for new
lease'.
* Asking
the tenant to get a consent form signed where the tenant
was
"deliberately exposed for exploitation" by
landowners.
* Writing intimidating letters of non-renewal
of leases and asking for
compensation to be paid to the
NLTB for "dilapidation, deterioration or
damages" for an
amount of $1000 an acre.
Dr Reddy wrote that as the NLTB
had a monopoly power over land, the
"vulnerable
community" could be exploited to its maximum,
particularly
when other institutions such as the state
were turning a blind eye to
this issue.
"It is in the
national interest that Indo-Fijian farmers
leave
agricultural land and this just cannot happen
overnight," said Dr Reddy.
"Rather, it is a gradual process and it requires a transition period.
"The first
best solution is to permanently resettle the tenant
farmers
on freehold land. However, this may be possible
for only a small
proportion of the farmers.
"The second
best solution is to provide separate residential
and
agricultural leases."
Residential leases should be offered for 99 years, Dr Reddy wrote.
As farmers became
ready to leave agriculture, they would not have
to
dismantle their home and become homeless.
They would
only have to give up agricultural leases which would
be
returned to their rightful owners.
"To arrive at a
solution that is acceptable to all, we will have
to
remove our political hat and open our eyes to issues
that concern all
the stakeholders, the nation, indigenous
Fijians and the tenant
community," Dr Reddy said.
"Can we begin with the NLTB?"
+++niuswire
ENDS