LAND
Myanmar is in the midst of rapid economic and social
change, with dramatic consequences for land tenure. Under the military
regimes that ruled Myanmar since 1962, the state was the main landowner,
either directly or (after 1988) via proxy companies. In the current
reform process, smallholders are reclaiming their legal land rights at
the same time that foreign investment is flooding the country, placing
all previous land use arrangements under increasing pressure.
Myanmar is the largest country in mainland Southeast Asia, with 70 percent of the population working in agriculture,1 although arable land makes up a relatively low 19 percent of national territory.2
Once the largest rice exporter in Asia, Myanmar experienced a drop in
production during the years of military control, and agriculture is now
further threatened by environmental change and an influx of land-related
investment. Land use varies between the rich rice paddies of the
Ayeyarwady Delta, the central Dry Zone, and mountainous areas inhabited
by ethnic minorities practicing shifting cultivation (taungya).
These latter areas are now the site of numerous land concessions and
natural resource extraction projects, leading to new cases of
displacement and conflicts.3
Land policy and administration
The
Myanmar Constitution (2008) provides for private property rights, while
maintaining that the state is the “ultimate owner of all lands and all
natural resources” and shall “supervise extraction and utilization of
State-owned natural resources by economic forces”.4 More than 30 laws govern land management, some of them dating from the 19th century British colonial period.5
At least 20 government agencies are involved in land issues, with a
complex system of varying structures at both the national (Union) level
and provincial (State) levels.6
In ethnic minority areas, local governments and military commanders
have significant influence over land policy; for instance, the Karen
National Union has its own Land Use Policy and registration procedures,7 although this is not recognized by the national government.
Responsibilities
for land management are divided among the Ministry of Agriculture and
Irrigation for lowland agricultural land, and the Ministry of Natural
Resources and Environmental Conservation (MONREC) for upland (forest)
lands. Residential land, meanwhile, is managed at the city level. The
rapid opening and political transition has led to bureaucratic overload,
as the new government has enacted new laws and formed new institutions,
including MOECAF established in 2011.8
The Vacant, Fallow and Virgin Land Law, Foreign Investment Law, and the
Farmland Law, all passed in 2012, were designed to increase investment,
encourage large-scale land use and promote agricultural income.9 These laws have been criticized for supporting investors’ interests over secure land holdings of smallholder farmers10
and enabling seizure and re-allocation of land as “vacant” or “fallow”
that is actually under cultivation or part of regular crop rotations
practiced by taungya farmers.11
In
January 2016, Parliament (while still under the control of USDP)
approved a new National Land Use Policy (NLUP) following an extensive
public consultation process. The new policy aims to harmonize existing
laws and guide development of a new land law.12
The policy assures equitable land access for smallholders and landless
people, with consideration of customary tenure and gender equality.13
Some civil society and donor agencies have praised the consultation
process and pro-poor aspects of the NLUP, while others, including ethnic
organizations, critique the policy for favoring investors over
community interests.14
The foremost remaining questions are how the policy will be implemented
and how it will be received by related institutions, such as committees
overseeing the 2012 laws, in dispute resolution and ensuring
accountability.15 In
May 2016, the new National League for Democracy (NLD) government formed
a Central Review Committee on Confiscated Farmlands and Other Lands,
aiming to address the complex legacy of land confiscation and
dispossession.16
The
NLUP consultation process is a reflection of widening political space
in Myanmar, including over land issues. Civil society movements have
used these spaces for advocacy on land rights issues. Farmers’
associations and other grassroots organizations have emerged in every
region of the country.17
In Yangon, the Land Core Group, formed in 2011 by domestic and
international NGOs and concerned individuals, plays a coordinating role
among diverse civil society groups.18
Land classifications
Prior
to the political transition, most land in Myanmar was held through a
multiplicity of customary or informal tenure arrangements. Deeds were
registered in township offices, but fewer than half of the population
had documented tenure. Record-keeping and maps were frequently outdated,
incomplete and inaccurate.19
The 2012 Farmland Law marked a turning point for farmers in districts
where paddy has been cultivated for generations, providing for the
issuance of land use certificates that can be transferred, inherited and
mortgaged.20
By the end of 2014, one study conducted by GRET found that 71 percent
of sampled landowners in the Ayeyarwady Delta had received titles, as
had 80 percent of landowners in the Dry Zone.21
However, coverage in other areas is lower. Land concentration is high:
20 percent of rural households control 69 percent of farmland, and the
number of large landholdings of 20 hectares or more is increasing.
Landless households are estimated to be between 20 and 60 percent in
various regions.22
The chart below shows the total land area of several categories from the Myanmar Statistical Information Service.
The
titling process only applies to land classified as “farmland”:
Forestland is not eligible and continues to be held through customary
tenure rights.23 Most taungya
or grazing land is not mapped or registered. In upland areas, land
classification is further complicated by the history of internal
conflict between the central government and armed ethnic groups, which
has led to many people being repeatedly displaced.24 People living in the uplands thus have less secure access to land than those in the delta and Dry Zone.
Customary
practices are officially recognized for the first time in the new
National Land Use Policy, which makes repeated mention of customary law
and tenure, without clearly defining what is meant by the terms.25
The NLUP also states that “legitimate land tenure rights” recognized by
local communities, “shall be recognized, protected and registered in
accordance with laws”.26
This language is spurring interest in community mapping and
documentation efforts, a process facilitated by the availability of
specialized mapping software, such as FAO’s open source mobile
application, Open Tenure.27
In
the process of developing the NLUP, the government has benefited from
technical support and advice from UNHABITAT’s Land Administration and
Management Program (LAMP) and the multi-donor fund known as LIFT. Other
main donors to land governance include USAID and the Swiss Agency for
Development and Cooperation (SDC).28 Since
2015, SDC has funded the Center for Development and Environment of Bern
University and the Land Core Group to launch the OneMap project, an
open-access spatial data platform on land issues.29
Land transfer and public land lease
The
Central Committee for the Management of Vacant, Fallow, and Virgin Land
(CCVFV), established in 2012, is responsible for reallocating “vacant”
or “fallow” land to domestic and foreign investors for periods from 30
to 70 years. Another committee, the Myanmar Investment Commission (MIC),
is also tasked with granting land to foreign investors.30
These laws take a British colonial precedent, the 1894 Land Acquisition
Act allowing for state appropriation of “waste land” for a “public
purpose”, and re-present it in the current context of economic opening
and investment promotion.31
As much as 20 percent of all land in Myanmar has been approved for land
concessions, with five million hectares (or about 7.5 percent of all
land) awarded to foreign and joint venture investors.32
Source: Myanmar Information Management Unit. Created by ODI June 2016. Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Explore the data.
The
highest profile examples of land investment are three Special Economic
Zones (SEZs), funded by Japanese, Thai, and Chinese companies
respectively.33
Although only the first of these has opened, the NLD government
has pledged to continue supporting the zones. External reports note that
SEZs face risks from local opposition, ongoing ethno-religious tensions
and environmental concerns.34
Such controversies also apply to investments in large-scale resource
development projects such as oil and gas pipelines, mines and hydropower
dams. Much of the investment in resource extraction is wholly or
partially from state-owned enterprises from other countries in East and
Southeast Asia.35
Foreign
investment in the agricultural sector is low compared to manufacturing
and mining. Land allocated to large-scale agricultural concessions
increased by 170 percent from 2010-13, but only one-fifth of that land
had been planted.36
Chinese investors, in particular, have acquired land for rubber and
other agribusinesses in previously isolated border and ethnic regions.37
Although
laws provide for notification, appeal processes, and compensation,
these procedures are not followed in many cases of land transfer. As a
result, communities find themselves excluded and even charged with
trespassing on land they have used for generations.38
Smallholders, particularly those living in conflict areas, are facing
insecure land tenure resulting from the effects of centralized land use
planning, poor inter-ministry coordination, as well as encroachment from
land transfer to investors.
Another widespread
cause for communities’ exclusion from agricultural and forest land is
Myanmar’s immense landmine problem. At least five million people living
in 56 townships (out of 330 nationwide) are affected by mines, mainly
near the Thai border.39
Limited technical surveys of contaminated areas have been conducted by
international agencies, but no land clearance or release to date.40
Land dispute resolution
The
reform period in Myanmar has witnessed a rise in land conflicts, linked
to past and recent land acquisitions by the military, the government
and their business allies. A parliamentary committee set up in 2012
received about 17,000 complaints about land disputes up to November
2015.41
The increased visibility of land issues reflects new political freedoms
and relaxation of media censorship, as well as the persistence of
entrenched interests in the economy and politics, particularly in upland
and border areas.42
Some cases of conflict around large-scale projects are still ongoing,
such as the Hat Gyi dam on the Salween River in Karen State and the
Lapadaung copper mine in Sagaing Region.
Myanmar’s burgeoning civil society has encouraged some smallholders to take land cases to court.43 Judicial oversight of dispute resolution, however, remains limited by law.44
Private negotiation, supported by public advocacy campaigns and appeals
for political intervention, have proved more effective than litigation.
There is also a growing interest in, and support for, legal education
for farmers and grassroots movement-building. The same forces of change
that are accelerating land transfers and disputes are also contributing
to social efforts to address their effects.
Ref:https://opendevelopmentmyanmar.net/topics/land/
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