Morris Kidir gestures at
a wide expanse of dark-green land he says was earmarked for a school or clinic
in his northern Liberian village, now covered in young oil palm trees.
After
being sworn in, Liberian President George Weah said citizens were owed clarity
on fundamental issues such as the land beneath their feet
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In
October last year, he recalls, workers from Malaysian conglomerate Sime Darby
arrived at the plot and began filling in the only gap left in a forest of palms
that stretch as far as the eye can see.
Kidir,
an elder in the village of Gbah, Bomi county, is on the front line of a
national dispute over land ownership dating back to the mid-19th century that
could now define the presidency of George Weah, the ex-football star sworn in
for a six-year term last month.
"We
beg you people to leave this land for us, for development," the frail
villager recounts writing in a letter to the firm, one of four oil palm giants
operating in Liberia.
This
West African country is one of the world's poorest, ranking 177th out of the
188 countries in the UN's Human Development Index. But its rubber, iron ore and
more recently palm oil represent rare examples of foreign investment -- and
sources of tax revenue.
Rural
residents say they are not aware of what the government and multinational firms
have agreed when signing decades-long contracts, and have little recourse when
diggers appear in their backyards.
Given
that the 1989-2003 civil wars were in part driven by disputes over land and
resources, observers are worried what the future holds as a UN peacekeeping
mission prepares to leave Liberia in March.
The
new government is expected to reconsider a four-year old Land Rights bill that
campaigners say was considerably watered down by the House of Representatives
in 2017 before being blocked by the Senate.
- Weight of history -
Weah
told the nation after being sworn in that citizens were owed "clarity on
fundamental issues such as the land beneath their feet, freedom of speech and
how national resources and responsibilities are going to be shared".
Freed
slaves from the United States founded Liberia in 1847 and introduced a formalized
system of land titles, overturning the customary tradition of the indigenous
population.
The
so-called "Americo-Liberians" banned non-landed citizens from voting
until 1951, and Weah is only the second indigenous Liberian ever elected
president.
"A number of laws were developed declaring the vast majority of land as public land, owned by the state," explained Stanley Toe, Executive Director of the Liberia Land Authority (LLA) — a situation that has largely prevailed until today.
As Gerald Yeakula, programme manager at the Centre for Transparency and Accountability in Liberia (CENTAL), noted in an interview with AFP, "a lot of the customary (indigenous) people do not really know that these lands do not belong to them".
- 'No consent' -
In
Gbah and villages like it, palms creep right up to doors of homes — despite an agreement, Kidir
said, to leave a buffer zone between the plantation and residential areas.
But
he, like many, is hazy on what the government and firms with large concessions
have agreed, leading to disputes.
"Almost
all of these concessions have not been concluded with full, free and prior
consent, despite some efforts by companies," explained Lien De Brouckere,
Deputy Africa Director for the Rights and Resources Initiative.
Sime
Darby, for example, signed a 63-year concession agreement with the Liberian
government in 2009 to develop 220,000 hectares (544,000 acres) of land, but has
since struggled to plant more than 10,000 hectares.
Angry
residents burnt palms and rioted in this area in 2016. In 2015, a senior
company official was taken hostage and a government minister wounded during a
riot at a plantation in southeast Liberia owned by Golden Veroleum, a rival
firm.
Sime
Darby told AFP it is operating within the agreed boundaries of the plantation,
and says it meets regularly with a committee working on villagers' behalf.
"Crop
compensation was paid in 2014 and 2017 totalling over US$1 million for over
1,500 farmers," said plantation manager David Parker in an email to AFP.
Palm
oil is used in many household products and foodstuffs, but has long been linked
to deforestation and loss of natural habitats.
Map of Liberia
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The
industry is far from unique: Liberia's extractive industries — iron ore, gold, diamonds — face similar accusations of
driving land disputes.
During
former president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf's 12 years in power, several
multi-decade concession agreements were renewed or changed hands, throwing new
scrutiny on land deals.
Ali
Kaba of Liberia's Sustainable Development Institute said land disputes
"have always been a problem", but people were "now more
aware" following advocacy by international organizations since the civil
war.
- Tribal certificates -
Particular
attention has focused on the misuse of so-called "tribal
certificates", documents that indicate the consent of a local chief to
transfer a parcel of land to an applicant.
They
are at the heart of activists' anger over changes to the 2014 Land Rights bill,
as they are often abusively used by prospectors as title deeds, despite
possessing inferior status legally.
"The
major change was the tribal certificates, as the 2017 version accepts tribal
certificates with little or no vetting," said De Brouckere.
Toe,
of the land authority, however, maintains the pending bill, if passed by Weah's
government, could change the lives of millions.
Indigenous
communities would gain "the right to own whatsoever land that they have,
the right to lease that land, the right to exclude others from that land,"
he said.
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