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World
Bank Overseeing Global Land Grab
The article
below was published in South-North Development Monitor (SUNS) #7357
dated 25 April 2012. We thank SUNS and IPS for permission to re-distribute
this article.
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World Bank Overseeing Global Land Grab
Washington, 23 Apr (IPS/Carey L. Biron) -- The World Bank continues
to facilitate land-grabbing in poor and developing countries around
the world, according to new research released here on Monday.
The report by Friends of the Earth, an international watchdog, is part
of a host of initiatives taking place ahead of the start of the Annual
World Bank Conference on Land and Poverty, which runs for the next four
days.
Friends of the Earth says that anywhere from 80 to 227 million hectares
of rural, often agrarian land, typically in poorer countries hungry
for foreign investment, have been taken over by private and corporate
interests in recent years.
Programmes and policies pushed by the World Bank, the organisation suggests,
have been both directly and indirectly responsible for this trend, with
examples reportedly coming from more than 60 countries.
"Some of these are countries which struggle to feed their own populations
- but which have enough fertile land to attract foreign investors,"
the report states.
Such figures are on the rise, driven by increased human demand for vegetable
oils and the evolving global market for biofuels.
According to some, these developments have been further exacerbated
by certain international efforts to combat global climate change, such
as the UN-sponsored Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest
Degradation (REDD) programme.
According to activists and farmers speaking ahead of the World Bank
Conference on Land and Poverty here in Washington, part of the blame
also needs to be placed on the Bank's own technical assistance, past
and present.
The issue formed a core message during more than 250 protests worldwide
on April 17, marked as the International Day of Peasant Struggle.
"Decades of World Bank policies have created the basis for what
is happening today," Giulia Franchi, a campaigner with the Italian
Campagna per la Riforma della Banca Mondiale, said on Monday.
Franchi and others express particular frustration with a Bank-led initiative
known as the Principles for Responsible Agricultural Investment that
Respects Rights, Livelihoods and Resources (commonly referred to as
RAI), which came into existence in January 2010.
The RAI, Franchi says, constitutes "an attempt to support transnational
corporations to acquire land worldwide. While it looks like it's standing
with local communities, there is no way that the expropriation of people's
lands can be considered responsible."
According to the Bank's explanation of the motivations behind the RAI,
recent years have seen "a sharp increase in investment involving
significant use of agricultural land, water, grassland, and forested
areas in developing and emerging countries ... some countries have been
confronted with informal requests amounting to more than half their
cultivable land area, and other countries are actively seeking major
investments."
The code of conduct inherent in the RAI is thus aimed at trying to "better
spread the benefits and balance opportunities with risks in major investment
programs".
Some warn that such an approach is wrongheaded from the start. The RAI
"creates an illusion that by following a set of standards, large-scale
land acquisitions can proceed without disastrous consequences,"
Friends of the Earth's Kirtana Chandrasekaran told IPS.
"RAI may seek 'transparency' from land deals, but even if done
'transparently', the transfer of large tracts of land ... to investors
is still going to deprive smallholder farmers and local communities
from crucial, life-sustaining resources for generations to come."
Chandrasekaran points instead to a recently created set of principles,
the Voluntary Guidelines on the Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries
and Forests.
A final draft of the Voluntary Guidelines was released in March following
three years of negotiations between 96 governments and civil society
organisations, under the auspices of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO). The guidelines are to be formally endorsed in May.
Most important, Chandrasekaran says, the Voluntary Guidelines "anchors
the land-grabbing issue to the existing obligations of states under
international law, explicitly mentioning the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights."
There is also a potentially more direct feedback loop under the Voluntary
Guidelines. According to the FAO, the Guidelines "allow government
authorities, the private sector, civil society and citizens to judge
whether their proposed actions and the actions of others constitute
acceptable practices."
Still, others caution that the Voluntary Guidelines might be too open
with regards to investment safeguards.
According to Devlin Kuyek, a Montreal-based staff member for GRAIN,
an international NGO focused on sustainable agriculture, "an investment
chapter was inserted into the Voluntary Guidelines at the last minute,
over the objections of civil society organisations, that is very similar
to what the Bank has been promoting with regards to private investment
... to try to make it appear that land acquisition can be done responsibly."
Kuyek notes that there are several similar guidelines in the works that
will attempt to impose some regulation - or the appearance of regulation
- on the surging market for foreign investment in fertile land.
While each of these will offer some competition to the RAI, observers
suggest that the World Bank appears to be little inclined towards changing
its stance on the issue.
"I've seen absolutely no sign whatsoever that the World Bank Group
has made any meaningful moves at all to genuinely respond to the criticisms
that its policies lead to land-grabbing," Joan Baxter, a researcher
with the Oakland Institute, an environment-focused think tank, told
IPS.
Baxter points to the roster of presentations at the current World Bank
Conference on Land and Poverty. "How can (the Bank) invite hedge-fund
manager Susan Payne and land-grabbers such as Addax Bioenergy to speak
at this conference?" she asks.
"Instead, why doesn't it invite some rural women to talk about
how the loss of their land to rich investors has robbed them of their
livelihoods?"
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