An estimated
fifth of the country’s arable land has been leased since 2009 to industrial
farming concerns, many of them foreign companies producing biofuels from crops
such as oil palm and sugar cane.
A report
published today, ‘Who Is Benefitting? examines the impact large land
leases held by three investors has had on local communities. It was
commissioned by local joint initiative Action for Large-scale Land Acquisition
Transparency, with support from Christian Aid and other international
development agencies.
The leases examined are held by Addax Bioenergy (SL) Ltd, Sierra Leone Agriculture and Socfin Agricultural Company Ltd.
The leases examined are held by Addax Bioenergy (SL) Ltd, Sierra Leone Agriculture and Socfin Agricultural Company Ltd.
As a result of
its findings, the report calls for a review of all existing contracts, and a
moratorium on further large scale land investment until existing concerns are
addressed, and future contracts can be independently monitored.
The report says that in particular, government contracts with large investors, some who have been granted 99-year leases, need to be more transparent and respect the country’s laws, and government and companies must implement international guidelines that emphasise the protection of local people and the environment.
The report says that in particular, government contracts with large investors, some who have been granted 99-year leases, need to be more transparent and respect the country’s laws, and government and companies must implement international guidelines that emphasise the protection of local people and the environment.
The report also
criticises the tax breaks offered to foreign companies to persuade them to
invest, which it says costs Sierra Leone many millions of dollars each year in
lost revenue.
Kato Lambrechts
of Christian Aid identified as a key problem government claims that just 11-15
per cent of the country’s arable land is being ‘used’ and that there is plenty
of room for foreign investors.
‘This
shows a lack of understanding of the way the country’s smallholder farmers, who
account for nearly half of working age Sierra Leoneans, use the land,’ she
said.
‘They rely on
an extremely diverse and complex mosaic of land types - upland farms, land
depressions prone to flooding, swamps, tree-crop plantations, fallow bush and
riverine grass areas to grow a wide variety of crops.
‘Much of this
land is deemed ‘unused’ – but that is far from the case. Communities are
promised development in various forms such as jobs and services if they sign
over land, but only a few ever see real benefits.
‘When they lose
access to the land they lose the ability to grow mineral and vitamin rich
fruits and vegetables which impacts badly on food security and nutrition.
People are struggling to purchase food, or going without.
‘Communities in
all three of the areas investigated reported increased levels of poverty,
poorer and fewer meals eaten each day, children, especially girls, taken out of
school and increased incidents of social ills such as teenage pregnancy, broken
marriages and theft.’
In two of the
leases investigated, compensation had been paid to local communities for trees
destroyed, but was seen as inadequate. The third company, Sierra Leone
Agriculture, maintained that no trees had been destroyed in setting up their
enterprise.
In all three
lease areas, local people said they would not have agreed to the land deals
were it not for promises made to them about jobs, and the building of roads,
along with improved health and education facilities, electricity, and water
wells.
These had not
been fulfilled to their expectations, with the companies maintaining that they
need to start full production and receive returns on their investment before
they can create all the jobs that have been promised.
Sierra Leone,
which is struggling to rebuild after a lengthy civil war, ranks among the
world’s least developed countries, at 180th of 187 nations on the 2011 United
Nations’ Human Development Index.
Life expectancy
at birth is 47.8 years, under-five mortality is one of the highest in the world
at 192 per 1,000 live births, and adult literacy is about 41%. In total,
some 70% of its population of about 5.5 million falls below the national
poverty line of US$2 a day.
A look at the
tax breaks enjoyed by two of the leaseholders, Addax Bioenergy (SL) Ltd, and
Socfin Agricultural Company Ltd, along with a third company, Goldtree Ltd,
reveal that an estimated total of US$18.8million a year, is lost in foregone
revenue to the government every year in respect of just those three deals.
The report says
that if just half that amount last year was directed towards agricultural
development, it would have allowed the government to triple the food security
budget.
‘There is an
urgent need to reduce rural poverty and improve the well-being of the nation’s
smallholder farmers,’ added Ms Lambrechts.
‘They are the
backbone of the economy and need support if they are to overcome the challenges
posed by cheap and subsidised imported foods, poor rural infrastructure and
access to basic amenities such as clean water, education and health facilities,
degraded lands and climate change.
‘The solutions,
however, are not to be found by leasing their fertile land out to foreign
investors for industrial plantations, with promises that this will bring
development. It is a risky and poorly thought-out policy.’
No comments:
Post a Comment