By Koffi Adu Domfeh
Domestic
flights had to be grounded as part of the agitations before a compromise was
reached for the GCAA to have 153 acres of the demanded 640 acres of land
released.
The
parcels of land reserved for the installation of aviation equipment are being
sold to private estate developers.
The
civil aviation scenario is a microcosm of the worrying land situation in Ghana.
Unfortunately
for institutions that lack the power of impactful industrial strike, lands
earmarked for research activities are stealthily encroached, taken over and
sold out by traditional authorities and other custodians.
Among
State institutions suffering from the land grabbing spree is Council for
Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), which is mandated to pursue the
implementation of government policies on scientific research and development.
The
over 15 research institutes under the council are engaged in activities of
importance to the development of agriculture, health, environment, technology,
industry and other service sectors of the Ghanaian economy.
But
the Council is gradually losing its research lands across the country – over 370
acres of land, mostly in the Greater Accra region.
Some
individuals with the mandate to guard national asset are rather pursuing their
parochial interest by approbating to themselves lands acquired by the State –
through Certificate of Allocation – without consulting people entrusted with
the management of such lands.
Private
individuals with links at the corridors of political power manage to get the
Lands Commission to sign off lease agreement for land occupied by the CSIR as
demonstration fields and other research purposes.
In
some instances, CSIR staff are manhandled and terrorized with impunity by hired
land guards whilst court injunctions are gleefully overlooked.
The
Research Staff Association of the CSIR has cautioned that the country’s food
and water security is threatened by the unbridled grabbing of lands earmarked
for agricultural research and development.
The
researchers are forced to waste precious time to fight, protect and reclaim the
lands, instead of focusing on their mandate to conduct research for national
development.
Ironically,
the Council seems to be fighting the very State institutions that should help
protect the lands as calls for government’s support to protect the lands from
encroachment are ignored.
The challenge of land grabbing is
indeed alarming in the country.
Ghana’s
food and water security is already under threat as arable lands are lost to environmentally-destructive illegal mining activities as well
as infrastructural expansion projects.
Water bodies and wetlands are being
destroyed for the construction of commercial and residential infrastructure.
Peri-urban agriculture is now a luxurious
venture with no land left for such farming activities.
The
unbridled acquisition of rural lands by foreign investors, often for biofuel
projects, also have negative implications for Ghana’s forest resource
management and deprive local people of sustainable livelihoods.
The
rush for land threatens to squeeze out poor communities with weak land rights.
There
have been demonstrations and agitations in a number of communities against
traditional authorities for selling lands illegally to foreigners without
compensation.
Forest
reserves are also not spared. In the last two decades, mining companies have
targeted forest reserves and the number of requests for exploration permits to
mine in forest reserves has increased.
Land utilization in line with modern day planning
and the complexity of land ownership pose a tough challenge to stimulate the socio-economic
development agenda of the country.
The
smooth coordination of the country’s land sector has been hindered by lack of
modern information management systems – conflict
of interest often ensue among government, traditional leaders and private
individuals in the acquisition of land for business or community development
projects.
For the past
decade, Ghana has implemented a Land Administration Project with the objective
to promote efficient and transparent land delivery services.
But
challenges persist. The siting of markets, recreational, religious and school
sites as well as sanitation and vehicular parks has sometimes being a herculean
task in communities.
As the global population soars, farmlands and
freshwater are increasingly becoming valuable resources.
But
as land becomes a scarce resource, should personal parochial interests be
allowed to override the national development agenda of reserving lands for
research and development?
By Kofi Adu Domfeh
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