Nepal: Slaget om jorden, som kommunisterne beslaglagde

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Dybe revner i kommunistpartiet mellem strammere og slappere – og imens er store områder fortsat beslaglagt af det maoistiske parti som led i den forgangne “folkekrig” mod feudalvældet – mange gamle jordejere rasende over langsommeligheden.

KATHMANDU, 10 August 2012 (IRIN): Little progress has been made in Nepal in returning land confiscated by former Maoist rebels during a decade-long civil conflict to the original owners. Researchers say this is in violation of a 2006 peace deal.

“Although land reform and land return are not top priorities currently, given the ongoing political crisis, if left unaddressed for too long such issues may sow the seeds of serious discontent in the future,” Sarah Levit-Shore, country representative of the Carter Centre, a US-based NGO, told IRIN.

When the conflict started in 1996, one of the key Maoist demands was that the government should seize and nationalize land belonging to feudal landlords and redistribute it to landless farmers.

During the war, a large number of properties were distributed to peasants as landlords fled the violence, according to the Informal Sector Service Centre (INSEC), a local human rights NGO.

Although Maoist leaders have promised to return confiscated land, progress has been slow and uneven, especially in the Midwest and Far West regions, where the properties remain under Maoist Party control, according to a recent Carter Centre report.

In September 2011, the Maoist-led government announced that all land seized during the conflict should be returned immediately to the owners.

In November a high-level delegation of party leaders visited Bardiya District in the Midwest region, 600 km west of the capital, Kathmandu, where most of the confiscated land is located, to form a taskforce to ensure its return.

“Rigid hardliners”

But little has changed, said local human rights activist Bhola Mahat, regional coordinator of INSEC in Nepalgunj city, the seat of the regional government overseeing Baldiya District:

“The problem is still [serious], as this has now become more complicated since the Maoists split up into two parties and the hardliners have become very rigid about their conditions [for land reform].”

In the wake of growing dissent in the Maoist party, hardliners led by Kiran Baidya formed their own party in June 2012, after splitting from the ruling Unified Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (UCPNM), led by Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda and Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai.

The ideological rift between Prachanda and Baidya dates back to the civil conflict, with Prachanda favouring a democratic parliamentary republic and Baidya calling for a communist state.

Some UCPNM leaders say the issue of land returns has been resolved.

“From our side, we have returned all the lands after reaching a compromise between the landowners and the ones who had captured their lands, and I don’t think this is an issue anymore,” said Shanker Koirala, a Maoist leader in Nepalgunj, aligned with Prachanda.

“This is just another political agenda by other parties to humiliate us. The reality is that there are no more land disputes,” he maintained.

Landowners who are still fighting to have their land returned say otherwise.

“Even the government has failed in its negotiation with the Maoists,” said Binay Dhoj Chand, who is trying to reclaim 27 hectares of farmland in Baldiya District. “All our lands have been seized, and not even the police could give us security if we went back to the village to reclaim our lands.”

No returns

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http://www.irinnews.org/Report/96067/NEPAL-Land-could-sow-seeds-of-serious-discontent