Introduction Government on February 5, 2008 tabled a new Land(Amendment) Bill 1 before Parliament which is currently being scrutinised by the Committee on Physical Infrastructure and on Legal Affairs 2 . Since and even before its tabling in Parliament, this Bill has instigated a heated and controversial public and parliamentary debate. The declared purpose of the Bill is to enhance tenure security and protect lawful and bona fide occupants and occupants under customary tenure from unlawful evictions 3 . However, both in Parliament and in the general public the amendment is met with hostility and rejection. Allegations about the Bill range from the claim that it will threaten Ugandan stability 4 to the assertion that Museveni wants to destroy the Buganda Kingdom 5 . There is a general suspicion 6 towards whatever the Government does regarding land matters which has been fed by current reports about how the Uganda Land Commission and other agencies have allocated big chunks of land to affiliates of the government or army generals 7 . Debate has become so heated that NRM MPs have been threatened by Museveni to be withdrawn support in the next election if they do not support the Land Bill 8 . Most of Ugandans derive their livelihood from land, with land constituting 60% of the total assets owned by a sample household 9 and with more than 43% of gross domestic product, 85 % of export earnings and 80% of employment being generated from land use 10 . It thus is clear that land is a sensitive issue. Any land tenure reform may affect wealth distribution and has implications for economic and agricultural development. Studies have shown that conflicts and tenure insecurity generally have a significant productivity-reducing impact and discourage land-related investment 11 . It thus is of great practical interest whether the proposed 1 The Land(Amendment) Bill 2007, The Uganda Gazette No. 72, Volume C, dated 28 th December, 2007. 2 “MPs to be fair on Land Bill”, The New Vision, February 6, 2008. 3 See Memorandum of the Land(Amendment) Bill 2007 and Prime Minister Apolo Nsibambi’s address at Statistics House, Kampala, January 27, 2008,“Reforms to strengthen landlord tenant ties”, Daily Monitor, January 30, 2008. 4 “Uganda: Land amendment bill threatens Uganda's stability”, The New Vision, February 8, 2008. 5 “Why Buganda opposes the Land Bill”, Daily Monitor, February 7, 2008. 6 This suspicion is e.g. expressed by FDC shadow minister for Lands, MP Florence Ibi Ekwau(Kaberamaido) when she says:"We feel the government has a hidden agenda that's why they want to hurriedly rush the Bill down our throats", see:“Mengo gives MPs 10 point guide on land”, Daily Monitor February 5, 2008. 7 See e.g. about allocation of Butabika Hospital land to officials from State House, Ministry of Lands and members of the first family:“List of Butabika plot owners shocks MPs”, Daily Monitor, April 3, 2008. See about the allocation of land in Kiboga and other areas to army generals:“MP brings evidence of land lord generals”, Daily Monitor, March 14, 2008. 8 “Land Bill: Museveni to fail dissenting MPs”, Daily Monitor, March 4, 2008. 9 See Deininger et al., Legal knowledge and economic development: The case of land rights in Uganda, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 3868(2006), p. 13. 10 See Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Drafting the National Land Policy, Working Draft 3 (January 2007), 3.2.2, 47. 11 A survey undertaken by the Economic Policy Research Council jointly with the World Bank in 2001 found that the mean output per acre on plots without conflict is, with US$ 201, more than double the US$ 90 observed on plots affected by conflict. Parametric estimations show that conflict induced loss of agricultural production is between 5% and 11%. Further, according to the subjective assessment, in 24% of cases households responded 3
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What should be done to enhance tenure security in Uganda and further development? : The land (amendment) bill 2007, ITS shortcomings, and alternative policy suggestions
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