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Library RETURNS OF GRABBED LAND IN MYANMAR: PROGRESS AFTER 2 YEARS (English, Burmese မြန်မာဘာသာ)

RETURNS OF GRABBED LAND IN MYANMAR: PROGRESS AFTER 2 YEARS (English, Burmese မြန်မာဘာသာ)

RETURNS OF GRABBED LAND IN MYANMAR: PROGRESS AFTER 2 YEARS (English, Burmese မြန်မာဘာသာ)

Resource information

Date of publication
November 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
OBL:72329

Namati submits this briefing paper to assist the government of Myanmar and other interested parties in efforts to ensure the
implementation of the 2013 recommendations of Parliament’s Farmland Investigation Commission. The commission is tasked
with scrutinizing land grab cases and to promote justice for Myanmar’s citizens whose land was taken without due process or
compensation.
According to the Secretary General of the Farmland Investigation Commission, as of June 2015, approximately 30,000 cases have
been submitted to the Commission, of which about 20,000 have been heard. Of those, a small number of cases (882 or 4%) have
been found justified to receive compensation. Many of these are collective cases, and according to the 2015 report, the
Commission has returned about 335,000 acres of urban and farmland to benefit 33,608 families.
Namati’s own experience suggests that the number of cases justified to receive compensation or return of land should be much
higher. We further recommend actions the government can take to help streamline the return and compensation of grabbed land
and improve the likelihood that outcomes are fair and equitable. This briefing draws on Namati’s experience using a network of
community paralegals trained to use administrative procedures to resolve land grab cases in Ayeyarwaddy, Southern Shan,
Sagaing, Magwe, and Bago between 2013 and 2015...

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