Pakistan: Skewed Land Holding And Denial Of Right To Shelter
AHRC-ETC-023-2012
July 19, 2012
An article by Altaf Hussain published by the Asian Human Rights Commission
Pakistan: Skewed Land Holding And Denial Of Right To Shelter
By Altaf Hussain
Imbibed in the colonial policies of British Raj prior the partition of India, 1947, whereby, in response to their support to British to suppress and rule the people; the local landlords, Pirs and Mirs, Chaudharis, Sardars and Maliks, were awarded large chunks of land and their fiefdoms were patronized by the British in today’s Pakistan. The ultimate beneficiary of partition; (Pakistan), has been symbolized with large land holdings in the region giving landed aristocracy the maximum power and license to keep the majority of the people of this country poverty ridden, under the clutches of debt-bondage and ultimately in virtual serfdom.
There has been a close connection of skewed land holdings with the insecurity of right to shelter of majority of the population of Pakistan. Starting with some facts; according to recent estimates, 63 per cent of Pakistan’s population resides in rural areas, whereas, 44 per cent of the country’s workforce is engaged in agriculture. Notably, overwhelming majority, 80.84 per cent, of rural population lives in housing made of mud bricks and wood, 26 per cent households live in one-room shelter; 69 per cent use wood/charcoal as fuel for cooking and only 21 per cent have access to tap water and 33 per cent have no toilet facility. The above mentioned housing arrangement too is not legally owned by these people.
The right to housing
or shelter is recognized universally as one of the basic
human rights. Article 25 of the 1948 UN Declaration of Human
Rights proclaims and renders it mandatory for the member
countries that they should provide their citizens with
adequate housing.
More importantly, the Constitution of
Pakistan has also incorporated clauses dealing with the
right to shelter and adequate housing to its citizens in
line with the International commitments. Article 38 (D)
makes the state responsible for providing basic necessities
of life to the citizens such as food, clothing, housing,
education and health irrespective of sex, caste, creed or
race.
However, the implementation of the rights enshrined in the Constitution is seldom materialized owing to the fact that politics and law making is dominated by the landlord-cum politicians who have kept the landless peasants and tenants at arm’s length and tightened their own grip over the system.
The right to shelter and adequate housing
is one of the major aggravations in the lives of people in
rural areas of Sindh and Baluchistan and Southern belt of
Punjab in particular given the fact that these areas are
characterized with large land holdings and age old rigid
tribal system. According some estimates the landed elite
constitutes only five per cent of the total people connected
with agriculture but they own 64 per cent of the total
agriculture land.
Brewing from this skewed nature of land
ownership peasants and rural workers have been facing
exclusion from the mainstream, thereby culminating in their
un-ending social vulnerabilities. It is in this condition
that peasants are pushed into the quagmire of
marginalization where they do not have access to right of
adequate housing or shelter and come across multiple
problems like, sexual harassment, no right to unionization,
and are slapped with the debt-bondage.
Lack of ownership of the houses they live in makes them more vulnerable to exploitation by the feudals. “Dependence for shelter/housing on landlord perpetuates the vulnerability of the poor that ranges from the extremes of forced eviction to the bonded labour”, says Karamat Ali well known labour and human rights activist.
The housing insecurity, therefore,
continues to be used as an instrument of social
marginalization, deprivation of the poor and downtrodden
people. “It is this insecurity rural people are grappled
with that they even face the forced expulsion by the feudals
from their villages and agriculture lands and some times
with out any substantial reason”, he adds.
“The
insecurity of housing seen from the perspective of forced
eviction of people from villages in Sindh particularly is
the result of feudal dominance”, says Punhal Saryo a
peasant and human rights activist.
People even can not dare think of the legal entitlements of their houses where there is feudal dominance. “We even can not imagine asking for the legal ownership of the houses we are living in, because our landlord can throw us out of the village”, says scared Wali Muhammad from Sanghar a district dominated by feudal structure.
It’s important that at this juncture of time concrete steps need to be taken by the government to abide by the provisions of the constitution. The successive governments have been playing on the tunes of feudal-cum politicians and bureaucracy and denying people their fundamental and constitutional rights.
Also the
residential rights or housing security of the people living
in rural areas who constitute the majority of our population
could not be realized unless land reforms are not introduced
in Pakistan, especially in the areas with large land
holdings. It is now necessary for the state and its
subsidiary organs to honor their constitutional
obligations.
Moreover, all human settlements that are
situated on the state land of any kind held by any civil and
non civil government departments/institutions, in rural area
should be registered. Also formal land entitlements should
be extended to the shelter less settlers, particularly to
the women folks of the local
communities.
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The AHRC is not responsible for the views shared in this article, which do not necessarily reflect its own.
About the Author: Altaf Hussain is a researcher at PILER and can be reached at pinjaro1@gmail.com
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