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Released By:
McMullan
The Australian Government will provide $54 million for a Pacific Land Program to support governments in the region that wish to strengthen or improve their land systems.
'This funding, which was announced in the recent federal budget, will assist governments dealing with complex issues relating to land policy reform,' said Parliamentary Secretary for International Development Assistance, Bob McMullan.
Mr McMullan said Australian assistance will be guided by two fundamental principles: first, Australia will only support reforms that recognise the continuing importance of customary tenure; and, second, land policy reform must be driven by Pacific island governments and communities, not by donors.
Mr McMullan is in Vanuatu for a two-day Pacific land policy conference. The Making Land Work conference will be attended by government ministers, officials, landowners and other groups from around the Pacific region with a stake or interest in land issues.
'Pacific governments are under pressure to reconcile new and competing interests relating to land ownership and land use with the customary systems that have offered their people a form of safety net for countless generations,' Mr McMullan said.
'These pressures include new technologies, rapid population growth and social change. Our program is designed to provide support to governments undertaking reforms to strengthen and improve their land systems and deal with these pressures.'
The Pacific Land Program will increase the skills and knowledge of people working in land departments and non-government organisations. It will include assistance for dispute resolution and helping customary owners negotiate on a more even basis with investors and developers. The program will initially provide support to Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, Solomon Islands and Timor-Leste. Assistance will be provided at a regional level for education and training and to help countries respond to problems associated with growing urbanisation such as squatter settlements.
'Uncertainty over land ownership and land use constrains social and economic development and reduces the prospects of greater investment and higher living standards,' said Mr McMullan. 'It can be a trigger for wider conflict, and conflict tends to exacerbate poverty.'
Mr McMullan will also launch a two-volume publication Making Land Work which was prepared by the Australian Agency for International Development, AusAID. The publication gives an overview of issues that countries are likely to face if they choose to reform their land policies and institutions.
'This is an excellent resource for policy-makers,' said Mr McMullan. 'It draws lessons from international experience around the Pacific and will stimulate ideas on policy options.'
Media Contacts: Sabina Curatolo (Mr McMullan's Office) 0400 318 205
Elizabeth James (AusAID) 0407 280 188