FACT
SHEET
Land grabbing by the Military
Released by PML
(N) Secretary Information Muhammed Siddique-ul-Farooque
at a press conference held on May 17, 2003 at PML (N) Camp Office, Islamabad
One of the anti-people measures that the present
military rulers adopted soon after toppling the democratically elected
government of Nawaz Sharif in October 1999 was the expansion of their land
grabbing operations that they had already institutionalized during previous
military regimes. Those regimes
had authorized unbelievable perks for serving and retired military officers,
including fifty acres of valuable agricultural land for every general promoted
from the rank of major general.
The Musharraf regime is not content with that.
It has been trying to grab more land in the most fertile areas of
Punjab, particularly in Okara, Pirowal and Khanewal areas.
This fact sheet is designed to prove that the current campaign of
dislodging tenants from military farms is totally illegal, unauthorized,
tyrannical and in violation of the directives of an elected Prime Minister.
No legal right
Punjab Board of Revenue had leased out large tracts
of agricultural land, tilled by tenants and their forefathers for over 80
years, to military farms and other organizations like Punjab Seed Corporation.
The leases have already expired, but the military instead of vacating
the land, have publicly claimed the ownership of these lands.
The military authorities have been pressing the Board of Revenue from
time to time to transfer the ownership of these lands to the military.
The latest move for the permanent transfer of over 20,000 acres of land
in Okara and Lahore was made by Ministry of Defense in its letter dated
February 1, 2000 – just three months after the Musharraf coup. The Board
refused to do that in its letter dated April 13, 2001.
Prime Minister’s Orders
These moves were in direct violation of Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif’s orders. He
had decided in 1999 to grant ownership of these lands to the farmers already
tilling them as tenants of the provincial government. The decision was in line of his policy to revolutionize
agriculture with empowering small farmers.
He had already distributed 160 thousand acres of governmemnt lands
among the landless haris of Sindh, and in August 1999 he ordered to transfer
the land under military control in Okara to the sitting tenants.
This order, like other beneficial measures of Nawaz Sharif, including
the seven marla scheme, Apna Ghar Project, remission of HBFC loans for widows
and orphans and the free treatment centers for kidney patients, was overturned
by the Musharraf regime.
False promises by Musharraf
Ironically, General Musharraf himself promised at a
public meeting at Faisalabad that state lands would be distributed among
sitting tenants. He made the promise in order to secure voter support in his
illegal referendum of April 2001. Musharraf’s present defense minister Rao
Sikandar Iqbal made the same promise when he was running for election from
Okara. All these promises were
false and mere deception, because the military operation to forcefully grab
the Okara lands had already been launched as is evident from correspondence
between military and the Board of Revenue.
Attempt to end tenancy
In June 2000, the administration of Okara Military
Farms – the largest of the many state farms spread over 17,000 acres told
the tenants that they would no longer be considered as tenants, but instead
would have to sign limited-year contracts.
They were required to pay cash rent to military authorities instead of
harvest shares. The tenants
refused, because they knew that while tenancy laws protected them from
eviction they could be sacked any time as contract workers.
The contract form that they were asked to sign banned personal use of
trees and soil of the land, bound the contractor to loyal obedience to the
military officers, and made the contractor responsible for preventing crimes.
The slightest breach of the contract would lead to its cancellation.
It must be noted here that while the elected Prime
Minister made the poor peasants owners of property General Musharraf is
turning the tenants into slaves. Nawaz
Sharif provided them with means to earn their living, but Musharraf is
depriving them of their livelihood.
Reign of Terror
The refusal of the tenants to sign on their death
warrants led to launching of a reign of terror by the military authorities.
The tenants organized themselves under the banner of Anjuman Muzarain
Punjab, and their peaceful protest spread to Pirowal and Khanewal.
The military responded with unprecedented violence to intimidate the
tenants.
In
January 2002, Bashir Ahmed was shot and killed on the orders of Deputy
Director Renal Military Farms.
In May 2002, two tenants were killed in Dipalpur and
Pirowal.
Next month, a man and a woman in Pirowal died after
facing continuous siege by police.
On July 9, 2002, Rangers Director General Hussain
Mehdi called 105 representatives of the tenants for talks but threatened them
that if they did not sign contract forms, they would be taken to the border
and shot dead as RAW agents.
In August 2002, a man in Okara was killed by police
torture in custody, because the police had been directed to force tenants sign
Theka deeds at all costs.
The military authorities have set up private jails in
collusion with rangers and police where tenants are forced to sign contracts.
About 1700 FIRs have been registered with false criminal charges
against the tenants and their family members. School going girls are picked up
by military authorities forcing them to ask their parents yield to the
military demands. Electricity and water supply to many villages has been cut
off to add to the misery of the poor people.
Grand Feudal Design
All these measures are part of a grand design of land
grabbing and aligning the military with feudal elite of the country.
A large number of serving and retired military officers have been
allotted agricultural lands in southern Sindh and Punjab over the years under
the pretext of security of the border areas.
This is in addition to other unprecedented privileges institutionalized
by successive military regimes. Prime
Minister Junejo tried to curtail this trend with cutting down defense expenditure and tried to put generals and admirals in small
Suzuki cars in place of more luxurious Toyotas, and General Zia promptly
sacked him. Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif reserved state land for landless tenants and slum dwellers, distributed
160,000 acres out of it among Haris, and General Musharraf staged his coup.
The current campaign to acquire permanent ownership
of leased agricultural land by the military has no other motive than to
ultimately parcel out these valuable lands to the military officers for
personal use. The total area
under lease to military farms in various districts of Punjab amounts to
166,204 acres. The argument that
military control over this area is necessary due to proximity with the border
does not hold good except 1,450 acres lying in the district of Kasur. In fact,
like the posh defense housing societies in major cities, the military farms
set up on leased lands have no relation to the defense of the country.
The armed forces, collectively and individually, have
emerged as a feudal power with large land holdings, and they persist to usurp
land through seemingly institutionalized means. It may not be a coincidence that most Musharraf supporters in
national, provincial and district assemblies represent feudal families.
The administrators of military farms have also sought feudal support in
their current land grabbing campaign. For
instance, director general of Pakistan Rangers, who has the rank of a major
general, has been reported to have publicly warned the landed aristocracy with
the suggestion that their tenants would also be encouraged to agitate for
ownership rights if the military farms tenants were allowed proprietorship.
Tarnishing Image of Armed Forces
It is time that saner elements both in the civil
society and the armed forces should take notice of this situation that not
only is affecting the professional efficiency of the armed forces, but also
tarnishing its image. It is no
service to the nation and its security that the armed forces be deemed as a
land grabbing mafia trampling the rights of poor peasants. It would also be a grave setback to agricultural economy of
the country.
Pakistan Muslim League (N) is presenting these facts
before the people with the sole purpose of protecting the dignity and honor of
the Armed Forces. It is our
mission to revive the image of the armed forces as defense service.
Their only task is to defend the borders of the country and dedicate
all their energy and capability to this end.
Running agricultural farms, industrial units, banks and other financial
organizations or business concerns does fall in their domain.
Knowledgeable people are aware of the fact that rampant mismanagement
and corruption is found in the Army Welfare Trust, Fauji Foundation,
industrial units and the military farms.
The armed forces, as well as the nation, have
suffered not only huge financial loss, but also disgrace at the hand of a
mafia of serving and retired military officers indulging in land grabbing and
other business activities that have no relation with the defense of the
country. The excuse that military
farms are needed to provide fodder form the animals owned by the military is
untenable. The fodder can be
purchased through contractors like other commodities needed for the armed
forces.
We demand…
In pursuance of our mission to restore the image of
the armed forces, we demand that all generals and other officers of the armed
forces and Pakistan Rangers involved in land grabbing be tried for tarnishing
the reputation of the armed forces in the eyes of the nation as well as the
world community. There crime is
all the more serious because their activities are creating hatred between the
people and the armed forces that might lead to conflict.
We demand that the FIRs registered against tenants be
scrapped, police pickets around tenant villages by removed and all measures to
dislodge the tenants from their lands be stopped within 24 hours.
We demand that the August 1999 orders of Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif to grant proprietary rights to the tenants of military
farms be implemented forthwith.
We demand that a high level impartial inquiry
committee, enjoying the confidence of the Parliament and general public, be
formed immediately to probe into land allotment to serving and retired
military officers and all the businesses and industries run by the armed
forces under various trusts and institutions including the military farms, and
the findings of the committee be made public within three months.