Lupa Kata Sandi? Klik di Sini

atau Masuk melalui

Belum Memiliki Akun Daftar di Sini


atau Daftar melalui

Sudah Memiliki Akun Masuk di Sini

Konfirmasi Email

Kami telah mengirimkan link aktivasi melalui email ke rudihamdani@gmail.com.

Klik link aktivasi dan dapatkan akses membaca 2 artikel gratis non Laput di koran dan Majalah Tempo

Jika Anda tidak menerima email,
Kirimkan Lagi Sekarang

Tricks to Hijack People's Land

Translator

TEMPO

Editor

Laila Afifa

6 January 2024 14:58 WIB

TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - The government makes things easier to obtain compensation for national projects. A sweet deal riddled with traps.

There is no end to the tricks up the sleeve of the Joko Widodo regime to hijack land owned by the people. After failing to evict residents of Rempang Island, Batam in the Riau Islands, from land ready to be transformed into an ecotourism project, the government changed the rules of the game: it offered a sweet deal that could well leave a bitter taste in the mouth.

Jokowi issued Presidential Regulation (Perpres) No. 78/2023 on the Handling of Social Impact Towards Land Reserved for National Development. The ruling, signed on December 8, 2023, revised Presidential Regulation No. 62/2018. The new ruling could very well be a bulldozer ready to tamp downland owned by the people to turn into a commercial zone in the wrapping of a national strategic project.

The new ruling, among other things, offers reimbursement to people evicted from their land. Requirements to obtain the compensation, in the form of a package or relocation, were also eased. Compensation would be provided to anyone who had sat on a plot of land for a minimum of 10 years.

At a glance, the new regulation looked like it was advantageous to Rempang residents who had lived on the land for decades, from parent to offspring. All the while, the Rempang residents had no land ownership documents because the government kept putting the paperwork off. In the old ruling, only residents showing proof of ownership had the right to compensation. With the new ruling, Rempang residents holding no land certificate now had the chance to also obtain compensation.

The problem was, besides oversimplifying matters, the new regulation is riddled with hidden ‘land mines’. The people of Rempang had previously refused to be evicted by the Rempang Eco-City project not for purely compensation reasons. They had fought tooth and nail to stay on their plots because they refused to be uprooted from their customary land and the accompanying ancestral traditions. Thus, whatever sweet compensation was offered was obviously an erroneous solution to this agrarian conflict.

For certain residents who refused to budge for compensation, the new regulation also held potential hidden traps. The central issue is, that the minimum 10-year residential requirement for eligibility for compensation is still subject to adjustment by the governor. In other words, even if residents could provide proof of residence, the government through governor policy could simply grab the plot with no compensation whatsoever.

And it is not only residents of Rempang who are now vulnerable to eviction. The new regulation is an umbrella ruling for the provision of land for all projects labeled national projects. Such a legalistic approach, namely the demand to show certification, has made people vulnerable to eviction from all the land of their ancestors. Meanwhile, only a small handful of customary land is yet acknowledged and recognized by the government.

As noted by the non-profit Customary Region Registration Body, of a total 1,336 customary region maps (comprising 26.9 million hectares), only 219 customary region maps (3.73 hectares) have obtained recognition and the acknowledgment of regional administrations. In other words, there are still a total of 23.17 million hectares of customary land as yet unrecognized.

Using Presidential Regulation No. 78/2023, customary lands as yet unacknowledged by the government are land plots owned by the state. Under the pretext of national projects, the government can with ease give up land belonging to the ‘state’ to third parties, alias investors. This ruling obviously goes against the grain of Constitutional Court decision No. 35/2012, which separates customary forest from state forestry.

But at the moment, what does the government care about Constitutional Court decisions?

Read the Complete Story in Tempo English Magazine



10th World Water Forum: Jokowi Hopes for Stronger Collaboration at the Welcoming Dinner

6 menit lalu

10th World Water Forum: Jokowi Hopes for Stronger Collaboration at the Welcoming Dinner

Indonesian President Jokowi expresses hope that the spirit of togetherness at the 10th World Water Forum welcoming dinner can bolster collaboration.


Dinner Reception Starts Jokowi's Agenda for 10th World Water Forum

19 menit lalu

Dinner Reception Starts Jokowi's Agenda for 10th World Water Forum

A dinner reception at Garuda Wisnu Kencana Cultural Park started the agenda of Indonesia's President Jokowi for the10th World Water Forum.


Jokowi Leaves for Bali to Attend 10th World Water Forum Summit

37 menit lalu

Jokowi Leaves for Bali to Attend 10th World Water Forum Summit

Indonesia's President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) departed for Bali to attend the 10th World Water Forum Summit.


Today's Top 3 News: IA-CEPA Boosts Indonesia-Australia Trade by Up to 90%

1 hari lalu

Today's Top 3 News: IA-CEPA Boosts Indonesia-Australia Trade by Up to 90%

Here is the list of the top 3 news on Tempo English today.


Indonesia's Jokowi Revises Import Regulation to Prevent Piles at Ports, Here Are the Provisions

1 hari lalu

Indonesia's Jokowi Revises Import Regulation to Prevent Piles at Ports, Here Are the Provisions

Indonesian President Jokowi has revised the tightening import regulations previously issued by the Ministry of Trade.


Jokowi, Sri Mulyani Hold Meeting on Import Restrictions

2 hari lalu

Jokowi, Sri Mulyani Hold Meeting on Import Restrictions

President Joko Widodo or Jokowi held an internal meeting on Friday afternoon to discuss the policy on import restrictions.


Jokowi, David Hurley Discuss Efforts to Enhance People-to-people Ties

2 hari lalu

Jokowi, David Hurley Discuss Efforts to Enhance People-to-people Ties

Indonesian President Jokowi and Australian Governor General David Hurley held a bilateral meeting today, May 17, at Bogor Presidential Palace.


Jokowi Congratulates Lawrence Wong on Inauguration as Singapore PM

2 hari lalu

Jokowi Congratulates Lawrence Wong on Inauguration as Singapore PM

Jokowi thanks former PM Lee Hsien Loong for his contributions to strengthening bilateral relations between Indonesia and Singapore.


Jokowi Welcomes Visit from Australia's Governor-General David Hurley in Bogor Palace

2 hari lalu

Jokowi Welcomes Visit from Australia's Governor-General David Hurley in Bogor Palace

Jokowi receives a state visit from Australian Governor General David Hurley at the Bogor Presidential Palace on Friday morning, May 17, 2024.


The Risk with Free Lunch Program

2 hari lalu

The Risk with Free Lunch Program

A number of Jokowi's ministers are busy producing simulations of the free lunch program. There is a risk it will become a cash cow.