An independent United Nations human rights expert proposed a set of measures 
today to guide large-scale international land purchases, known as �land 
grabbing,� ahead of upcoming negotiations by the �Group of Eight� (G8) 
industrialized nations on responsible investment in agriculture.
The UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, Olivier De Schutter, identified 
the practice of international investors buying or leasing large amounts of 
farmland in developing countries as one of the new trends to emerge out of last 
year�s global food crisis which needs to be addressed.

Although transactions can be opportunities for development, with the potential 
for creating infrastructure and employment, increasing public revenues and 
improving farmers� access to technologies and credit, they also have negative 
effects on the right to food as well as other human rights, noted Mr. De 
Schutter.

The eviction of people who have informally cultivated the land for decades, the 
loss of access to land for indigenous peoples and pastoral populations, and 
increased competition for water resources are some of the potential detrimental 
impacts.

�These principles and measures are intended to assist both investors and host 
governments in the negotiation and implementation of large-scale land leases 
and acquisitions,� Mr. De Schutter told reporters in Brussels, Belgium.

He said that the proposed measures are meant to ensure that such investments 
work for the benefit of the population including the most vulnerable groups in 
the host country, with obtaining the right to food as the ultimate goal.

�From a human rights perspective, the negotiations leading to investment 
agreements should be conducted in full transparency and with the participation 
of the local communities whose access to land and other productive resources 
may be affected as a result of the arrival of an investor,� stressed the 
Special Rapporteur.

�Any shifts in land use should in principle be made with the free, prior and 
informed consent of the local communities concerned.�

Other measures included arrangements in investment contracts that obliged 
foreign investors to provide farmers with access to credit and improved 
technologies, and the establishment and promotion of farming systems that are 
labour intensive.

�A multilateral approach could avoid beggar-thy-neighbour policies, with 
countries competing against each other for the arrival of foreign direct 
investment and thus lowering the requirements imposed on foreign investors,� he 
argued.

Mr. De Schutter � who reports to the Geneva-based Human Rights Council in an 
independent, unpaid capacity � stressed that land not only represents the main 
means to access and procure food for millions, it is also critical to the 
identity of certain peoples and communities.

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