*https://www.insideindonesia.org/a-150-year-old-obstacle-to-land-rights
<https://www.insideindonesia.org/a-150-year-old-obstacle-to-land-rights>*

A 150-year old obstacle to land rights Written by AHMAD DHIAULHAQ & WARD
BERENSCHOT  Print
<https://www.insideindonesia.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3667:a-150-year-old-obstacle-to-land-rights&catid=210&Itemid=101&tmpl=component&print=1&layout=default&page=>

Protestors calling for land reform, Jakarta, September 2019 / Dhemas
Reviyanto / ANTARA FOTO
Published:Sep 18, 2020
Tagged under

   - Land Rights <https://www.insideindonesia.org/topics/57-land-rights/tag>

Ahmad Dhiaulhaq & Ward Berenschot

This year marks the 150th birthday of one of the most consequential laws in
Indonesian history. In 1870 the Dutch adopted the *Agrarische wet *or
undang undang agraria. This law contains the provision that would become
known as the *domein verklaring*: ‘all land not held under proven
ownership, shall be deemed the domain of the state’. With this ‘domain
declaration’ the Dutch colonial rulers claimed ownership of most of the
land in Java. This ownership would later extend beyond Java. This domain
declaration is important because it has facilitated the colonial
exploitation of Indonesia by weakening Indonesian control of their land.
Western plantation and mining companies are able to acquire access to land
without having to buy it from rural Indonesians.

The *domein verklaring* is also important because it lives on. The
principle established by the *domein verklaring* – that state interests are
prioritised over the land rights of Indonesian citizens – still guides the
character of land tenure in most parts of Indonesia. The state’s outsized
control over land still bedevils Indonesia’s politics and economy.
The *domein verklaring* lives on

When the Dutch were thrown out in 1945, the newly independent government
maintained the state’s control over land. For example, article 33 of the
1945 constitution states that ‘the earth and water and natural resources
contained therein are controlled by the state and used for the greatest
prosperity of the people’. This article contained a new legal concept of
‘state right of control’ (hak menguasai negara) that provided a new legal
basis of state control over land and natural resources.

In 1960 Indonesia come close to abolishing the *domein verklaring *with the
adoption of the Basic Agrarian Law (BAL). This law explicitly aimed to
address the injustices created by colonial laws. This law also recognised
customary land rights.

The New Order regime (1965-1998), however, changed course and reinstated
the state’s control over land. The New Order again prioritised state
control over the customary land rights of rural communities through
reinforcing the principle of hak menguasai negara – claiming that the state
should use the land ‘for the welfare of the nation’.

In 1967 the regime adopted a new forestry law reintroducing the *domein
verklaring* principle. This law designated 143 million hectares – almost 75
per cent of Indonesia’s territory – as forest land (‘kawasan hutan’).
Suharto decreed that this land was controlled by the state (via the
Ministry of Forestry), and could not be owned by Indonesian citizens.
A land rights demonstration in Jakarta, 2004./ Wikimedia

While the total amount has since been reduced, the Indonesian state still
designates about 63 per cent
<https://www.sitinurbaya.com/status-hutan-indonesia-the-state-of-indonesias-forests-2018>of
Indonesia’s territory
<https://www.sitinurbaya.com/status-hutan-indonesia-the-state-of-indonesias-forests-2018>
as
forest estate. Much like its colonial predecessor, the Indonesian state is
using this control over land to award land concessions to companies. The
government’s data
<https://news.detik.com/berita/d-3952129/menteri-lhk-beberkan-hasil-atasi-ketimpangan-penguasaan-hutan>
shows
that until 2017, 95.76 per cent of forest concessions were allocated for
corporations, while only 4.14 per cent were under community management.
These concessions give companies the legal right to take the land away from
local people living and working on that land. In that sense, the *domein
verklaring* lives on.
A troublesome heritage

This restriction on land ownership continues to have a pervasive impact on
the quality of life of many Indonesians, as the roots of conflicts, social
inequality and poverty.

The widespread land conflicts affecting all Indonesian provinces are one
such example. Throughout Indonesia rural communities are engaging in
demonstrations, land occupations and lawsuits to protest against oil palm,
mining, agri-business and forestry companies taking their land. Local
newspapers are full of such reports: according to the latest count by
Konsorsium
Pembaruan Agraria
<http://kpa.or.id/publikasi/baca/laporan/30/Catahu_2018:_Masa_Depan_Reforma_Agraria_Melampaui_Tahun_Politik/>,
there are currently 410 such conflicts mainly in Sumatera, Java and
Kalimantan, involving 87 thousand families.

At the root of these conflicts is the control of the Indonesian state over
large tracts of land and the weak recognition of traditional land rights.
As rural Indonesians struggle to obtain or prove their legal ownership of
land, it has been relatively easy for incoming large-scale plantation or
mining companies with concession permits to claim that land. The
consequences are protracted conflicts and significant local economic and
social damage.

The state’s control over land also prevents upward mobility. A certificate
proving land ownership can enable people to access credit from banks;
without proof of land ownership, such loans are more difficult to obtain.
In this sense the state’s control over land is having a negative economic
impact: restricted land ownership is preventing people from obtaining loans
that they could then use to start a business, invest in agricultural
production, including the purchase of farm equipment and so on.

The state’s control over land is also making people poorer in another way:
it is preventing people from benefiting from the natural resources on or
under that land. For example, inhabitants of forest areas often find
themselves in conflict with forestry officials over the right to extract
timber and non-timber forest products to fulfil their needs. These
officials invoke the state’s control over forest land to claim that only
they can fell and sell trees growing on forest land, something which
inhabitants resent and consider unfair. Not unfrequently people are
arrested for logging trees on land which, in their mind, is theirs
<https://tirto.id/warga-adat-sumbar-tebang-pohon-terancam-penjara-apa-yang-keliru-cGha>.
In a similar, manner state officials regularly prevent
<https://www.insideindonesia.org/hunger-and-culture-in-west-papua> people
from engaging in mining, cultivation or harvesting on ‘forest’ land.
Half-hearted reforms

This damage to the well-being of rural Indonesians caused by the state’s
control of land has not gone unnoticed. Over the years, activists and
(some) law-makers have engaged in various attempts to abolish the *domein
verklaring* principles and to curtail the excessive state-control over land
and natural resources. A prominent example of a reform initiative was the
adoption of the decree of the People’s Consultative Assembly (TAP MPR) No.
IX/2001 on agrarian reform and natural resource management. The motion
aimed to give people more control over land by pushing the agrarian reform
agenda, however his initiative, among others, has still not yet been
implemented.

In 2012 a lawsuit filed by the non-government organization (NGO) AMAN led
to a famous constitutional court ruling that mandated the state to formally
recognise communal land rights. In theory thereby altering the state’s
control over forest land. However, again, the implementation of this ruling
remained limited. In 2020 the formal recognition of customary forests
remains restricted to 65 customary law communities and covers only a very
small area of 35,150 hectares.

In recent years, the Jokowi administration has implemented TORA (Tanah
Objek Reforma Agrarian: Land Object Program of Agrarian Reform), an
ambitious program to hand out land titles and redistribute land to
communities. Yet the program avoids the most vexing issue. So far these
land titles are mostly given to people whose land ownership is
well-documented and (mostly) located outside forest areas, thereby not
affecting large parts of Indonesia.

Over the last twenty years Indonesia’s parliament has adopted several new
laws that have further cemented the state’s control over land, including
the natural resources law of 2004, the plantation law of 2004 and the
mining law of 2009.
Farmers protest in Jakarta, 2004 / Wikimedia

In this vein, the proposed Omnibus Law, which is currently being debated by
the Indonesian Parliament (DPR), seeks to extend the land leases for
companies to 90 years and aims to set up a state institution (the bank
tanah) with the mandate to acquire, manage and distribute land to the
benefits of investors and state projects.

In short, despite a long history of activism and legal reforms, the
expansive control of the state over land has barely shifted.
Land and oligarchy

Why have these reform efforts been so unsuccessful? Apart from the
considerable complexities of designing effective land reform it must be
acknowledged that a structural problem exists. The primary reason why
the *domein
verklaring* continues to have influence is because political and economic
elites profit considerably from the state’s control over land.

During the Suharto era, the ruling elites accumulated their wealth
<https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20200401002031-20-488918/bob-hasan-kayu-dan-keistimewaan-dari-cendana>
by
cooperating with domestic and international logging companies. Since the
fall of Suharto, corruption cases regularly show that political and
bureaucratic elites are using the state’s capacity to award land
concessions to make large amounts of money. Frequently an elected district
head, governor or DPR member is found to have used his influence to direct
concessions to companies owned by family members
<https://thegeckoproject.org/the-making-of-a-palm-oil-fiefdom-7e1014e8c342> or
friends. Available surveys
<https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5728/indonesia.96.0099#metadata_info_tab_contents>
of
the sources of wealth of ruling elites illustrate the importance of the
state’s control over land for Indonesia’s elites. The personal wealth of
many political leaders themselves, stem from natural resource extraction
and palm oil companies
<https://www.tuk.or.id/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Buku-Saku-Kuasa-Taipan-Kelapa-Sawit-di-Indonesia-final-banget.pdf>
and
rests on the concessions to land granted by the state.

The sad irony is that those with the power to enact laws to change the
state’s control over land have the greatest interests in maintaining it.
Will the *domein verklaring* be abolished?

This year it is not only 150 years since the Dutch adopted the *domein
verklaring*. It is also (almost) twenty years since Indonesian
parliamentarians passed the TAP MPR resolution calling for land reform.
Considering the observed negative impacts to the land rights and wellbeing
of millions of Indonesians, it would be fitting to celebrate the *domein
verklaring’s *150th birthday by finally abolishing this colonial heritage.

*Ahmad Dhiaulhaq (**[email protected]
<[email protected]>) i**s a postdoctoral researcher at KITLV/Royal
Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies. Ward
Berenschot (**[email protected] <[email protected]>) **is
professor in Comparative Political Anthropology at the University of
Amsterdam and a senior researcher at KITLV.*
Inside Indonesia 141: Jul-Sep 2020

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