Con el telón de fondo de la guerra de Ucrania, esta edición de Qué leer repasa tres artículos que exploran diferentes conflictos territoriales menos conocidos, todos ellos en Asia.
Por: Aimée Martínez Vega*
Los intereses de las empresas mineras e hidroeléctricas, los paramilitares y las guerrillas disidentes, y el monocultivo de la coca son piezas de la violencia estructural que expulsa a las familias campesinas de sus tierras. Sin respuesta del Estado colombiano, la crisis humanitaria que ocurre en el municipio de Ituango, con 4 mil familias desplazadas en el último mes, expone la problemática.
Un indígena Mayagna observa una zona despalada por colonos en la Reserva de Bosawás. Foto: Carlos Herrera | Confidencial
The debate about compensation of former white farmers in Zimbabwe continues to rage. The compensation agreement signed in July agreed a total amount of US$3.5 billion to pay for ‘improvements’ to the land that was expropriated. After 20 years of discussion, this was a major step forward. However, there seem to be multiple positions on the agreement and little consensus, along with much misunderstanding. However, some things are happening, and a joint resource mobilisation committee has been established with technical support from the World Bank and others.
Foto: Alex Garcia
La Corporación Jurídica Yira Castro de la mano con las víctimas y reclamantes de tierras del departamento, construyeron un documento que devela cómo la negación violenta del derecho a la tierra ha sido la cuestión de fondo de la estrategia de despojo forzado en esa zona del país.
For hundreds of years, pastoralists in Ethiopia’s lowlands have relied on strong customary land tenure systems to survive. Historically, legislation has failed to clearly define communal rights to rangelands, and the specific roles and responsibilities for both communities and local government to administer and manage these resources. This legislative deficiency prevented pastoral communities from fully exercising their constitutional rights to land (Ethiopia’s Constitution broadly recognizes pastoral communities’ right to access land and prevents their involuntary displacement).