Photo: Felicity Thompson/IRIN |
When Sia Bona's father died, she and her mother lost access to his land |
In Sierra Leone, more than 20 percent of households are headed by women, and in over a third of these cases this is due to the death of her husband according to a 2011 food security study by the World Food Programme. Sierra Leone’s conflict was set off in part due to highly unequal distribution of natural resources, including land. During the war, which ended in 2002, two thirds of the population was displaced, and those who returned home often found their farmlands destroyed or occupied.
Little impact
Musa Tamba Sam, Member of Parliament for the remote Kailahun district bordering Liberia, believes the 2007 Devolution of Estate Act is a step in the right direction. “[It] came about because women were marginalized in terms of property. The culture considered the woman as property, and she is amongst the things shared out by the family.”
The situation of most rural women has changed little, if at all. “It’s still not really possible for a woman in the rural areas to be a landowner,” said Sam.
The Act is often ignored by paramount chiefs, or not recognized by relatives who stand to gain under customary law, and in many areas and instances it is overridden by traditional laws for community land. The belief that land exists for the dead, the living and the unborn, and so cannot be permanently alienated is still strongly held in many areas.
According to a study led by the Italian non-profit, Cooperazione Internazionale (COOPI), three-quarters of land in the areas they surveyed was either family or communal property.
Actionaid’s Gatundu noted that practice tends to follow customary over statutory law even in countries that have included women’s land rights in their national constitution.
As a result of losing their land, many women and their families are pushed into hunger, children drop out of school, and families are forced to live on the street according to a COOPI study in 2012. Others must marry one of their husband’s male relatives to survive.
“Women use the majority of their earnings to pay for school fees, medical bills and other basic family needs,” said Roisin Cavanagh, manager of the Women’s Property and Land Rights project at COOPI. “So if women have insecure tenure, it means this income is at risk if their relationship with the man breaks down or he dies.”
Winning women’s votes
Separate to the Act, the government is also working on reforming current land policy, which will direct all future land legislation. Many women’s rights activists are disappointed with it, saying it does little to protect women’s rights to land and women were not properly consulted.
Sierra Leone’s 1991 constitution states that all persons are equal under the law, “unless customary law says otherwise”. In 2007 the country’s Constitutional Review Commission recommended that this section be abolished, but constitutional reform has yet to come. “It doesn’t matter how good the land policy is, [if this clause is not removed, nothing will change],” said Brima.
“At the moment the discourse on land in Sierra Leone is very much in the private space,” said COOPI’s Cavanagh. “People talk about land as a private issue, so it’s around the family… but it needs to be moved from the private sphere to the human rights sphere.”
In June 2012, COOPI and the United Nation’s Development Programme (UNDP)led the first national conference on women and land, bringing together women from across the country, activists, government and NGOs. Cavanagh hopes the conference will spark a countrywide women’s land rights movement.
Brima says now is a good time to open a national debate on land ownership, and hopes politicians will begin to see women as an important constituency ahead of general elections later this year. She noted that “This could be an easy win for politicians seeking to win the female vote.”