70418 AFGHANISTAN KABUL: URBAN LAND IN CRISIS A Policy Note September 13, 2005 Energy and Infrastructure Unit South Asia Region Table of Contents INTRODUCTION.............................................................................................................. iv EXECUTIVE SUMMARY................................................................................................ vi CHAPTER 1: KABUL URBAN DEVELOPMENT: CITY IN CRISIS ............................ 1 A Current Urban Special Structure 1 B. Action Plan of for the Development of Kabul 13 C. The need for a new approach to Planning and Regulations 16 CHAPTER 2: LAND TENURE REGULARIZATION IN INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS OF KABUL ....................................................................................................................... 19 A. Background and Objectives 19 B. The Current Policy Stance 19 C. Urban Land Tenure Initiatives 21 D. The Nature and Extent of Urban Land Tenure Insecurity and Irregularity 23 E. Issues in Tenure Regularization 24 CHAPTER 3: RESOLUTION OF PROPERTY RIGHTS DISPUTES IN URBAN AREAS: RETHINKING THE ORTHODOXIES............................................................. 29 A. Volume of Property Disputes 29 B The Subject of Property Disputes 35 D. Official and Unofficial Documentation in Disputes 42 E. Governance Efforts and Issues 44 F. The Special Property Court .............................................................................. 47 G. Formal Versus Informal Mechanisms 50 H Conclusions and Policy Implications 53 CHAPTER 4: CONCLUSIONS ....................................................................................... 60 Annex 1: The Housing Typology of Kabul....................................................................... 61 Annex 2: Terms of Reference for the Preparation of Kabul Development Plan............... 66 Annex 3: Collated Information on Five Sample Gozars in Kabul City ............................ 73 Annex 4 Analysis of Property Dispute Cases ................................................................. 79 Annex 5: Acquisition of Building Plots ........................................................................... 82 Annex 6: Acquisition of Government Built Apartments .................................................. 85 Annex 7 The Special Land Disputes Resolution Court.................................................... 89 Annex 8: Decrees Relating to the Special Land Disputes Court and its Clients, Returnees ……………………………………………………………………………………92 Annex 9: Saranwali, the Attorney-General’s Office in Kabul Province........................... 98 Annex 10 Case Study: Property Matters in Siah Sang Gozar ........................................ 104 ii Tables Table 1.1 Distribution of the Housing Stock by Type……………………………..…….. 5 Table 3.1 Typology of Property Disputes in Kabul………………………….……..........39 Table 3.2 Entitlement Documents in Sample Gozars by Percentage…………………….41 Table 3.3 Source of Cases Brought to Special Land Disputes Court………….................47 Figures Figure 1.1 Regulations and National Incomes…………………………………….............4 Figure 1.2 Kabul – Map of Formal and Informal Residential Settlements………………………………………………………………………..……....6 Figure 1.3 Example of Informal Settlement Developed on Agricultural Land……............7 Figure 1.4 The Built-up Area of Kabul and the Constraints Represented by Topography………………………………………………………………………….......10 Figure 1.5 Kabul - Average Built-up Density Compared to Other Cities of the World…………………………………………………………………………………….11 Figure 1.6 Kabul – Map of Population Densities………………………………………...12 Figure 1.7 Kabul – Density Profile in Built-up Area…………………………….………13 Figure 1.8 Comparison between Land Use Efficiency of a Detached House and Courtyard House……………………………………………………….………….….....18 . Boxes Box 3.1 Den Dollar – A Customary Settlement in Kabul……………………….….…....29 Box 3.2 The Sharpur Eviction ……………………………….…………….……….…....30 Box 3.3 Threat & Collusion in the Establishment of New Housing………….………....34 Box 3.4 Statutory Evidence of Property Ownership …………….………………….…...42 Box 3.5 The Legal Definition of Government land (State Properties)……….………………………………….……………………………………45 Box 3.6 New Law Seeking to Control Allocation of State Properties ……………….….46 Box 3.7 Legislation Used by the Special Land Disputes Court …………………….….. 49 Abbreviations iii AGCHO Afghanistan Geodesy & Cartography Head Office IRA Islamic Republic of Afghanistan JRC Judicial Reform Commission KM Kabul Municipality MUDH Ministry of Urban Development and Housing SLD Special Land Dispute (Court) iv KABUL: URBAN LAND IN CRISIS A Policy Note INTRODUCTION Afghanistan is one of the poorest and longest suffering countries among members of the World Bank, and has been ravaged by chronic conflict and political instability. Afghanistan’s infrastructure has been destroyed or degraded; its human resource base severely depleted; and its social capital eroded. Despite existing public administration structures, the majority of state institutions are only beginning to function effectively, and the economy and society have become fragmented. Despite being hampered by limited capacity and a difficult security situation in many parts of the country, the Government has improved the quality of governance and decision-making both at the center and in the provinces. It has gained widespread international recognition and national legitimacy. The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (IRA) has put forward a compelling vision and strategy for national reconstruction embodied in its “Securing Afghanistan’s Future – Accomplishments and the Strategic Path Forward� (2004). One of the most challenging issues with which the IRA is coping is that of the urban sector, characterized by rapid urban growth owing to natural population increase and an enormous influx of returning refugees and displaced people. The country’s total population of 22 million is growing at an overall growth rate of close to 3 per cent per year. Recent annual rates of urban growth are close to 13% with an expectation that this will decline to 5% with improving political stability. Associated shortages of urban services abound. The challenge is all the more daunting as a result of the backlog of land and housing needs caused by a combination of years of turmoil, a deteriorated housing stock, and a rigid master planning system. The purpose of this report is to provide policy guidance to the Government on how to manage three of the most important aspects of urban land management: i) development of urban areas using contemporary techniques of planning and regulation, , and ii) the regularization of tenure in informal areas and iii) land rights dispute resolution. All three issues are intertwined since the regularization of tenure depends, in part, on the capacity to resolve land rights disputes, and the implementation of a realistic and affordable urban development plan requires a stable legal framework to establish land use rights. The rectification of the three issues is a necessary but not sufficient remedy for creating well function land and housing markets, a topic beyond the scope of this report. The main field work for the study was preceded by a scoping mission to Kabul in April 2004 during which a stakeholder workshop was held to identify the key issues facing the lives of Afghan urban dwellers. The findings of the workshop confirmed the importance of secure access to urban land, ability to resolve land disputes and the need for improved basic urban services provided within a rational urban development framework. iv This report was prepared by a team composed of Robin Rajack, Liz Wily and Alain Bertaud, under the leadership of Richard Beardmore during a field visit to Afghanistan on January 8-26, 2005. Peer review comments were provided by John W. Bruce and Klaus Deininger. Useful comments were also provided by William Byrd and Sam Maimbo. A background paper was prepared by the Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit (AREU) on urban governance, urban management, and vulnerability in three provincial towns. Soraya Goga participated in the field missions and oversaw the preparation of the AREU study. The review of urban planning issues was carried out in discussions with the Government, the municipality of Kabul, UN Habitat and technical consultants supporting the implementation of several IDA-funded infrastructure projects. Jayashree Srinivasa assisted with report processing. The review of land dispute resolution focused on Kabul City. Agencies contributing to property dispute resolution were identified and discussions were held with the Maintenance and Shelter Departments of the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing, which allocates government-built apartments and has a special commission (Commission Barrasi) responding to complaints and disputes; the Property and Distribution Departments of the Municipality, which both allocates building plots in Kabul and addresses disputes arising; the Kabul Province Attorney-General’s Office (Saranwali), which keeps an eye on the legality of allocations; and the Special Property Disputes Court. This was first established in 2002 and expanded in November 2003 to resolve specific property disputes affecting returnees and IDPs. Meetings were also held with the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) which runs two Legal Aid Centers in Kabul. More than two thirds of the cases brought to these centers relate to property matters. NRC facilitates resolution, either directly with disputants, through informal means or through assisting clients to submit their cases to the courts. Most of their clients are returnees or IDPs and the cases are accordingly directed to the Special Court. The review of land tenure arrangements was carried out in discussions with the Judicial Reform Commission, the Afghanistan Geodesy and Cartographic Head Office, Kabul municipality and donor-funded consultants involved in land titling and registration in primarily rural areas. v EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Kabul Urban Development: a City in Crisis The Current Urban Special Structure i. The city of Kabul, with a population estimated at about 3 million people, has grown over the last 10 years at an exceptionally fast pace, reaching a rate of demographic growth of about 17% p.a. over several years. The city has grown mostly through the construction of informal, largely unserviced settlements, which now shelter about 80% of Kabul’s population and represent a private investment in fixed capital of US$ 1.3 billion (not including land value). To the extent that the stability of the country improves in the future, the rate of demographic growth is likely to slow.. Nevertheless, it is likely to stay at around 5% (about 3% natural growth plus 2% migration) for some years to come. This “reduced� growth rate will represent a yearly increase of about 150,000 people or about 20,000 households. ii. Kabul has grown in two adjacent valleys separated by a mountain spine. (Figure 1) The city center (red dot) is close to the mountain spine. The central hill spine reinforces the function of the city center, as direct communication between suburbs – without passing though the city center – is made difficult because of the contours of the terrain. The current chronic traffic jam around the city center is explained by the peculiar topography of Kabul: whereby the only roads joining the two parts of the city pass through the current city center. Because of its topography, Kabul is likely to stay dominantly monocentric and to develop around one dominant center, as the current city center is the only location easily accessible from all parts of the city. Important sub- centers are unlikely to develop in the future. iii. With a built-up area of 140 km2, Kabul has an average built-up density of about 215 persons/ha. This is a high density by world standards but a normal density for a large city of Asia (similar to the density of Bangalore or Hyderabad). Population densities in informal areas are higher than in formal areas and most informal areas are farther from the center than formal areas. As a result, the population of Kabul is rather more dispersed (in spite of the high density) than in other cities of Asia with similar built-up densities (dispersion index of 1.13, as compared to 0.99 in Bangalore and 1.03 in Hyderabad1) iv. The mountains surrounding Kabul and the central spine limit the spatial expansion of Kabul to the North and West. There is still a large amount of undeveloped land to the East of the city. In the very long run, the only real possibility of expansion for the city is on a plateau to the North of the city, on the other side of the mountain range limiting the current built-up area to the North. But an expansion of the city into this area now would be premature, given the large densification potential and the ease of expansion of the existing built-up area. 1 The lower the dispersion index, the lower the dispersion, i.e the shorter the average distance per person to the city center controlling for differences in city’s built-up area. In other words, the average distance per person to the city center in Kabul is significantly longer than in other cities with a similar built-up area. vi Figure 1: The built up area of Kabul and the constraints represented by topography Informal residential settlements v. Given the extraordinary rapid rate of demographic growth and the extreme hardship and destruction caused by war and political upheaval in the last 20 years, it is remarkable that most households have been able to find access to land and to build mostly solid and well-designed houses (see Cover). Many cities of the world growing at a rate lower than Kabul have been faced with rapid expansion of large shantytowns made of temporary materials and with extremely unsanitary conditions. In Kabul, by contrast, while the majority of informal neighborhoods completely lack even basic infrastructure, the houses themselves are made of durable materials providing adequate and permanent shelter to their inhabitants The historical record shows that trying to discourage migration by demolishing informal housing, by withholding formal property rights, or by depriving new informal settlements from elementary services, is not only ineffective at slowing down migration, but significantly contributes to the creation of large permanent slums with intractable environmental and social problems. vi. The informal system of developing land is not without drawbacks: First, property rights have been often violated. Second, the informal process in most cases does not vii allow enough land for roads, infrastructure or community facilities. Third, the quality of the physical environment is often poor owing to almost total lack of solid and human waste management. While the informal land development process has been often messy, the overall outcome is certainly positive if one considers that the only possible alternative to informal land development would have been for migrants to live in temporary shelters in refugee camps waiting for the Government’s orderly resettlement plans to materialize. The advantage of the informal land delivery system has been its ability to distribute land quickly to households who were then able to convert their own labor into capital by building sturdy houses. The current informal housing stock, providing adequate shelter to 80% of the population, is here to stay and should be provided with regular tenure, infrastructure and community facilities. vii. Any new land development process should not only be orderly but it should be fast and affordable to new migrants. Such a system will have to rely on market forces and let the private sector take a leading role. The role of Government in providing land and shelter should be restricted to small and well-defined target groups like destitute households, invalids, and other social cases. There are simply no credible alternatives to letting the private sector develop land on a large scale – formally this time rather than informally as it did in the past. The planning office of the municipality of Kabul Municipal or the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development just do not have sufficient skilled staff and budget to allocate land in a timely manner to about 20,000 households a year, while at the same time developing infrastructure in the neighborhoods that are lacking it. Opportunities and liabilities are in informal residential settlements viii. The map below (Figure 2) shows the extent of informal settlements in Kabul. Beyond the formal and informal categories, the residential housing stock of Kabul has been divided into five types depending on the dwelling design: apartments, townhouses, detached houses, courtyard houses, and houses built on slopes. Informal residential settlements can be found in all parts of the city, but they are more heavily concentrated in the South West part. The typology shows that courtyard design is dominant in the informal sector, while detached houses are the most common form of housing in the formal sector. Apartments and townhouses, with a little more than 3% of the population, constitute a very small part of the housing stock. The population living in informal houses built on steep slopes represents about 12% of the total residential population; however most of this population is strategically located close from the city center and from the major employment zones. ix. The traditional courtyard house design reflects demand and is efficient in terms of land use and subsequent incremental growth. Zoning and regulations should allow the extensive construction of courtyard houses. The existing residential plots can accommodate an additional population of about 300,000 people by building additional rooms. Undeveloped areas immediately adjacent to the existing built-up areas can accommodate an additional 1,000,000 people. x. Plots in informal settlements are not very different from plots in formal settlements. On the left of the segment of the satellite image shown in Figure 3 can be viii seen a few blocks of formal detached houses and on the rest of the image, the typical informal courtyard houses most common in informal settlements. Because the settlement shown below is not fully densified, the process of development: plots boundaries follow agricultural field boundaries and so do streets. This suggests that in this case, land has been purchased from farmers with mutual agreement between buyer and seller. The plot size in the courtyard houses varies from 200 to 350 m2, built areas vary from 25% to Figure 2: Kabul – Map of formal and informal residential settlements 65% of plot area, which allows – in the case of a single story house – floor space from 50m2 to 225 m2 per house. The courtyard design, typical of the informal houses of Kabul, allows high plot coverage while keeping good standards of light and ventilation. The number of houses per hectare varies between 20 and 28, denser than the formal detached houses which in most schemes do not go above 22 house per ha. xi. Informal settlements built on slopes are different from the settlements shown in the aerial photo below. Many houses have no vehicular access and plots on the steeper slopes are smaller. Moreover, settlements built on slopes are much smaller in area and are usually linear, i.e. they are usually not very far from vehicular access. The provision of water and sewerage on the steeper slopes would prove to be initially costly. It is probable that an upgrading policy should be developed with lower standards – for instance a public tap for, say, 20 households – in order to keep down upgrading costs. However, informal settlements on slopes constitute an important part of the housing stock of Kabul, and they provide cheap housing at a walking distance from most centers of employment. The difficulty of access and the lower standards of infrastructure would ix guarantee low rents in the future. These settlements would be ideal for recent migrants who have few resources and whose priority is to find employment. Figure 3: Example of informal settlement developed on agricultural land xii. It has been argued that the hills on which many of the informal settlements are built should be reserved for a green belt to be used for the recreation of the people of Kabul. Steep rocky hills are not well suited for tree planting or for recreation (although some trees have indeed already been planted around the crest of Kohi Asamayi Hill). Rather than developing green areas on hills which are difficult to plant and difficult to access, it would be better to develop the banks of the three rivers which are crossing Kabul. Presently, Kabul river banks are being used as a dumping ground. The redevelopment of the embankments of Kabul rivers could provide about 180 ha of linear park within easy walking distance of a large part of Kabul population. xiii. The points developed above concerning the spatial structure of Kabul can be summarized as follows: • The majority of the population live in informal areas, and these informal areas should be considered permanent and should be gradually improved; x • The average density of Kabul is high but “normal� for an Asian city: current land use is relatively efficient and does not consume more space per inhabitant than other cities of Asia; • Topography is a significant constraint limiting the expansion of the city and dividing the city into two parts, communicating only through the city center; and • The network of primary roads with an adequate right of way covers most of the city. Linking the North East part of the city with the South Western part will be costly and difficult. Removing the chronic traffic jams in the city center would probably require – in addition of traffic management measures –the creation of a ring road. Action Plan for the Development of Kabul xiv. The extraordinary demographic growth and local circumstances suggest that Kabul’s urban strategy should be designed around three principles: • Most of the new housing built by new migrants and the expanding population will have to be self-built and informal. Infrastructure, therefore, will have to be developed incrementally after most houses have been already built (there is no point in developing infrastructure in vacant areas when most already built houses have no infrastructure at all). However, the right of ways of a grid of primary and secondary roads in new areas to be developed should be marked and preserved from encroachments. • The Government should concentrate its limited resources on providing basic infrastructure and community services to the existing population and on providing an orderly legal framework for the development of new land to accommodate population growth. • The Government does not have the financial and human resources to engage in developing land and/or building houses on a large scale. xv. An urban development strategy for Kabul would consist of three main components: • Upgrading progressively the infrastructure of existing settlements and legalizing tenure; • Developing an adequate primary infrastructure network which would accommodate the growth of Kabul in the future; and • Allowing land to be developed legally in a timely manner to accommodate new households in areas adjacent to the present urbanized area. xvi. The spatial framework of this program would be contained in a new structure plan for Kabul to be prepared jointly by MUDH and the municipality of Kabul. The xi major outputs of this plan will include a) a definition of central and local government objectives for urban development in the next five years , including a definition of the role of the Government land private sector in urban development; b) constant monitoring of formal and informal sector building activities and developing indicators on real estate prices; c) a zoning map showing the land where the city expansion will take place and what uses and standards are expected in each respective area; d) a set of land development regulations reflecting market demand, the housing design traditions of Afghanistan and the affordability of housing for various socioeconomic groups; and e) a program for resource mobilization based on user fees, impact fees and eventually property taxes. While beyond the scope of this study, the need to develop a strategy for municipal revenue generations is paramount and should be the subject of a separate and priority task. xvii. The new structure plan of Kabul should promote a new approach to planning. This approach relies heavily on the initiative of the private sector in developing land and building houses and other structures. The role of government should focus on providing an infrastructure network, which would allow the city to grow in an orderly manner, community facilities, and the legal framework within which private developers and individual builders-households would operate. The development of the structure plan will not be a “once in 20 years� effort, but on the contrary will be a continuous and permanent effort to adjust the plan to changing supply and demand situations. The Structure Plan staff should monitor constantly the growth of the city, including the variations in land prices, rents and construction costs, and constantly adjust the plan to meet new demand emerging from changing economic conditions. Land Tenure Regularization in Informal Settlements in Kabul: Priority Need for Informal Settlements xviii. Approximately 80 percent of Kabul’s households face some level of irregularity in land tenure, with varying degrees of tenure insecurity including limitations on the utility of land and house as an asset. . Given the extent of informal settlement and the rapid growth of such areas particularly on account of the accelerated return of refugees, the issue of informal settlement upgrading, including land tenure regularization, was highlighted by the Government as a key issue at the Workshop hosted by the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing to launch the analytical work in April 2004. The prominence of this issue was also reiterated in a June 2004 Issues Paper prepared by the Bank as well as through inputs of various Bank staff involved in the review process for this work. xix. As the Government attempts to decide on the appropriate strategy for regularizing land tenure in urban informal settlements, more data will be needed on the nature and extent of land tenure insecurity and irregularity in this environment, as well as on the informal systems of land administration and property claims dynamics that already exist. This perspective is strongly shared by the Judicial Reform Commission. xii xx. The first data collection effort has led to a mostly qualitative analysis of land tenure insecurity as a source of vulnerability in the form of a recently completed study on Urban Governance, Urban Management and Vulnerability carried out by AREU with World Bank funding. A proposed second stage of work would be through quantitative data collection piggybacked on the upcoming National Urban/Rural Vulnerability Assessment (NUVA). xxi. NUVA offers a valuable opportunity to systematically capture qualitative and quantitative representative data on many aspects of urban land tenure relevant to the issue of regularization. These include the distribution of tenure classes in these settlements; the types of property documents available; specifics of tenure (how is land acquired, allocated, defended, alienated, leveraged and protected); specific aspects and causes of tenure insecurity; the proportion of households facing property disputes; the share of these typically resolved at the community level, official levels etc.; the proportion of these and other informal decisions that are usually recorded and the form and level of such records; the number of times households have moved; the average share of income on housing; and other areas of interest. A proposed follow-up activity, to be carried out under the KURP project (see below), will analyze the NUVA data and outline a road map for legalizing tenure in Kabul’s informal areas. Urban Land Tenure Initiatives xxii. There are several initiatives that have occurred within recent times that demonstrate an active consideration on the part of Government to actively address urban land tenure issues, some directly purporting to address regularization of land tenure in informal settlements. These are summarized below: • Kabul Urban Reconstruction Project (KURP) • Land Titling and Economic Reconstruction in Afghanistan (LTERA) • UN-HABITAT Upgrading • Judicial Reform • Urbanization Commission • Land Commission Issues in Tenure Regularization xxiii. There are various dimensions to a program of tenure regularization in informal settlements which inform its design. Making the appropriate choices depends on adequate profile data of the targeted communities (along the lines described above); careful clarification of the desired outcomes; realistic assessment of financial and manpower constraints; socio-political analysis; stipulations of the existing legal framework and the ease with which it can be modified; and an assessment of the level of available technology among other things. A range of design elements are outlined below. Future analysis of the NUVA data would also allow for a less neutral discussion of the xiii options in the Afghan context. Land tenure is associated with varying mixtures of property freedoms each of which can be experienced to different degrees. For residential plots, these usually include the freedoms to occupy, use, improve, leverage, alienate and bequeath the land. Regularization programs can target any subset of these freedoms for enhancement. • Instruments of Tenure: Depending on existing constraints and on which freedoms are targeted for enhancement, there are a variety of tenure instruments which can be employed to convey those rights or freedoms. • Eligibility: A tenure regularization program needs to have a clear and acceptable basis for determining eligibility. Criteria that are typical include a subset of the following: a cut-off date , geography – limits the regions of the city or even identifies the specific settlements in a Schedule; topography – sometimes used to exclude regularization of settlements on untenable land; proximity to infrastructure; ownership – often regularization policy applies only to State/ Municipal or State Owned Enterprise land; environmental sustainability; public purpose; and poverty – settlements that are better off financially are sometimes excluded on the basis that they should not receive subsidies inherent in regularization. • Dispute Resolution: regularization programs need to determine the modes through which land related disputes would be addressed in the program. Some programs rely on the conventional courts. Others create devoted Land Tribunals such as the Special Property Court recently established in Afghanistan. • Legal regimes: In Afghanistan the choice is complicated by multiple layers of law including Islamic law, customary law and civil and statutory law. The recent JRC initiative to integrate the informal justice system with the formal system whereby decisions made in the former would be eligible to be recorded in the latter (providing that the decisions were consistent with Islamic and civil law) would be an important development of relevance to dispute resolution in the context of regularization. • Mapping and Surveying: The formalization of property claims usually requires some spatial referencing of the parcels of land to which the claims or freedoms apply. To this end some level of mapping and bounding description (surveying) system is required. • Registration and Land Administration: Once property rights or freedoms are assigned to particular parcels of land through tenure regularization, some form of registration and administration of these rights is necessary. Here, the level of sophistication depends on the instrument of tenure used, the level of detail of the parcel description and the capacity that can be sustainably deployed toward this exercise. xiv xxiv. As can be seen from the above discussion, implementation of a tenure regularization program is a complex and multi-faceted operation. Given its legal ramifications, consistency of approach is also paramount. The functions go beyond registration and updating of rights but also include mapping, community mobilization and engagement, surveying and dispute resolution among others. Moreover, tenure regularization is often one component of a broader upgrading program involving complimentary interventions in infrastructure improvements requiring expertise in physical planning, engineering and community participation among other disciplines. A later edition of this report will provide recommendations on the appropriate approach to be taken to regularize tenure in informal areas of Kabul Resolution of Property Rights Disputes in Urban Areas: Rethinking the Orthodoxies xxv. Formal property disputes in Kabul are numerous, but not as numerous as might be expected. Disputes that have been presented for formal resolution (i.e. to the Courts or institutional commissions) since December 2001 number no more than several thousand, a tiny proportion in a city of around three million people. Less than two thousand cases have been brought to the Special Land Disputes Court set up to address returnee and IDP complaints. No more than 10,000 property disputes are formally addressed in the courts nationally, also a comparatively low figure for a population of more than 20 million people. xxvi. A significant proportion of property disputes in Kabul pertain to high-value properties owned by wealthier persons or public figures, and it is this rather than volume of cases that promotes the high-profile surrounding conflicts. The much larger sector of privately-owned middle income and small homes and premises has broadly escaped issues of formally contested ownership and occupation, both during and following 1978- 2001. Conflicts over real property exist in these sectors, but are mainly among family members or relating to conventional boundary and similar issues. Resolution is broadly contained within the household and related informal social domain (neighborhood). Reasons for these differences are elaborated later in this chapter. xxvii. Notwithstanding the above, the potential for significant contestation over property in Kabul City is enormous. These relate in different ways to the massive and still- expanding informal settlement sector and where de facto home-owners number at least one million. In general, these people rarely actively contest property rights, either formally in the courts or even informally, but live in a state of suspended tenure insecurity. A second large group of conflicts relate to contested legal ownership and generally affect better-off households. Three years after Bonn, the number of property cases being brought to the Courts is still rising. By no means all property disputes in Kabul or other cities reach the courts; it is possible that these comprise the minority. However, even within the normal court system property cases are rising both in number and as a proportion of total cases. xxvii. The focus of urban property dispute is the family home. Over half the cases brought to the Special Court concern private homes. This is less strongly the case in respect of clients assisted by NRC in Kabul, among whom are just as many who bring xv disputes concerning open land or building plots in the city. Commercial buildings, individual shop premises, car parks and public buildings are also the subject of dispute, but at much lower levels. xxx. The outstanding issue at dispute is contested ownership of the property. The most common case is where a returnee finds his home, apartment or building plot occupied by another, and who may be the third or more in a line of owners. Wrongful occupancy or other disputes relating to ownership are not limited to persons unknown to each other. Intra-family disputes over ownership are common, and account for 36 percent of all NRC cases. This compares with the 29 percent of inheritance and pre-emption cases in the courts nationally. Often the trigger to these disputes is the suddenly heightened value of the property, in which siblings of descendants wish to access a share. xxxi. The frequency and nature of property dispute correlates with socio-economic status. In general terms, this review found that - • formal property disputes are the privilege of the rich, and chronic insecurity of tenancy, the fate of the poor; • the more valuable the property, the more vulnerable it is to wrongful occupancy and transfer by both State and private parties, and eventual dispute as to its owner; and while disputes as to the rights of family members to shares or ownership of inherited property afflict all classes, it appears to be the case that the more valuable the property/wealthier the owners, the higher the likelihood of disputes. xxxii. Alleged corruption and related governance ills lie at the heart of many property cases. Alleged malfeasance is reported to be commonly at play in cases in the Special Disputes Court referred to the many cases where relatives or private persons have allegedly falsified both documents and identifies, claiming to be returnees, heirs of absentee or deceased persons, or those acting on behalf of absentees, presenting themselves as holding notarized power of attorney. xxxiii. The broadest distinction in disputes relating to real property in Kabul is between those which inhabit private and public land. Insecurity of tenure is mainly the issue confronting the latter, while private owners may be dogged by a range of disputes relating to wrongful occupancy while absent, contested ownership among family members, disputes relating to purchases and sales and payments, and disputes relating to the position of boundaries. xxxiv. A high proportion of property disputes are caused or facilitated by poor governance or alleged corruption on the part of civil servants. Although in different ways from those found in rural areas, the hand of officialdom in urban property disputes is highly evident. This occurs first in the legacy of policies of the conflict period 1978- 2001. This ranges from expropriation of the urban estates of wealthy persons during the Communist administration during the 1980s (such as the subdivision of one of a royal estate in the city into building plots, now under restitution claim), to unconsidered speedy cancellation of both building plot allocations and especially provisional apartment ownership by absentee owners during the Taliban. xvi xxxv. The Special Property Disputes Court was instituted specifically to deal with property restitution claims of returnees and important changes have been made to its operation since it was instituted by the Supreme Court in 2002. The Special Court is not dealing swiftly or effectively with claims. Overall, progress is very slow. In the first instance, immediate access to the court is limited with most grievances being first addressed or investigated by other agencies, including the police.. Surprisingly few cases are brought to the court directly, but pass through other official. xxxvi. Customary norms provide an excellent platform upon which to build accountable, reliable and trusted systems of evidencing ownership and which will be more readily available to the mass of urban owners. The majority of city-dwellers are living today on Government land and therefore have no legal surety of tenure (by customary evidence or rightful acquisition or otherwise). It does not necessarily follow that this surety may only be granted through acquisition of either court prepared entitlements or the conduct of expensive cadastrally-based survey and registration of house plots. Practically speaking, the scope for advancing cheaper and more localized community-based systems for the issue and maintenance of evidence is very high. Such a system could build upon the existing customary traditions of evidencing. An essential feature of its modernization would be to retain the centre of evidencing at the local, community level and involving community actors. This could not only heighten reliability and accountability of records but enable thousands of families to secure their occupancy cheaply and in relatively short periods. xxxvii. Community level dispute resolution is preferred. Although the brevity of this review meant that interviews directly with disputants were extremely limited, the reported balance of favor is upon localized, informal resolution of property disputes. Upcoming conduct of the National Urban Vulnerability Assessment (NUVA) should provide a statistically sound assessment of this. The most common relate simply to questions of time, cost, trust and enforceability. Poorer people usually lack the knowledge, time, connections, confidence and funds (to pay anticipated fees or bribes) to bring grievances to formal institutions, or the courts. Nor are they confident that case will necessarily be fairly heard and adjudged, or the decision enforced. In addition, those who lose the case are highly likely to appeal. xxxviii. The following actions would help limit property disputes: • Limit further informal occupation of Government lands in Kabul City; • Regularize existing occupancy as swiftly as possible, at least in those areas where environmental damage is not excessive by regularizing security of tenure as discussed above; • Strengthen the practice and raise the legal status and support for informal machinery for resolving disputes; • Support and reform the judiciary in ways which dramatically speed up the resolution of property disputes and enhance public confidence in decisions; • Encourage provision of autonomous legal aid services; xvii • Reform of policies and procedures in the public sector which now allow pro-rich injustices in housing and land allocations, and private speculation in public property (Government lands) to continue unabated; and • Impose new transparency measures to reduce opportunities for corruption and collusion on the part of decision-makers in the property and housing sector, including formal procedures for routine accounting in the public domain. xxxix. Government is not in a position to pursue all desirable interventions simultaneously, but a limited number of modest but solid interventions will lay a foundation for incremental improvements. The following are suggested as priority actions: • Target the Special Property Disputes Court for concentrated improvement and expansion. • Help limit the number of disputes entering the courts, through providing public and practical support to informal mechanisms. • Assist the new post-election leadership and staffing of the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing to take action to tighten up and monitor the implementation of social housing policy with targeted subsidies which disallow any individual to acquire more than one government-built or Municipal-allocated housing plot. Conclusions xl. This report outlines the problems and challenges that the Government faces in advancing the management of urban land in Kabul, and by extension, in other urban areas of the country. The challenges are formidable given the lack of capacity in the concerned institutions and the vested interests which will pursue the maintenance of the status quo. xli. The chief challenges include modernizing attitudes and behaviors to the way urban land is managed. This means moving away from centralized urban planning to more dynamic approaches involving careful monitoring of the land and housing market to determine the direction in which urban development should evolve. It means confirming the economic and social value of existing informal residential settlements and to build on these assets to create improved standards of living through the provision of basic infrastructure services. It means creating a more conducive institutional environment to encourage the private sector to both service land and construct economic housing in the city, leaving the provision of social housing to the public sector. It means creating a regulatory system operated at the municipal level which ensures that quality of construction is adequate. xlii. The challenge extends to the subject of creating appropriate systems for secure tenure in informal residential areas. Data pertaining to the nature and extent of land tenure insecurity and irregularity need to be collected and analyzed. The lessons learned should be used to design appropriate systems of land tilting which are cost effective and xviii inspire trust in the Government institutions responsible for land matters. The overall system of land management must include reaffirming informal methods of property rights dispute resolution and the strengthening as well as improving the efficiency of formal court systems. Standards of transparency and accountability need to be raised in both fora. Advances in these three areas should be seen as precursors to further action required to improve land and housing markets. xlv. The achievement of the reform agenda is a large and complex undertaking that will require a resolve by all parties to make the changes which, in the long term, will serve to make Afghanistan’s urban areas better engines of economic growth and healthier places for the growing proportion of the country’s population choosing to dwell in cities and towns. xix Chapter 1: Kabul Urban Development: City in Crisis A. Current Urban Special Structure 1.1. Demographic Growth. Kabul’s current urban special structure, dominated by informal settlements, is the result of exceptionally rapid demographic growth. Kabul’s population is currently estimated to be about 3 million people. The population has grown by about 17% per year between 1999 and 2002. If returnees are excluded from the growth calculation, the population has still grown by a staggering 13% per year over the same period. While the rate of demographic growth is likely to slow down in the future because of the improving stability of the country, it is likely to stay at around 5% (about 3% natural growth plus 2% migration) for some years to come. This “reduced� growth rate will represent a yearly increase of about 150,000 people or about 20,000 households. 1.2. The relentless influx of hundreds of thousands of people every year has shaped Kabul in a particular way and will continue to shape the spatial development of Kabul for many years into the future. No municipality in the world, faced year after year with such a large number of poor migrants, would have managed to organize the delivery of land, housing and services in an orderly manner. In Kabul, the informal development of land and housing has been the most effective way of quickly delivering the sturdy shelters which are necessary to survive Kabul’s winter. Not surprisingly, land developed informally represents about 70% of all residential areas and provides shelter to about 80% of the population of Kabul.2 The total capital value of the informal housing stock of Kabul in 2004 (not including land value) is estimated at around US$2.5 billion (see detailed calculation in Annex 1). 1.3. During the last 20 years, because of the enormous rate of migration there was no realistic alternative to letting migrants develop land informally. The only alternative would have consisted of sheltering migrants in temporary refugee camps until the Government would have had time and resources to develop land formally. If the Government had adopted this “orderly� solution, the country would have lost the US$2.5 billion value contributed by the migrants building their own houses in Kabul alone (Annex 1). Refugees living in temporary camps do not contribute to capital formation, and their labor potential is usually wasted. 1.4. Impact of Migration. Given the extraordinary rapid rate of demographic growth and the extreme hardship and destruction caused by war and political upheaval in the last 20 years, it is remarkable that most households have been able to find access to land and to build mostly solid and well-designed houses. Many cities of the world growing at a rate lower than Kabul have been faced with rapid expansion of large shantytowns made of temporary materials and with extremely unsanitary conditions. In Kabul, by contrast, while the majority of informal neighborhoods completely lack even basic infrastructure, 2 The population and land use estimates contained in this report are derived from a preliminary study of the Ikonos satellite image of Kabul taken in 2004. The details of this study, in particular the detailed housing typology are presented in Annex 1. 1 the houses themselves are made of durable materials providing adequate and permanent shelter to their inhabitants. 1.5. Only a small portion of Kabul’s population could not find shelter through the construction of housing made of permanent materials. The population living in tents is estimated at 10,000 people or about 4,000 households. An additional 5,000 people are thought to be living in the ruins of destroyed buildings. Given the extraordinary number of people migrating to Kabul over the years, and taking into account the past political instability of the country, it is remarkable that only about 0.5% of the population is currently living in temporary shelters. While the informal land development process has been often messy, the overall outcome is certainly positive if one considers that the only possible alternative to informal land development would have been for migrants to live in temporary shelters in refugee camps waiting for the Government’s orderly resettlement plans to materialize. The advantage of the informal land delivery system has been its ability to distribute land quickly to households who were then able to convert their own labor into capital by building sturdy houses. Because the labor of recent migrants has had very little opportunity cost, the informal land development process has been a boon to the Afghan economy. This is in large part due to the exceptional skill of Afghan rural migrants in building sturdy houses out of local materials. 1.6. Impact of Informal Settlements. While many in Government deplore that the expansion of the city has occurred outside of any legal or regulatory framework, it is nevertheless true that the ad hoc informal development of the city has prevented a worse disaster in the form of homeless families roaming the streets of Kabul and having to be sheltered in temporary refugee camps. The construction of permanent houses built mostly by laborers who had no alternative employment opportunities has contributed to the growth of fixed capital in the city and constitutes an important asset rather than a liability. While some individuals illegally profited from the informal expansion of the city by selling land which didn’t belong to them, the households who purchased land from them should not be penalized as they had no alternative for shelter and many probably purchased land in good faith. The final outcome of the informal settlement development process of Kabul has been largely positive. 1.7. The informal system of developing land is not without drawbacks: First, property rights have been often violated. Second, the informal process in most cases does not allow enough land for roads, infrastructure or community facilities. The task of the Government in the years to come is to remedy a posteriori the problems created by the informal land development process, by (i) legalizing the titles of households who built houses, eventually compensating some land owners, and (ii) developing infrastructure in informal areas. Simultaneously, the Government should allow a fast and efficient development process for new land for the 150, 000 new migrants expected every year (although quite a number of them could find accommodation in the areas already developed, as will be seen below). The current “waiting list� system for land, in its present form, does not seem to provide a satisfactory answer to the demand for land and shelter. 1.8. The new land development process should not only be orderly but it should be fast and affordable to new migrants. Such a system will have to rely on market forces and 2 let the private sector take a leading role. The role of Government in providing land and shelter should be restricted to small and well-defined target groups like destitute households, invalids, and other social cases. There are simply no credible alternatives to letting the private sector develop land on a large scale – formally this time rather than informally as it did in the past. The planning office of the Kabul Municipal government or the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development just to no have sufficient skilled staff and budget to allocate land in a timely manner to about 20,000 households a year, while at the same time developing infrastructure in the neighborhoods that are lacking it. 1.9. Role of Government. The role of the Government in the new formal land development process is important. In areas close to the existing built-up areas, where there is obvious demand for new plots, the municipal government should design and mark on the ground a grid of primary and secondary roads at about 400 meters distance from each others. This new network will branch on the existing primary road network. The grid network should take into account topography and, when possible, property boundaries in agricultural areas where boundary lines are visible and well known. The most important task is to mark the right of way boundaries of the road network on the ground and publicize it. There is no need to acquire the land. The process should be considered a simplified form of land readjustment scheme. The development of new plots within the grid should follow the current process, i.e. plot size and street pattern and width should result from the interaction of neighbors and informal developers. action and control should concentrate on preventing the primary and secondary grid network from being encroached. Eventually, after a sufficient number of plots have been delimited and built, the municipal government could envisage leveling and even surfacing the roads of the grid, with or without financial contribution from the households being served. 1.10. This approach to land development contrasts with the current approach of concentrating the entire effort of the Government on the detailed design and development of small areas of land that can cater to only a small fraction of the annual demand. While the Government develops its own land development schemes, the informal sector is developing large tracts of land without any guidance for the provision of primary and secondary right of ways, which will be crucial in providing an infrastructure network in the future. 1.11. In defining an urban strategy for Kabul, it is important to consider informal settlements as legitimate, and to deal with their shortcomings, rather than trying to turn back the clock and attempting to rebuild the city according to obsolete and utopian concepts. Government officials have to accept that migrants are here to stay, that their houses are an asset, that many more migrants are going to come in the future, and that the city should be able to distribute land and services in a more orderly manner than has been the case in the past. 1.12. Many Government officials faced with the problems created by large-scale migration wish that somehow migration could be discouraged to provide some “breathing time� to develop plans to allow a more orderly development. Kabul Government officials should take into account the experience of many cities in Asia and Latin America that had to face large influxes of migrants in the past. Initially, many of these cities tried to develop policies focused on discouraging migration rather than on facilitating the orderly 3 settlements of large number of new migrants. India, for instance, had a policy of investing in “backward areas� to prevent migration toward cities. India is now trying to find cheaper ways to develop land to accommodate its migrant population coming from rural areas. The historical record shows that trying to discourage migration by demolishing informal housing, by withholding formal property rights, or by depriving new informal settlements from elementary services, is not only ineffective at slowing down migration, but significantly contributes to create large permanent slums with intractable environmental and social problems. 1.13. Post World War II Germany provides a not very well known precedent of a policy encouraging any investors to build quickly all kinds of structures, offices, shops or houses to replace destroyed properties. In the German cities between 1945 and up to around 1955, investors were allowed to build without waiting for new master plans or for a new set of urban regulations; limitations on land use where substantially removed, with a few exceptions. The following graph (Figure 1.1) extracted from ongoing research by Olga Kaganova (Urban Institute 2000) illustrates the policy followed by German cities just after the end of World War II in particular in the city of Stuttgart: the priority was to get displaced persons and businesses to build as soon as possible. The local government practically waved most land use regulations during this period. Later, when Germany became affluent again, the Government tightened regulations. 1.14. Kaganova’s graph illustrates the changes in the ratio of costs to benefits of regulations as national income increases. When national income is low, the costs of regulations are higher than their benefits, while at higher levels of income the benefits of regulations become higher than their costs. Many low income countries make the mistake of over-regulating land use, slowing down the growth of their national income as a consequence. Figure 1.1: Regulations and National Income 4 1.15. Accept Reality of Informal Development. Therefore, the best policy is to confront the reality of rapid demographic growth by concentrating scarce Government resources in investments where they will be the most effective in integrating rapidly the influx of migrants into a productive urban workforce. The experience of other countries has shown that allowing new migrants to have elementary property rights and access to basic infrastructure service does not accelerate migration. Migration is largely an exogenous phenomenon, there is not much that the Government can do to stop it or slow it down. While in the short run, migration toward cities causes growing pains for municipalities, in the long run the wealth of a city is proportional to its number of inhabitants, with larger cities producing a larger share of the national wealth than smaller cities. This, in the long run, will also be true in Afghanistan. 1.16. Before discussing in more detail a plan of action for the development of Kabul, it is necessary to review the opportunities and the problems inherent to the informal developments that dominate Kabul land use. In the following section the peculiarities of the informal settlements and the resulting spatial structure of Kabul are analyzed. In a later section, the components of a land development strategy that would take into account the specificity of the situation in Kabul will be described. Opportunities and liabilities in informal residential settlements 1.17. The map in Figure 1.2 shows the extent of informal settlements in Kabul. Beyond the formal and informal categories, the residential housing stock of Kabul has been divided into five types depending on the dwelling design: apartments, townhouses, detached houses, courtyard houses, and houses built on slopes. The distribution of land and population among the housing types is shown on Table 1.1. Table 1.1 Distribution of the Housing Stock by Type 5 1.18. Informal residential settlements can be found in all parts of the city, but they are more heavily concentrated in the South West part. The typology shows that courtyard design is dominant in the informal sector, while detached houses are the most common form of housing in the formal sector. Apartments and townhouses, with a little more than 3% of the population, constitute a very small part of the housing stock. The population living in informal houses built on steep slopes represents about 12% of the total residential population; however most of this population is strategically located close from the city center and from the major employment zones. Figure 1.2: Kabul – Map of Formal and informal residential settlements Plot sizes, plot coverage, and densities in informal settlements 1.19. Plots in informal settlements are not very different from plots in formal settlements. On the segment of satellite image shown on Figure 1.3 on the left can be seen a few blocks of formal detached houses and on the rest of the image the typical informal courtyard houses most common in informal settlements. Because the settlement shown on Figure 1.3 is not fully densified, we can see the process of development: plots boundaries are following agricultural field boundaries and so do streets. This suggests that in this case, land has been purchased from farmers with mutual agreement between buyer and seller. 6 1.20. The plot size in the courtyard houses varies from 200 to 350 m2; built areas vary from 25 to 65% of plot area, which allows – in the case of a single story house – floor space from 50 to 225 m2 per house. In the future, when some second floor would have been built, the floor space per informal house could reach 400 m2. The courtyard design, typical of the informal houses of Kabul, allows high plot coverage while keeping good standards of light and ventilation (see the section below on land use regulation). The number of houses per hectare varies between 20 and 28, denser than the formal detached houses which in most schemes do not go above 22 house per ha. Figure 1.3: Example of Informal settlement developed on agricultural land 1.21. Plot sizes in informal settlements are not smaller than in formal settlements and in many cases are larger (this is a peculiarity of Kabul informal settlements, as in most other cities of the world informal plots are typically much smaller than formal plots.). Surveys (UN Habitat) are indicating on average about 2.2 households per plot in informal settlements, with an average household size of 7.5 persons. These figures come from ad hoc surveys and are not necessarily representative of the whole universe of the informal housing in Kabul. However, in the absence of better data it has to be assumed that these figures are close to reality. If these figures are considered accurate, then the average density in a fully built informal settlement could reach 400 people per hectare. Street pattern and road width 1.22. As seen in Figure 1.2, most roads in informal settlements are very narrow, from 4 to 6 m wide, which is enough to get a vehicle through on an emergency or to give access to a few plots, but not enough for normal vehicular traffic to flow through neighborhoods. 7 The major problem is not so much the narrow streets but the lack of street hierarchy. There is no network of primary and secondary streets. Large informal settlements like the one shown on Figure 1.3 are viable if vehicular traffic is kept at a very low level within each settlement and if vehicles do not use the street as parking. Refuse disposal would require a community system whereby solid waste is collected by the community and brought to collection points located on the primary or secondary road network where it can be collected by municipal trucks. 1.23. The provision of water, sewerage, and storm drainage should not be very difficult in existing settlements as the streets, while narrow, are well marked and mostly straight. The UN Habitat upgrading project already under way should provide realistic unit costs. Space for community facilities 1.24. The informal development process normally does not leave any space for community facilities like schools, clinics, police stations, etc. This would have to be provided, either by acquiring already developed plots, or by locating in still vacant adjacent areas. Informal settlements built on slopes 1.25. Informal settlements built on slopes are different from the settlements shown in Figure 1.3. Many houses have no vehicular access and plots on the steeper slopes are smaller. Moreover, settlements built on slopes are much smaller in area and are usually linear, i.e. they are usually not very far from vehicular access. The provision of water and sewerage on the steeper slopes would prove to be initially costly. It is probable that an upgrading policy should be developed with lower standards – for instance a public tap for, say, 20 households – in order to keep down upgrading costs. However, informal settlements on slopes constitute an important part of the housing stock of Kabul, and they provide cheap housing at a walking distance from most centers of employment. The difficulty of access and the lower standards of infrastructure would guarantee low rents in the future. These settlements would be ideal for recent migrants who have few resources and whose priority is to find employment. 1.26. It has been argued that the hills on which many of the informal settlements are built should be reserved for a green belt to be used for the recreation of the people of Kabul. Steep rocky hills are not well suited for tree planting or for recreation (although some trees have indeed already been planted around the crest of Kohi Asamayi Hill). Rather than developing green areas on hills which are difficult to plant and difficult to access, it would be better to develop the banks of the three rivers which are crossing Kabul. Presently, Kabul river banks are being used as a dumping ground. The redevelopment of the embankments of Kabul rivers could provide about 180 ha of linear park within easy walking distance of a large part of Kabul population. 1.27. Linear parks are the most efficient, in terms of land use, accessibility, security, and maintenance. There are many examples of urban linear parks, from the city of 8 Chandigarh in India to the bunds of Lahore and Shanghai and including even Washington DC’s Rock Creek Park. Summary assessment of informal settlements in Kabul 1.28. While the informal settlements of Kabul present some difficulties for vehicular traffic, they constitute an important and valuable part of the housing stock. These settlements should be upgraded over time with water supply, sewers, and storm drainage and refuse disposal. Eventually, as part of a second stage of upgrading, a network of secondary streets from 8 to 12 m wide would have to be created following a grid about 800 m wide. The impossibility of having individual car access to each house is not necessarily a liability in a city as dense as Kabul. However, a reliable and efficient public transport system would have to be developed in the future. The spatial structure of Kabul 1.29. Kabul has grown in two adjacent valleys separated by a mountain spine as can be seen on Figure 1.43. The city center (represented by a red dot on Figure 1.4 ) is close to the mountain spine separating the 2 valleys. The central hill spine separating the parts of Kabul reinforces the function of the city center, as direct communication between suburbs – without passing though the city center – are made difficult because of the topography. The current chronic traffic jam around the city center is explained by the peculiar topography of Kabul: because of the mountain spine dividing the North East from the South West, the only roads joining the two parts of the city pass through the current city center. Traffic around and in the city center could be reduced in the short run by better traffic management and, in the longer run, by providing alternate routes between the two parts of the city, as suggested in the Action Plan proposed in section B below. 1.30. Because of its topography, Kabul is likely to stay dominantly monocentric and to develop around one dominant center, as the current city center is the only location easily accessible from all parts of the city. Important sub-centers are unlikely to develop in the future. We will see below the implications of this monocentricity for future land use and transport. 1.31. The network of primary roads radiating from the city center is adequate. Fortunately, the growth of informal settlements has not encroached significantly on the right of ways of the network of primary roads linking different parts of the city to the center. The right of way available on most of the primary network is at least 30 meters, sometime more than 50 meters. The only exception is the road giving access to the dense residential areas of District 13 (south west of the city) that has an average right of way of only around 8 meters. 3 Figure 1.4 was obtained by superimposing a Landsat 2000 image with a map of the built-up area of Kabul obtained by digitizing an Ikonos satellite image taken in 2004. 9 Figure1.4: The built-up area of Kabul and the constraints represented by topography 1.32. The mountains surrounding Kabul and the central spine limit the spatial expansion of Kabul to the North and West. There is still a large amount of undeveloped land to the East of the city. In the very long run, the only real possibility of expansion for the city is on a plateau to the North of the city, on the other side of the mountain range limiting the current built-up area to the North. But an expansion of the city into this area now would be premature, given the large densification potential and the ease of expansion of the existing built-up area. 1.33. With a built-up area of 140 km2, Kabul has an average built-up density of about 215 persons/ha. This is a high density by world standards but a normal density for a large city of Asia (similar to the density of Bangalore or Hyderabad, see Figure 1.5) 1.34. Population densities in informal areas are higher than in formal areas and most informal areas are farther from the center than formal areas (Figure 1.6). As a result the population of Kabul is rather more dispersed (in spite of the high density) than in other cities of Asia with similar built-up densities (dispersion index of 1.13, as compared to 10 0.99 in Bangalore and 1.03 in Hyderabad4) This dispersion is apparent on the density profile of Kabul (Figure 1.7), which does not follow the usual negatively sloped exponential profile found in dominantly monocentric cities. The large amount of land used by institutions and the Government in the center tend to lower the density of the center and contribute to the dispersion of the population. One of the consequences of high spatial dispersion is increased costs urban transport and infrastructure. Figure 1.5: Kabul average built-up density compared to other cities of the world 1.35. In spite of the relatively high density, the additional absorption capacity of existing neighborhoods, in particular informal neighborhoods, remains high. Many plots in some informal settlements are not yet built, and most plots have only a ground floor where the large size of plots would allow an additional floor. From a preliminary calculation based on the interpretation of Ikonos 2004, it appears that the existing built-up area could accommodate an additional 300,000 population, just by filling up existing vacant plots at current densities (see annex 1 for detailed assumptions and calculation). 1.36. Because of the city’s topography, Kabul city center is uniquely accessible from the various districts. This unique accessibility of the existing CBD will reinforce with time the monocentric character of the city, making public transport more efficient than private cars. It is therefore important to review land use in the center to make it more efficient and business oriented. 4 The lower the dispersion index, the lower the dispersion, i.e the shorter the average distance per person to the city center controlling for differences in city’s built-up area. In other words, the average distance per person to the city center in Kabul is significantly longer than in other cities with a similar built-up area. 11 Figure 1.6: Kabul - Map of population densities The potential and constraints of Kabul’s current spatial structure 1.37. The points developed above concerning the spatial structure of Kabul can be summarized as follows: • The majority of the population live in informal areas, and these informal areas should be considered permanent and should be gradually improved; • The average density of Kabul is high but “normal� for an Asian city: current land use is relatively efficient and does not consume more space per inhabitant than other cities of Asia; • Topography is a significant constraint limiting the expansion of the city and dividing the city into two parts, communicating only through the city center; • The network of primary roads with an adequate right of way covers most of the city (with the exception of District 13). Linking the North East part of the city with the South Western part will be costly and difficult. Removing the chronic traffic jams in the city center would probably require – in addition of traffic management measures – the creation of a ring road; and • Because of the city’s topography, Kabul city center is uniquely accessible from the various districts; this unique accessibility of the existing CBD will reinforce 12 with time the monocentric character of the city, making public transport more essential to make it more efficient and business oriented. Figure 1.7: Kabul - Density Profile in built-up areas B. Action Plan of for the Development of Kabul 1.38. The preceding sections of this paper have shown the constraints and opportunities facing the development of Kabul. The following section outlines an action plan that takes into accounts the constraints and opportunities of Kabul as they appear in 2005. 1.39. The extraordinary demographic growth and local circumstances suggest that Kabul’s urban strategy should be designed around three principles: • Most of the new housing built by new migrants and the expanding population will have to be self-built and informal. Infrastructure, therefore, will have to be developed incrementally after most houses have been already built (there is no point in developing infrastructure in vacant areas when most already built houses have no infrastructure at all). However, the right of ways of a grid of primary and secondary roads in new areas to be developed should be marked and preserved from encroachments. • The Government should concentrate its limited resources on providing basic infrastructure and community services to the existing population and on providing an orderly legal framework for the development of new land to accommodate population growth. 13 • The Government does not have the financial and human resources to engage in developing land and/or building houses on a large scale. 1.40. In the context of Kabul, the Government has only three tools at its disposal to shape urban development: • Registration and guarantee of property rights • Land use regulations • Investments in infrastructure Defining the role of Government in urban development 1.41. Why can’t the Government take a more direct lead in shaping urban development? For instance, why shouldn’t the Government develop in advance large tracts of land and build large housing projects, or even develop satellite towns? 1.42. The Government faces several serious problems when acting as a land developer: • Timeliness and quantity of land developed: as we have seen, the demand for land is probably around 20,000 plots per year. Responding to demand would require the Government to acquire quickly large amounts of land, to design and build infrastructure, and more importantly to price and allocate plots to households in a timely manner and at a price corresponding to demand. The Government – local or central – does not have the capacity or flexibility to rapidly accomplish any of these tasks. The political process will interfere constantly in the awarding of contracts, the recruitment of consultants and even more in the allocation and pricing of plots. • Lack of cash resources: land development requires having access to a steady stream of capital. The uncertainty of budget allocations does not allow the Government to finance land development in a timely manner, resulting in extended negative cash flows draining budgets without apparent benefits. • Conflict of interest between the Government’s role as regulator of markets and its role as developer. The Government when acting as a land developer is often tempted to act also as a monopolist and to use its regulatory power to prevent competition from the private sector. The outcome is scarcer and more expensive housing. The Delhi Development Authority in India is a good example of Government acting as a monopolist land developer, resulting in expensive and scarce housing, hurting the poorest part of the population in the process. 1.43. Building satellite towns in new areas might be tempting, as it might seems to constitute a solution to avoid the entangled property rights issues prevalent in the current city. Starting with a blank slate seems to be an attractive solution. The government should resist this temptation. 1.44. Building satellite towns or large land development projects outside the existing urban areas presents two main problems: 14 • Enormous initial capital cost, causing negative cash flows to be carried for many years as infrastructure in new areas has to be developed long in advance of actual plot occupation by households, and • Very large transport costs because of the spatial diseconomy caused by satellite towns which are never self-sufficient in terms of jobs and housing. 1.45. Projects to build satellite towns or new cities quickly slow down after a few years because of financial shortfalls. In addition, plots sold in new towns require large subsidies to make the remote location attractive to buyers. It is hard to justify sinking large capital investments into empty areas while the existing population in the built-up areas suffers from inadequate infrastructure. In Kabul, building a separate new town on the Northern plateau would prove extremely costly. Huge investments in infrastructure will have to be made many years before the first inhabitants settle there, while 80% of Kabul’s already settled population has practically no infrastructure. At the same time, a new primary network of roads will have to be built to link the new city with Kabul. Transport between Kabul and the new city will have to be heavily subsidized to attract households and business. 1.46. The experience of these last few years has shown that the Government has insufficient human and financial resources to simultaneously develop land, regulate its use and guarantee property rights. The ever-longer waiting lists for obtaining a plot of land show that the Government cannot possibly fulfill the role of developer and regulator at the same time. Developing an urban development strategy 1.47. An urban development strategy for Kabul would consist of three main components: • Upgrading progressively the infrastructure of existing settlements and legalizing tenure; • Developing an adequate primary infrastructure network which would accommodate the growth of Kabul in the future; and • Allowing land to be developed legally in a timely manner to accommodate new households in areas adjacent to the present urbanized area. 1.48. The spatial framework of this program will be contained in a new structure plan for Kabul to be prepared jointly by MUDH and the municipality of Kabul. (The detailed terms of reference for the preparation of this plan are provided in Annex 2.) The major outputs of this plan will be: • A definition of central and local Government objectives for urban development in the next five years, including a definition of the role of the Government land private sector in urban development; • Terms of reference for a team of urban planners at the central and local level. This will include constant monitoring of formal and informal sector building activities and developing indicators on real estate prices; 15 • A zoning map showing the land where the city expansion will take place and what uses and standards are expected in each respective area; • A set of land development regulations reflecting (i) market demand, (ii) the housing design traditions of Afghanistan and, (iii) the affordability of housing for various socioeconomic groups; • A procedure for quickly providing building permits and land subdivision permits; • A program of progressive neighborhood infrastructure upgrading and the role of Government, community and private contractors in implementing this program; • A program of construction for a primary infrastructure network allowing the projected expansion of the city and the opening of new adjacent areas for development; • The demographic and spatial framework for the development of adequate coverage for social facilities; and • A program for resource mobilization based on user fees, impact fees and eventually property taxes. 1.49. The new structure plan of Kabul should promote a new approach to planning. This approach relies heavily on the initiative of the private sector in developing land and building houses and other structures. The role of Government should focus on providing (i) an infrastructure network, which would allow the city to grow in an orderly manner, (ii) community facilities, and (iii) the legal framework within which private developers and individual builders-households would operate. 1.50 The development of the structure plan will not be a “once in 20 years� effort, but on the contrary, will be a continuous and permanent effort to adjust the plan to changing supply and demand situations. The Structure Plan staff should monitor constantly the growth of the city, including the variations in land prices, rents and construction costs, and constantly adjust the plan to meet new demand emerging from changing economic conditions. C. The need for a new approach to Planning and Regulations Master plans and development plans 1.51 Traditional master plans – including the master plan developed for Kabul in 1978 – are based on a detailed design reflecting the vision of a few experts who cannot possibly have the foreknowledge of future changing economic conditions. For this reason such plans rapidly become obsolete. By contrast, an analysis of the real city on the ground, including its assets and its liabilities, constitutes the starting point of realistic development plans. Development plans propose gradual changes to improve perceived shortcomings at a pace consistent with the economic resources of households, private firms and Government. For instance, housing policies contained in development plans should be based on demand for different type of housing as demand changes over time. 1.52 Development plans should establish a process to monitor real estate prices as signals to increase or decrease the amount and type of housing that is allowed to be built. 16 For instance, determining the area of land to be zoned for flats should not be based on the arbitrary decision of a technocrat in charge of the plan but on the monitoring of rents and sale prices of apartments. Market price variations are sending signals to planners and developers that there is strong demand for a specific type of housing and less for another. This demand-driven approach allows different socio-economic income groups to find the type of housing they prefer, rather that the type of housing which is selected in their name by an urban planner. Zoning 1.53 A zoning plan is a legal document which establishes the types of construction that can be built in specific parts of the city. Different zones with different characteristics (minimum plot sizes, set backs, floor area ratio, maximum number of floors, etc.) accommodate different city functions and different income groups. Land use standards in residential areas should therefore be related to the price of land in various areas, to the cost of construction, and to households’ income. The population which cannot afford the minimum standards specified in zoning regulations is forced to build illegally. For this reason, it is essential that the urban planning staff monitor on a permanent basis the evolution of households’ income and land and construction prices. Land use standards contained in zoning laws should be closely related to income and land and construction prices. They should in no case be based on arbitrary norms imported from outside the country. 1.54 The land use standards specified in zoning plans for residential areas should also reflect cultural values specific to different socioeconomic groups. For instance, in Kabul there are mainly three housing types: flats in walk-up apartments of 5 floors, detached houses built on the middle of the plot, and houses built around a walled compound leaving the center of the plot as an open courtyard. Each type of house corresponds to demand from different socioeconomic groups. Zoning regulations, therefore, should be able to allow the three types of houses. It should be recognized that the third type, the house built around a central courtyard, is the most efficient in terms of land use and in term of use flexibility. Zoning regulations in areas where this type of housing is allowed should therefore allow building on property boundaries and no set back should be required. 1.55 The design of housing reflects consumer preferences; there is no optimal house design. However, some designs preferred by consumers make particularly efficient use of land, while others do not happens that the courtyard design selected by about 80% of informal households is particularly land-efficient. The sketch of Figure 8 illustrates this point. 1.56 In Figure 1.8, the use of land on two identical plots of 390 m2 is compared: the first one contains a typical detached house on a plot 15m X 26m typical of formal subdivisions; the second plot type is nearly square (19.5 m X 20 m) and is typical of courtyard houses found in informal subdivisions. The design of the detached house leaves only two small front and back yards for a ground floor area of 165 m2. By contrast, the courtyard design, shown on the second plot, allows a large courtyard of 10m by 14 m and 17 a much larger built area of 250 m2. An additional advantage of the courtyard house is that it can be easily subdivided between several households and is easily upgraded over time. 1.57 Land regulations should reflect consumer preferences. It will therefore be essential that the new Kabul land use regulations allow both types of houses. In practical terms, it means that regulations in courtyard areas should not require setbacks from the property line (as is usual in Europe and the US or, unfortunately, in many other countries which have imported their model from former colonial powers). Households should be able to built right on the limit of their property, with the requirement that a minimum of, say, 30% of the land be left open, without defining where this opening might be. 1.58 Importance of regularizing tenure and resolving land conflicts for the future development of Kabul The regularization of tenure and resolution of conflicting land claims is essential for the efficient use of urban land. Land parcels which cannot be traded because of uncertainty about land titles get by-passed by development and soon constitute enclaves of underused or vacant land, obliging the city to expand infrastructure further than what would have been necessary if the land had been freely traded. In the case of Kabul the uncertainty of tenure of many land parcels and buildings constitutes a major hindrance to the future land use efficiency. It will be essential to allocate sufficient resources in the years to come to resolve land conflicts as soon as possible. This would have a major positive impact on the quality and cost of housing produced in the future Figure 1.8: Comparison between the land use efficiency of a detached house and a courtyard house 18 Chapter 2: Land Tenure Regularization in Informal Settlements of Kabul A. Background and Objectives 2.1 It is estimated that 70% of Kabul’s 3 million inhabitants live in informal settlements. Most of these households are likely to have some measure of irregularity in land tenure with varying degrees of tenure insecurity including limitations on the utility of land and house as an asset. This paper explores the issue of regularization of land tenure in these areas. It is part of a broader piece of analytical work ‘Kabul: Urban Land in Crisis’ being carried out by the World Bank in which complimentary analyses firstly of city structure, land use planning and regulation and secondly of the nature and potential mechanisms for resolving urban land disputes, are also undertaken. 2.2 Given the extent of informal settlement and the rapid growth of such areas particularly on account of the accelerated return of refugees, the issue of informal settlement upgrading including land tenure regularization was highlighted by the Government as a focal issue at the Workshop hosted by the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing to launch the analytical work in April 2004. The prominence of this issue was also reiterated in a June 2004 Issues Paper prepared by the Bank as well as through inputs of various Bank staff involved in the review process for this work. 2.3 The overarching objective of this chapter is to facilitate an enhanced policy dialogue on land tenure regularization in informal settlements with particular reference to Kabul. Toward this end, this Report aims to: • Describe and analyze the current status of policy on tenure regularization in informal settlements. • Summarize various current initiatives related to urban land tenure particularly as they pertain to regularization. • Describe and analyze the nature and extent of tenure insecurity and tenure irregularity in informal settlements. • Identify and discuss policy and methodological options relevant to tenure regularization in informal settlements. B. The Current Policy Stance 2.4 As in many developing countries, informal settlement in Kabul took place in the context of inadequate formal supply of affordable land to those segments of the population who desire to be located within convenient reach of the city’s amenities and income earning opportunities, but who are of lesser economic means. In Kabul, the relative security of the capital’s hillsides at a time of conflict also appears to have been a motivational factor in households’ locational choices. As is also typical of many developing countries, such mass informal settlement took place against the backdrop of a ‘dejure’ policy that branded as illegal and carded for demolition, all development that took place without formal planning sanction particularly that which was inconsistent with the city’s Master Plan. The ‘defacto’ policy, was however one of tolerance in which the 19 rule of law was only occasionally and perhaps symbolically enforced. Such enforcement by way of demolition, continues to this day but at a scale that is of minimal impact on the vast extent of informal settlement. 2.5 In 2003 the President of the IRA issued a Decree which stated that informal settlements are to be regularized. The Ministry of Urban Development and Housing (MUDH) has owned this agenda in a substantive way and championed the new policy in various fora. In particular, the MUDH co-hosted two Workshops on urban land issues in the last year, the first with the World Bank and the second with UN-HABITAT, in which it reiterated its stance in favor of regularization. 2.6 On the other hand, Kabul Municipality (KM) has expressed considerable reservation about regularizing informal settlements particularly on the hillsides and continues to carry out the occasional demolition. There arguments are based on various grounds which may be summarized as follows: • Priority of Financial Investments – The Municipality contends that scarce financial resources should be prioritized for areas of the city that have been subject to formal development. • High Infrastructure Servicing Costs – Moreover, it is contended that servicing hillside communities with hard infrastructure, especially those areas in the upper reaches, is very costly and at times inappropriate because of the untenability of the land for settlement. • Environmental – It is argued that the city is in desperate need of green areas and that the hillsides where most of the informal settlement is located were originally earmarked for greenery to enhance the quality of life in the city, reduce its environmental risks and enhance its aesthetic appeal as the capital. • Orderly Development – The Municipality is concerned about the aesthetic appeal of the capital and about the challenges and strains that informal settlements create for the systematic expansion of city infrastructure and amenities. • Development Standards – Informal settlements are characterized by numerous contraventions of development standards for infrastructure (road widths, adequate provisions for sewage disposal and drainage etc.) as well as inconsistencies with the regulations for small buildings (plot sizes, set-backs, room sizes etc.). These may translate into greater public health and safety risks. 2.7 Most of these arguments are discussed in Chapter 1 of this paper focusing on city structure, land use planning and regulation. In summary, the counter position to these concerns is that the planning and regulation of built development in the city needs to be reconciled with the economic rational that informs the locational choices of the city inhabitants, particularly those of lesser income. The informal settlements reflect a rational economic locational choice of the settlers who priorities proximity to income earning opportunities and amenities. Their dense settlement which compares to the density of the high-rise apartment blocks built during the Soviet regime reflects an efficient use of land and reduces per unit costs of infrastructure even if per hectare costs are relatively higher 20 than average due to the number of households and the steepness of the terrain. It is also questionable the extent to which the hillsides can sustain substantial vegetation cover given their rocky nature, suggesting that alternative green areas such as river banks may be worth considering. 2.8 But perhaps most of all, the untenability of relocating an estimated 2 million informal settlers suggests that upgrading including land tenure regularization ought to be given substantial consideration as a policy response to informal settlement. It appears that the Government as a whole including the MUDH and KM is coming to such a recognition. This perception is reinforced by the initiatives described in the next section. C. Urban Land Tenure Initiatives 2.9 There are several initiatives that have occurred within recent times that demonstrate an active consideration on the part of Government to actively address urban land tenure issues, some directly purporting to address regularization of land tenure in informal settlements. These are summarized below: Kabul Urban Reconstruction Project (KURP) 2.10 In July 2004 the World Bank approved a US$25 million loan to the Government for the KURP. The project aims to upgrade basic infrastructure facilities in selected neighborhoods, pilot a land tenure regularization initiative in a subset of these mostly informal settlements, support structure planning and road improvement and provide management support to KM. 2.11 The land tenure regularization component (approx US$0.7 million) aims to develop an appropriate methodology (or methodologies) and capacity to regularize urban land tenure in Kabul and by expansion, urban Afghanistan. The process and competencies to be developed and tested include systematic, site-wide approaches to community mobilization, adjudication and dispute resolution, cadastral surveying, mapping, registration and subsequent administration. Staff of the Afghan Geodesy and Cartography Head office (AGCHO) is to be trained to participate in the pilots and to sustain the process after it is fully designed and approved. The aim is to better understand the complexities and informal arrangements that govern present land tenure arrangements and devise, test and refine appropriate principles, methods, technologies and instruments for all aspects of tenure regularization which can form the basis of a scaled up programmed for urban Afghanistan. In that regard, this project component will also set out to create an action plan for scaling up tenure regularization for all of Kabul. Appendix 1 contains the TORS for consultants to support this undertaking. Land Titling and Economic Reconstruction in Afghanistan (LTERA) 2.12 In 2003 the Government entered into an agreement with USAID who in September of that year awarded a three-year contract to the Emerging Markets Group, Ltd. (EMG) concerning land titling and registration (component 1) and economic restructuring (component 2) in Afghanistan. The total initial investment targeted for these two components is US$30 million at least half of which may be allocated to the land titling 21 and registration component. According to EMG’s December 31st 2004 Detailed Work Plan, this component is to be executed by five project teams: Registration Team; Spatial Information Team; Titling Team; Legal Team; and Afghan Capacity Building and Outreach Team. 2.13 The EMG is particularly concerned with titling and registration of urban land and so will inevitably be exploring solutions to these issues in informal settlements. In this respect their Work Plan for calendar year 2005 aims among many other things to: • Assess land tenure issues in Kabul, particularly in informal settlements where UN-HABITAT is working including political and legal issues with respect to issuing titles in such locations. • Build the political will and legal framework for granting of titles in pilot areas once the residents have met the criteria for formal titling. • Hire train and deploy four two person teams to selected pilot areas to assess the issues and help resolve resident’s titling problems. • Conduct legal analysis of laws, regulations and customary practices related to resolving land and property related problems in urban informal settlements in Kabul and select provinces. • Research customary law and dispute resolution practices in Kabul’s informal settlements. • Host a conference on land tenure issues and informal settlements in Kabul. UN-HABITAT Upgrading 2.14 Over the last few years UN-HABITAT has been executing a European Union funded upgrading program in various districts of Kabul. This program has focused on community planning and mobilization coupled with investments primarily in drainage and access ways. While there is currently no component directly addressing land tenure regularization, the investments in infrastructure have enhanced the security of tenure of the settlers in those communities making formalization of tenure a logical undertaking in the future. Towards this end, the EMG titling pilots are likely to target a subset of these communities. Judicial Reform 2.15 The Judicial Reform Commission (JRC) has been engaged on issues related to land on several fronts. Although none of these explicitly address tenure regularization in informal settlements, they are part of the broader, building momentum for reforms that may later facilitate that process. These activities include proposals to simplify the recording process associated with title registration; the drafting of a replacement Registration of Deeds Act currently before the Ministry of Justice (MoJ); and conduct of a survey on the efficacy of informal justice systems in 11 provinces including Kabul out of which two draft laws, a Structure Law and a Functioning Law were produced. The JRC is soon to be dissolved, however a very recent Presidential Decree established an Advisory Legal Board which includes several existing JRC members and which is likely to subsume the functions of the JRC. 22 Urbanization Commission 2.16 In 2003 an Urbanization Commission was established comprising representation from various Ministries including the Ministries of Finance, Justice, Urban Development and Housing, Agriculture and Livestock, Commerce, Light Industries and Interior as well as Kabul Municipality and AGCHO was charged to give oversight on urban development. Its position on informal settlements was the one favoring regularization and its mandate included monitoring of existing settlements and containment of expansion. Since the inauguration of the post-election Government, this Commission has not met and its status is now uncertain Land Commission. 2.17 In 2004 a Land Commission was established with an Inter-Ministerial Working Group chaired by the Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Livestock. This initiative was undertaken in the context of an Asian Development Bank Technical Assistance program for capacity building in land policy and administration reform. The Commission and its work is currently also being supported by the Department for International Development (DFID) of the UK. Although this loan and Commission are predominantly focused on rural land, several of the proposed initiatives relate to drawing from local practices, an approach that’s relevant to tenure regularization in urban areas. D. The Nature and Extent of Urban Land Tenure Insecurity and Irregularity 2.18 As the Government attempts to decide on the appropriate strategy for regularizing land tenure in urban informal settlements, more data will be needed on the nature and extent of land tenure insecurity and irregularity in this environment as well as the informal systems of land administration and property claims dynamics that already exist. This perspective is strongly shared by the Judicial Reform Commission. 2.19 The current policy dialogue on land tenure regularization of which this paper is a part, aims to help fill this data gap in at least two ways. The first calls for a qualitative analysis of land tenure insecurity as a source of vulnerability in the form of a recently completed study on Urban Governance, Urban Management and Vulnerability sponsored by the World Bank. The second way is through piggybacking on the upcoming National Urban Vulnerability Assessment (NUVA) scheduled to be executed around July 2005 by suggesting specific questions related to this theme for inclusion in the questionnaire and then conducting a preliminary analysis of that subset of data. 2.20 With respect to the recently completed Urban Governance5 study, the methodology employed was semi-structured interviews with some ninety key informants and some seventy households. One of the key findings was that insecurity and inaccessibility of tenure are widespread causes of vulnerability. It was also noted that renters were particularly vulnerable to rapidly rising rents and often moved on multiple occasions. Land grabbing by influential members of society, occasional demolitions and examples of land legislation being overruled were also causes of insecurity. The Study also found that customary and informal systems were potentially useful for settling 5 AREU, Urban Governance, Urban Management, and Vulnerability, mimeo, Kabul, 2005. 23 disputes in informal areas but noted that with the rapidly changing demographic of urban areas in recent years, many settlers do not feel adequately connected to these local mechanisms. 2.21 The upcoming National (Urban)/Rural Vulnerability Assessment (NUVA) of 2005 offers a valuable opportunity to systematically capture qualitative and quantitative, representative data on many aspects of urban land tenure relevant to the issue of regularization. These include the distribution of tenure classes in these settlements; the types of property documents available; specifics of tenure (how is land acquired, allocated, defended, alienated, leveraged and protected); specific aspects and causes of tenure insecurity; the proportion of households facing property disputes; the share of these typically resolved at the community level, official levels etc.; the proportion of these and other informal decisions that are usually recorded and the form and level of such records; the number of times households have moved; the average share of income on housing; and other areas of interest. E. Issues in Tenure Regularization 2.22 There are various dimensions to a program of tenure regularization in informal settlements which inform its design. Making the appropriate choices depends on adequate profile data of the targeted communities (along the lines described above); careful clarification of the desired outcomes; realistic assessment of financial and manpower constraints; socio-political analysis; stipulations of the existing legal framework and the ease with which it can be modified; and an assessment of the level of available technology among other things. A range of design elements are outlined below. The discussion on each will be enhanced in a later draft of this paper. Subsequent analysis of the NUVA data will also allow for a less neutral discussion of the options in the Afghan context. Property Freedoms 2.23 Land tenure is associated with varying mixtures of property freedoms each of which can be experienced to different degrees. For residential plots, these usually include the freedoms to occupy, use, improve, leverage, alienate and bequeath the land. Regularization programs can target any subset of these freedoms for enhancement. Instruments of Tenure 2.24 Depending on existing constraints and on which freedoms are targeted for enhancement, there are a variety of tenure instruments which can be employed to convey those rights or freedoms. These include conventional tenure forms such as freehold and leasehold with or without restrictions, to a range of intermediate instruments. Some examples of intermediate instruments and countries in which they are utilized are identified below6. They will be elaborated upon in a later version of this paper. It is also possible that Afghanistan may need to devise a unique instrument or to utilize a 6 Most of the listed examples are drawn from a recent review entitled ‘ Land, Rights & Innovation’ edited by Geoffrey Payne and published by ITDG Publishing in 2003. 24 combination of instruments in its regularization drive. The proposed collection and analysis of land tenure profile information will give greater clarity on the appropriate approach. • Certificate of Comfort - Trinidad • Statutory Lease – many Commonwealth Territories • Declarations of Possession - Columbia • Future Use rights - Columbia • Communal Tenancy – many territories • Housing Permits – francophone Sub-Saharan Africa • Credit Contracts - Bolivia • Certificates of Rights - Botswana • Concession of the Real right to Use - Brazil • Community Land Trusts - Kenya • Temporary Occupation Licenses – India, Kenya • Communal Ownership – South Africa • Land Rentals – Thailand Eligibility 2.25 Tenure regularization program needs to have a clear and acceptable basis for determining eligibility. Criteria that are typical include a subset of the following: • A Cut-Off date - indicates the latest date by which occupation must have occurred • Geography – limits the regions of the city or even identifies the specific settlements in a Schedule • Topography – sometimes used to exclude regularization of settlements on untenable land • Proximity to Infrastructure – sometimes used because of the limitations of expanding from tenure upgrading to services upgrading. • Ownership – often regularization policy applies only to State/ Municipal or State Owned Enterprise land. • Environmental Sustainability – settlements on steep slopes, in flood plains, river banks, ecologically sensitive areas etc. are often excluded • Public Purpose – land that is informally settled on but earmarked for an alternative public purpose is often excluded • Poverty – Settlements that are better off financially are sometimes excluded on the basis that they should not receive subsidies inherent in regularization 2.26 Any of the above criteria have been factored into the basis for selecting Gozars to be upgraded under KURP. Dispute Resolution 25 2.27 Regularization programs need to determine the modes through which land related disputes would be addressed in the program. Some programs rely on the conventional courts. Others create devoted Land Tribunals such as the Special Property Court recently established in Afghanistan. Still others rely on in-situ application of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanisms while in some cases the informal systems are relied upon. 2.28 Afghanistan the choice is complicated by multiple layers of law including Islamic law, customary law and civil and statutory law. The recent JRC initiative to integrate the informal justice system with the formal system whereby decisions made in the former would be eligible to be recorded in the latter (providing that the decisions were consistent with Islamic and civil law) would be an important development of relevance to dispute resolution in the context of regularization. The Chapter 3 explores this issue in much greater depth. Mapping and Surveying 2.29 The formalization of property claims usually requires some spatial referencing of the parcels of land to which the claims or freedoms apply. To this end some level of mapping and bounding description (surveying) system is required. Mapping can range from simple, field generated sketches of layouts up to large scale (typically 1:2000) base mapping derived from aerial photography. In between these two options and much closer to the aerial photography derived maps are maps based on satellite imagery which are capable of accuracies ranging from 0.6 meters (Quickbird) to several meters. 2.30 The choice of methodology should be determined by adequate consideration of what is already available; sensitivity analyses of different levels of accuracy; the existence and likelihood of the parcels being linked into a national cadastre and the accuracies required to facilitate that; the end purpose of the mapping; the density of built topographic detail; and of course the resources that can be devoted to the exercise. 2.31 The choice of tenure instrument also influences the level of boundary description that is required. Conventional instruments such as freehold and leasehold typically require ground measurement and depiction of boundaries through traditional surveying methods and plotting. For other, more basic incremental tenure instruments, plot referencing by way of a unique identifier supported by attribute description of neighbouring parcels may suffice. Additionally point referencing of parcels through one coordinated point closest to the centre of the parcel is an option given the increasing availability of the Global Positioning System (GPS). Usually, however, boundary descriptions that incorporate simple intuitive attribute descriptions are useful because of the ease with which individual plot owners/settlers can identify them in social rather than technical terms. 2.32 Kabul and several other areas were recently mapped through satellite images by the Afghanistan Information Management Systems (AIMS). These maps are now being used by several Ministries and NGOs, however the AGCHO who holds the formal responsibility for mapping and surveying contend that they are subject to many inaccuracies. The EMG also proposes to consider generating alternative maps possibly 26 through digital aerial photography. This contention about the AIMS’ maps needs to be resolved and their suitability for tenure regularization in urban areas determined. Registration and Land Administration 2.33 Once property rights or freedoms are assigned to particular parcels of land through tenure regularization, some form of registration and administration of these rights is necessary. Here, the level of sophistication depends on the instrument of tenure used, the level of detail of the parcel description and the capacity that can be sustainably deployed toward this exercise. 2.34 Models vary from one-stop shops to multi-Agency variations where surveying and registration functions are separate organizational responsibilities. The level of decentralization also varies from highly centralized capital-based systems to those decentralized at the provincial levels. Some contend that such systems need to be even closer to the settlers if they are to be kept current and therefore advocate district or even village level; community based manual land administration using standardized forms and procedures. Other models see civic and private sector property associations assuming primary responsibility for land administration. 2.35 The JRC is keen for the choice of model for Afghanistan to be informed by review of the efficacy of systems used particularly in central Asian countries. Some presentation and analyses of these systems will be undertaken in a later version of this paper. Institutional Arrangements for Implementation 2.36 This can be seen from the above discussion, implementation of a tenure regularization program is a complex and multi-faceted operation. Given its legal ramifications, consistency of approach is also paramount. The functions go beyond registration and updating of rights but also include mapping, community mobilization and engagement, surveying and dispute resolution among others. Moreover, tenure regularization is often one component of a broader upgrading program involving complimentary interventions in infrastructure improvements requiring expertise in physical planning, engineering and community participation among other disciplines. 2.37 At this point it is not evident that such a combination of expertise exists in any one department of Government or institution in Afghanistan. Considerable institutional engineering would be required or at least much enhanced coordination among various bodies. Currently these include the AGCHO, MUDH, KM, JRC, the Courts and others. The case for an entirely new Agency also cannot yet be dismissed. Conclusions 2.38 This draft of a paper on building a policy dialogue on land tenure regularization in urban informal settlements has attempted to sketch out the state of play with respect to policy and related initiatives in Afghanistan. It has also identified various data gaps and 27 strategies to partially fill them in the short term. A preliminary sketch of the variety and complexity of issues to be addressed was also presented. 28 Chapter 3: Resolution of Property Rights Disputes in Urban Areas: Rethinking the Orthodoxies A. Volume of Property Disputes 3.1 Formal property disputes in Kabul are numerous, but not as numerous as might be expected. Disputes that have been presented for formal resolution (i.e. to the courts or institutional commissions) since December 2001 number no more than several thousand,7 a tiny proportion in a city of around three million people. Less than two thousand cases have been brought to the Special Land Disputes Court set up to address returnee and IDP complaints. No more than 10,000 property disputes are formally addressed in the courts nationally, also a comparatively low figure for a population of more than 20 million people. (Annex 4). 3.2 A significant proportion of property disputes in Kabul pertain to high-value properties owned by wealthier persons or public figures, and it is this rather than the volume of cases that promotes the high-profile surrounding conflicts. The much larger sector of privately-owned middle income and small homes and premises has broadly escaped issues of formally contested ownership and occupation, both during and following 1978-2001 (Box 3.1). Conflicts over real property exist in these sectors, but are mainly among family members or relating to conventional boundary and similar issues. Resolution is broadly contained within the household and related informal social domain (neighborhood). Reasons for these differences are elaborated later in this chapter. 3.3 Notwithstanding the above, the potential for significant contestation over property in Kabul City is enormous. As outlined below, these relate in different ways to first, the massive and still-expanding informal settlement sector where de facto home-owners number at least one million.8 In general, these people rarely actively contest property rights, either formally in the courts or even informally, but live in a state of suspended tenure insecurity. A second large group of conflicts relate to contested legal ownership and generally affect better-off households. (a) Potential conflict arising through genuinely unjust evictions 3.4 Under the terms of existing law, construction of houses on Government land9 without permission is illegal. Key public officials demonstrated willingness to use the law to destroy such homes for their own, if not public convenience. The bulldozing of houses in Shirpur in 2003 is the best-known example (Box 3.2). A de facto policy of regularization of informal settlements suggests such evictions may not become a chronic habit but in the still-unregulated environment may nevertheless occur by the hand of powerful officials, taking advantage of technically legal procedures that may not 7 This conclusion is drawn on the basis of data provided by the Maintenance Department of the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing, the Property Department of the Municipality, the Supreme Court, the Special Property Disputes Court and the Norwegian Refugee Council. 8 This excludes the many tenants, relatives and friends who may share these premises but who will also be indirectly affected by ownership conflicts. Rental issues are covered later. 9 Also known as Public Land or State Land. 29 Box 3.1 DEN DONAR A CUSTOMARY SETTLEMENT IN KABUL Den Donar is a neighbourhood in District 7 (Gozar 614) and which comprises four sub-settlements. Up until the 1970s each of these was a traditional sub-urban or peri-urban hamlet, made up of farming families. Over 2,000 jeribs were cultivated (400 ha). Each hamlet was founded based on an original clan, with close inter-relations among households. Today each of these settlements is still largely of one ethnic group, and the greater proportion of who have a long history in the community. Describing one of the hamlets, the informant explained how conversion of the village land to urban housing was triggered by the drought of the early 1970s. The growing demand for building land by the expanding city provided the incentive to sell off at first small parcels of land, and then more and more. The sharp rise in values since 2002 has encouraged many to sell off their final fields for building land. Others have persistently retained a small field. Land sales have altered the character of the community, but not dramatically, given the social stability of the neighborhood. Especially in former years, sales were preferably made to known persons or at least those from the same ethnic group. Strangers have risen in number, although slowly, and with their absorption into the community. Male household heads still meet routinely in local mosques (there are more than seven altogether in the Gozar). The Wakil-e-Gozar is selected by household heads to represent the interests of the community and to inform members of development opportunities (e.g. vaccination campaigns, food for work, etc.). The Wakil-e-Gozar is always involved as a certifier of documents, both because this is believed to be prerequisite to acknowledgement of tenure by Government land Courts, and because he is considered the chief elder among elders. He is not paid for these informal notarization services. Less than 20 percent of household owners have property documents prepared by the Court (‘legal documents’). “Customary documents are sufficient if the details are properly described�. During the war years, many people fled from the area, leaving others in charge of their homes and fields. The informant could not recall a single case of wrongful occupation during 1978-2001 or since. He explained this as a consequence of – (a) the overriding ethnic and socio-political cohesion of the community – “no one would have allowed a complete stranger to take over one of our houses or build on our remaining fields� (b) the low value of the traditional houses, combined with the lack of water and electricity services, and which were not appealing to either Government authorities during the Communist or later periods, or to individuals or officials who were looking for premises to rent out or sell; “these were not houses like you find in Shahr-e-Naw or Wazir Akbar Khan or valuable Macrorayan apartments� (c) the remoteness of the area from the centre of the city, and (d) the absence of any Government land in the Gozar upon which needy persons could settle without immediate dispute. As to more general disputes, these too are very few in number and mainly related to intra-family matters. “Sometimes families need help agreeing who to give the house to when the father dies, but no one goes to Court for this. It is resolved in the community� Source of Information: G. Jelani, AIMS personal communication necessarily accord with principles and practices that are socially just. Should evictions reoccur, this could rapidly descend into dramatic conflict with the State, with constitutional principles relating to the right to shelter brought potently into play. (b) Potential conflict arising between old and new members of neighborhoods 30 3.5 There are many areas in Kabul where expansion onto Government land has not occurred involuntarily by homeless people and nor has it occurred solely during the disturbed war years. On the contrary, some of the most significant occupations have been Box 3.2 THE SHIRPUR EVICTION In September 2003, several hundred Police began to destroy the houses of some 30 families (250 individuals) who had constructed substantial homes on land claimed by a Government Ministry. This was Shirpur, a comparatively wealthy neighborhood in downtown Kabul City. Residents were not given the chance to collect their possessions ahead of the bulldozers. Not all construction was recent, with some ‘historical’ buildings also bulldozed. A great deal of local press coverage was given the event. When criticized by human rights groups and by a UN Human Rights Monitor, the Police Chief claimed the eviction was based upon an official order to remove the squatters from Government land. A few days later the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission listed 30 officials as instrumental in the eviction and planned beneficiaries of the resulting cleared land. President Karzai expressed outrage and ordered a commission of inquiry. This reported to him the next month (October 15th 2003). The President responded to the findings by firing four key officials including the Police Chief. Clearance was halted by a Decree issued on March 27 2004 ordering Kabul Municipality to set prices for plots, with reference to open market rates and to collect these fees from the new allocatees. Large houses quickly began to be constructed, some owned by top officials. Evictions were similarly undertaken in other parts of Kabul during 2004, such as affecting Madan-e- Hawaye area. On February 17 2004, the local newspaper Erada complained that – “Scarcely a month on from the adoption of the new Constitution, the Municipality and Land Distribution Commission has been distributing the lands of the locality of Ayub Khan Mena, like the area of Shirpur, to the benefit of powerful people and not in line with the law. The residents of Ayub Khan Mena say they want ownership of their lands to be defined in a legal manner. They want ownership of their homes and lands on a legal basis, according to the current local rates. This is one aspect of the problem. But the other aspect is whether the homeless people in the Municipality’s files will be treated as deserving cases, compelled to live in various parts of the city for so many years and forced to pay high rents to those high- ranking people to whom plots have been distributed…. Recently, the people of Golbagh and other adjacent areas have shown their solidarity for the people of Ayub Khan Mena. They have warned that if the Municipality and Commissions do not stop allocating luxurious plots to powerful people in return for more money and if they do not recognize the inheritance of properties in a legal way, they will fight the case with Government�(as translated and cited by BBC, 17 January 2004). directly engineered since 2001. Nor were the objectives of these invasions solely to assist homeless or poor people to find a place to live; instead, Government land was deliberately invaded with money-making in mind. Box 3.2 provides an example relating to what was once peri-urban pastureland. As often, wilful invasion has occurred above well-established neighborhoods on steep hillsides. Box 3.2 also illustrates the case as relating to widely-acknowledged occupation since 2001. Those protesting against construction – from local elders and Wakil-e-Gozar to District Police, Municipality officials – have often been threatened, or bribed. (b) Potential conflict arising during regularization 3.6 Even should majority tenancy be regularized (as is the de facto policy of the Administration), the nature of entitlement is yet to be negotiated (e.g. leasehold, right of occupancy, freehold, permission to occupy?). A host of disputes may be expected to arise in the process of adjudication. Family members may battle for valuable entitlement, neighbors will frequently argue about ill-planned boundaries and who should surrender 31 footage for public access, and those who have bought plots or houses from land developers may find themselves facing claims that they have not fully discharged their debts. The greatest of care and testing will be needed to ensure that tenure paradigms are sufficiently innovative and flexible to properly deliver preferred modes of tenure (e.g. spousal title, family title, partnerships, and group ownership of shared compounds as well as individual entitlement), and to be able to respond sufficiently flexibly to situations to avoid regularization repeatedly coming to a halt. Award of provisional title is already being informally mooted as a useful instrument. The integration of entitlement with rationalized land use planning, to remove at least the main bottlenecks of rights of way access, will be essential. 3.7 In all Gozars sampled where unplanned settlement has arisen since 1978 and especially since 2001, a very large body of intra-community disputes arises over matters such as one house invading the privacy of another, footpaths being ruined with waste disposal, and snow being cleared from one compound to another (Annex 3). While comparatively minor, these disputes generate a great deal of heat and argument as to boundaries. A basic requirement will be development of procedures which enable disputes to be resolved in ways that are fair and lasting as well as practical and cheap, and which are able to integrate compromises as to boundaries and access. Wakil-e-Gozar and local mosque councils already play an important role in resolving such conflicts whenever called upon to do so (Annex 3) Community-based conflict resolution mechanisms will almost certainly be the most viable route to first explore. (e) Potential conflict from rent-seeking 3.8 Another source of likely heightened property disputes arises in the better-off socio- economic sector, the seeds of which have already been planted in a strikingly rapid rise in property values in Kabul (up to ten times since 2001(Annex 3), and a dramatic increase in property dealers. While aspirations to a vibrant land market have from the outset of post-Bonn planning been a positive objective, this exists however within a socio-legal environment that is still distant from effective rule of law. Rampant rent-seeking is already producing a host of illegal property dealings that are illegal or otherwise lacking legitimacy and may be expected to give rise to a steady increase in disputes over ownership and subordinate property interests, particularly including tenancy. Rent-hikes de-securing mass occupancy of housing are already the norm. Based on analysis of current disputants thus far, there is no reason to expect that these disputes will be confined to the business community; intra-family competition for ownership is amply evident, often driven by no more than the lucrative benefits of ownership in an excessively attractive sale and rental market. Opportunities for personal gain are reportedly abundant, particularly affecting those who have been absent and/or are absent owners. (f) Potential conflict stemming from mismanaged and complicated allocations 32 3.9 A smaller body of property disputes is also waiting to happen in the form of unmet promises of land. and attempts to establish ownership rights on land were there is established occupancy or ownership. This exists, for example, in the waiting lists of an acknowledged minimum of 26,000 persons who have paid significant sums for the purchase of numbered building plots from the Municipality, allocated on land which the Municipality appears not yet to own. (Annex 4). The real number could be larger. Some plot allocations are not only on land that is already privately-owned, but also occupied with well-established houses, some of them decades or even one hundred years old. Other private properties have been allocated on farmland, of which there is a surprisingly significant residue within greater Kabul. Attempts by those who have purchased the plots to construct homes meet with protest, sooner or later. Both parties are aggrieved; those whose properties are being invaded and those who have paid good money for plots. 3.10 Three years after Bonn, the number of property cases being brought to the Courts is still rising. By no means all property disputes in Kabul or other cities reach the courts; it is possible that these comprise the minority (see below). However, even within the normal court system property cases are rising both in number and as a proportion of total cases. 3.11 The normal court system (Primary District Courts and Provincial Appeal Courts) receives cases involving persons who are not returnees. Whereas in 2002 only 16 percent of filed cases in these courts were property related, Supreme Court records for the March 2003 – March 2004 year show 62.4 percent of all cases were property related (see Table 3 in Annex 4 for breakdown of cases). Fifty-four percent of cases investigated by the Kabul Attorney-General’s Office during 2003-04 were property related (Annex 6). 3.12 The Special Land Disputes Court (SLDC) established in 2002 to resolve cases brought by returnees has seen a similar rise.10 In the first six months of its operation the Special Court received some 300 submissions (Annex 7). This subsequently doubled, with an average of 255 cases every quarter during March 2003-March 2004. By Decree in late November 2003, the workload of the Court was subdivided between a Kabul Province Court and another Court dealing with claims from the rest of the country. The Kabul Court inherited 258 cases and over the following five Quarters (up to end 2004) received an average of 145 new cases. The total cases so far received by the Special Land Disputes Court is under 2,000 and the vast majority relate to property in Kabul Province (Tables 1 & 2). The extremely limited capacity of the ex-Kabul section of the court to travel and deal with cases is a major reason for this continued skewed receipt of cases. Even those that arise outside Kabul tend to be urban-related, and mainly submitted in Mazar-i-Sharif, which the ex-Kabul Court has periodically visited. 3.13 While the rise in cases is not surprising, it is a salutary fact that by no means all of these disputes derive from the civil war period but are being created daily – and disputes thrive in an environment of weak governance. The orthodoxy is that property disputes stem from the disorder of 1978-2001. Review of cases and policy thus far suggest that at least in respect of Kabul (but not necessarily elsewhere) the Mujahiddin period (1992- 10 The mandate of the Court may also include IDPs; the relevant article on this is ambiguous. Refer Annex 8 for relevant Decrees relating to the Court. 33 1996) was particularly damaging upon security of ownership. Both the Communist regime before this (1980s) and the Taliban regime afterwards (1996-2001) saw more official appropriation. Thus, for example, ownership of an estimated 900 Macrorayan apartments was cancelled given that they were absent and/or had not paid more than the down payment of purchase of 10 percent (Annex 6). Formal policy today (and in fact since 1989) is for restitution of ownership to rightful owners. Returns since December 2001 predictably produce a significant body of disputes. 3.14 As of January 2005, 78 percent of those formally assisted by UNHCR to return to Afghanistan have settled in Kabul.11 Voluntary return records collected by UNHCR show that 39 percent of these people owned homes or lands (86,270 families) and where these have been wrongfully occupied or sold, may be expected to take formal or informal measures to retrieve those properties.12 Virtually all unassisted returnees owned properties and may be similarly expected to seek restitution where these properties are no longer available to them. Numbers affected are not known,13 but current rates of dispute submission suggest the restitution claims of returnees they may be much fewer than originally assumed. 3.15 Meanwhile lack of provision for housing plots or apartments for the 61 percent of assisted returnees to Kabul who had no homes of their own (47,000 families in January 2005, and rising monthly) is placing pressure on the rental market and also helping to drive construction of new houses in unplanned areas and in public spaces, sowing more seeds of future conflict. In addition, sudden demand for accommodation and office space created by the expanding international community from January 2002 has stimulated further illegal occupancy and/or construction in the higher-value property sector, producing new dispute. Rent-seeking and criminality in an environment which is still afflicted by limited rule of law may be expected. 3.16 Of most concern however is the finding that a significant proportion of disputes have their origins in post-Bonn malfeasance. This ranges from alleged corrupt or nepotistic allocation of building plots or apartments since 2001 (see Annexes 5 and 6) providing fake documentation for clients, or, allegedly, at least turning a blind eye to its production, to being bribed to ignore construction on Government land– an apparently widespread occurrence in the so-called informal property sector as exampled in Box 3.3 and largely affecting Government lands. While by no means all Government employees are involved, these allegations have led to the institutions themselves are as a whole being held in low repute. 11 Data provided by UNHCR Kabul Office, January 2005. 12 Many others returned to find their houses in Kabul destroyed, but this is not a dispute issue. 13 This information could be forthcoming from the planned National Urban Vulnerability Assessment exercise in mid 2005. 34 Box 3.3 THREAT & COLLUSION IN THE ESTABLISHMENT OF NEW HOUSING One Gozar visited represents an established settlement from 1951 but where relations have been disturbed since 2002 with the conversion of pastureland in the area into 50 new houses, with more planned. It is alleged that these were built on the basis of illegal sales of plots by a Kuchi who claimed an old title deed for pasture from Zahir Shah’s time. This title is alleged as counterfeit by older residents. The Wakil-e-Gozar claims that the Kuchi offered him 200,000 Afghanis to endorse the plot sales, and when he refused to do so, turned to several local police, with whom he is alleged to still collude. Very high prices have been paid for the plots. Plot-owners say they are also forced to pay bribes to the police during construction: “Those who did not pay the police had their houses destroyed during the night�. The Wakil-e-Gozar noted two recent cases. One involved a widow who refused to pay more bribes. “What the Kuchi did was to bribe the district police and during the night brought bulldozers and destroyed her house. In the morning, while the woman was running up and down to the police and the court, the Kuchi began building a new house on the ruins. After less than one month the new house was built and a new family settled. No one knows what happened to the widow�. The Wakil-e-Gozar also alleges that several police officers now also have land in the area and make business selling houses. Three of five Gozars visited had seen rapid expansion since 2001 through settlement over which existing residents have no control. One Wakil-e-Gozar reported: “More than 500 new houses have been illegally built in my Gozar since 2001, on Government land above the old settlement. These were built illegally. The individuals involved have no deeds or orders issued by any authority, but they took the land and developed it. They even occupied the grounds of the school and built around 40 houses on it. The graveyard was also not left free. When people went and asked them not to build there, they responded with guns. When the local elders went to ask them not to build there and to not let the waste run on the graves, they beat the elders. We complained to the district police and they came to stop them building but faced their guns also. ISAF came and stopped them from setting fires. They do not have any Wakil or representative and we do not recognize their existence here. We have complained to every place we think could do something but no one could do anything. B The Subject of Property Disputes 3.17 The focus of urban property dispute is the family home. Over half the cases brought to the Special Court concern private homes (Annex 4). This is less strongly the case in respect of clients assisted by Norwegian Relief Council (NRC) in Kabul, among who are just as many who bring disputes concerning open land or building plots in the city (Table 4). Commercial buildings, individual shop premises, car parks and public buildings are also the subject of dispute, but at much lower levels. NRC’s data is particularly revealing as it encompasses cases which are handled through both formal (courts) and informal means (by bringing the disputants together or with the help of community members and elders). 3.18 The outstanding issue at dispute is contested ownership of the property. The most common case is where a returnee finds his home, apartment or building plot occupied by another, and who may be the third or more in a line of owners. The NRC caseload shows that 71 percent of its clients have this complaint (Annex 4). Almost the same proportion of cases heard by the Special Court is categorized as ‘wrongful occupation’ (Table 1), 35 although this represents only a quarter of cases nationally (Table 3). Among NRC clients, cases brought in response to claimed wrongful eviction by officialdom represent around a quarter of cases – not reflected in the Special Court data as that court does not deal with cases where Government is the defendant (these are handled by the Ministry of Justice). 3.19 Wrongful occupancy or other disputes relating to ownership are not limited to persons unknown to each other. Intra-family disputes over ownership are common, and account for 36 percent of all NRC cases. This compares with the 29 percent of inheritance and pre-emption cases in the courts nationally (Table 3 in Annex 4). Often the trigger to these disputes is the suddenly heightened value of the property, in which siblings of descendants wish to access a share. 3.20 Corruption and related governance ills are reported to lie at the heart of many property cases. Malfeasance is reportedly commonly at play in cases. Judges in the Special Disputes Court referred to the many cases where relatives or private persons have allegedly falsified both documents and identifies, claiming to be returnees, heirs of absentee or deceased persons, or those acting on behalf of absentees, presenting themselves as holding notarized power of attorney. There are allegations that officials are often involved, either directly or by being bribed to collude. More than one fifth of NRC’s cases are reported to involve blatant or more subtle corruption by officials (Table 6 in Annex 4). Falsification of documents is common. It is alleged that bribery is commonly attributed to Police, Municipality officials and Ministry officials. 3.21 Urban property disputes differ from those in rural areas and have different implications for interventions. In general terms, similar ills and insecurities afflict rural and urban properties. There are important differences, however. In rural areas for example, privately-owned properties such as houses and farms are not necessarily the main focus of property dispute. Many more disputes relate to common properties, such as pastureland and related dual use pasture/rainfed farming lands (Alden Wily 2004a & 2004b). Whole communities may be involved. Competition for resources between arable and pastoral land use add fuel to these disputes. Inter-ethnic bitterness due to historical dominance by one tribe over another raises the heat of disputes further. Underlying these disputes are less active disputes with the State, in terms of contested definition of land which belongs to the community or to the State, as government or public lands. 3.22 This contrasts with the finding that in urban areas disputants are more often individuals and the properties at issue, mainly private properties such houses, apartments, shops and urban and peri-urban gardens and farms. Historical considerations are minor. Determination of the authenticity of evidential deeds (customary or otherwise) is an essential element of urban dispute resolution, whereas in rural areas, issues of history and justice come into play. Most urban disputes have origins that extend no earlier than 1992 and a significant number have arisen in the post-Bonn reconstruction period. Ethnic tension is not absent. However, wrath is less directed to new beneficiary occupants than to the powerful individuals who reportedly engineered these public land occupations to their own benefit, and to the Administration for failing to halt these developments or to rein in the culprits. 36 3.23 Arguably, issues of bribery and corruption and counterfeiting of documents are more prominent in Kabul and other city environments than in rural areas and where contestants are challenging the status quo and how it was arrived at, more than the documents themselves. In addition, as outlined above, a significant number of urban disputes have their origins in the unjust, if technically legal, decisions of government officials or bodies, such as relating to allocation/cancellation/reallocation of building plots and apartments (Annexes 5 and 6). 3.24 Rural dwellers also appear to rely upon community based mechanisms more frequently than their urban counterparts, to whom courts are more accessible (but probably more expensive to utilize) and where community institutions may be weak. There are clearly many disputes which are addressed at neighborhood level (Annex 3) but it could be that this is limited to Gozars such as visited by this study (and limited to Districts 2, 6,7 & 8) and where a long history of occupation exists for the core of the community. Agencies like UN-Habitat and surveyors in Kabul report that in many other districts, social relations are too fragmented for community-based networks and authority systems to consolidate.14 Beall and Esser (2005) in particular comment upon the many neighbourhoods, both rich and poor, where home-owners do not even know their neighbours. 3.25 The broadest distinction in disputes relating to real property in Kabul is between those which inhabit private and public land. Insecurity of tenure is mainly the issue confronting the latter, while private owners may be dogged by a range of disputes relating to wrongful occupancy while absent, contested ownership among family members, disputes relating to purchases and sales and payments, and disputes relating to the position of boundaries. 3.26 Among those who have built homes illegally on Government land, the non- existence of either embedded customary or legal entitlement means that disputes are suppressed and rarely enter the formal domain because of this. This is especially so for the many thousands (and possibly millions) of people who have newly built or acquired houses since 2001. Because militia commanders have allegedly been the major actors in this development, and for rent-seeking rather than benign reasons, the main dispute should in theory be between the state and these commanders, but in practice the administration has been unable or reluctant to act.. Disputes between commanders and those to whom they sell land for building or houses, are allegedly rife. Due to the illegality of settlement overall, these are kept out of the formal domain, with even Wakil- e-Gozar refraining from endorsing occupancy or transactions (Box 3 4). A further main divider among disputes is socio-economic status as outlined below. Table 7 provides an overview of the typology of disputes. C. Effect of Socio-economic Status 3.27 The frequency and nature of property disputes correlates with socio-economic status. In general terms, this review found that: 14 Hunte (2004), Shutte (2004), Grace (2004) and Beall and Esser (2005). 37 • formal property disputes are the privilege of the rich, and chronic insecurity of tenancy, the fate of the poor; • the more valuable the property, the more vulnerable it is to wrongful occupancy and transfer by both State and private parties, and eventual dispute as to its ownership; and • while disputes among family members about shares or ownership of inherited property afflict all classes, it appears to be the case that the more valuable the property/wealthier the owners, the higher the likelihood of disputes. Homeless 3.28 The number of completely homeless, persons with only tent or otherwise flimsy shelter is comparatively low – the vast urban squatter slums of many warmer capital cities do not exist in Kabul. UNHCR attempts to keep track of the homeless and as of 8 January 2005 identified 22 distinct temporary settlements of more than six households in Kabul (UNHCR 2005). Thirteen of these “spontaneous settlements� are located in public buildings or their premises, three on public land and two within the walls of destroyed private buildings. The total number of persons affected is less than 17,000, or less than 0.5 percent of the total Kabul population. It is known that many others possibly smaller settlements exist. Grace (2004) referred to an estimated 16,000 households living in open spaces and destroyed housing during last winter. Homeless tenants 3.29 A very high proportion of people in Kabul live in the homes of relatives or landlords. By virtue of not having the means to own houses over which to dispute, the very poor are not directly party to formal or informal disputes over ownership. Instead they may have to move frequently in the face of rent hikes. Or they may have to move out under duress in the overcrowded homes of relatives or friends, with whom they have lodged. Home owners on land they do not own 3.30 As recorded above, by far the greater proportion of Kabulis are those who have constructed or purchased homes of varying size and quality in unplanned settlements and on land to which they are not legally titled (mainly Government land, with some private lands affected). 3.31 In the case study of Gozar in District 8 illustrates (Annex 11) even those settled as long ago as 1989, do not typically engage in formal disputes as to ownership and when problems arise, are obliged to resolve these within the community and often without the assistance of Wakil-e-Gozars. Few Wakil-e-Gozar accept the occupancy of newcomers who have not been formally granted title by Government (Annex 3). Most of these conflicts appear to centre not on actual entitlement to the house or even the land upon which it is built but upon boundary issues and related rights of way. Social behavior problems caused by the unplanned nature of these settlements, such as where a house directly overlooks another and deprives female residents of essential privacy, or where 38 waste moves into the yard of another, are common triggers of property related dispute in these areas. Tenurial conflicts do periodically do arise with Municipal or other government authorities or their agents (Police, Military) but do not reach the Courts even where evictions occur, such as most publicly exhibited in the Shirpur case. This is because occupation is technically illegal. More commonly such conflicts are resolved on an ad hoc and recurrent basis with payments to officials disputing settlement. This particularly occurs during construction. Home owners in unplanned but recognized settlements 3.32 Upgrading of existing settlements has only partially occurred within the original Master Plan area. Private ownership of houses and shops and the land on which they exist is recognized. However, these areas have fewer disputes due to - • the lower value of the houses due to their comparatively smaller size, the traditional nature of their construction and the absence of running water, electricity, drainage and sewage; this has made them unappealing to wrongful occupation or reallocation by Government; • most such areas have origins as rural villages and today’s owners are descendants of stable social and often mono-ethnic communities. Even though thousands left their homes during especially the Mujahiddin and Taliban periods, neighbors and relatives who remained, protected those vacant properties. This was the case in Den Donar (Box 3.1) and Sai Sang (Box 3.2). Although homes were bombed, looted and destroyed in other Gozars sampled, especially during the Mujahiddin period (1992-1996), in only of five cases were houses wrongfully occupied, and these people fled with the arrival of the Taliban (Mula Buzorg, District 7). 39 Table 3.1: Typology of Property Disputes in Kabul Dispute Type Causes and Triggers Parties Typically Typical Wealth Group City Area Where Usual Evidence of Involved of Claimants Most Common Ownership 1 Contested private a/ Forcible occupation of empty houses during Private persons Returnee rich and better Planned and Court issued house ownership by civil disturbances off who own large houses serviced areas. Deeds, genuine or unrelated persons Militia commanders worth co-opting High income areas. counterfeit b/ Counterfeit claims of ownership in absence of owner c/ Formal reallocation by Communist or later regimes 2 Contested private a/ Reallocation by Government in absence of Beneficiaries of Returnee medium or poor Planned and Court issued apartment owner and installment payments officials serviced areas Deeds, genuine or ownership by counterfeit unrelated persons b/ Counterfeit claims and establishment of Militia commanders ownership 3 Contested building a/ Failure of Municipality to Acquire Plots that Private persons Wealthy or better off in Proposed planning Allocation Letters plot ownership by has allocated order to pay for plot areas from Municipality unrelated persons Municipality b/ Private owners Existing Owners 4 Intra-family a/ Return of family members while one Siblings All classes All areas Legal and disputes concerning member has maintained the property Customary private house or Spouses evidence of apartment b/ Resentment of economic gains from sale or subdivision at rent of the property giving vibrant rental and Descendants inheritance sale market induced mainly by international depending upon community housing and office needs wealth of family and value of property 40 Dispute Type Causes and Triggers Parties Typically Typical Wealth Group City Area Where Usual Evidence of cont’d. Involved of Claimants Most Common Ownership 5 Eviction of house a/ Eviction due to pressure from those with Private persons Poorer households Unplanned areas Customary deeds owners from means or power of purchase or Government land Influential persons in inheritance positions of authority and Or no evidence Militia commanders 6 Eviction of land or a/ Building plot projects, roads, etc. Municipality Poorer households Unplanned areas Customary deeds house owners to of purchase or make way for Private persons inheritance planned developments 7 Boundary, Right of a/ Informal settlements allegedly randomly Neighbors Middle to poorer people Unplanned areas No documents of Way and Privacy settled or allocated by militia commanders who have built their own ownership. Over Disputes houses time some customary documents of sale. 8 Inter-Community a/ Illegal occupation of Government lands Old settlers and new Militia commanders are land No documents above or next to well-established settlements; settlers wealthy, plot or house other than bills of the support of influential persons buyers, middle income sale, rarely Militia commanders endorsed by Wakil- e-Gozars 41 Home and apartment owners in wealthier, serviced central areas of Kabul 3.33 It is these properties which have been and remain the target of wrongful occupation, formal cancellation of ownership and reallocation, and intra-family disputes. D. Official and Unofficial Documentation in Disputes 3.34 Most evidence of ownership is by customary means. Evidential documentation of ownership falls into three categories: • Those with documents prepared by the courts (‘legal deeds’); these are usually held by wealthier owners and in respect of better quality buildings15; • Those with documents prepared at local level with witnesses recorded and generally countersigned by the Wakil-e-Gozar (customary deeds); these tend to be held by middle to poor income families, in respect of unserviced, traditional or small houses, and usually take the form of bills of sale or subdivision at inheritance; and; • Those with no documentation, or documentation which is not countersigned by Wakil-e-Gozar or another official; this is currently commonly the case for those buying plots or houses constructed illegally on Government land. 3.35 Among neighborhoods visited, the majority hold customary documents of title (Table 8). Although these areas were in one small part of Kabul, it is likely that the vast majority of written entitlement elsewhere in Kabul is by informal means. Wakil and residents interviewed were uniformly dismissive of ‘legal documents’, saying this was ‘not customary’, ‘expensive’, ‘unnecessary’ or ‘as good as legal deeds’. Table 3.2: Entitlement Documents in Sample Gozars by Percentage GOZAR (Neighborhood) Qabala Sharia Qabala Orfi Informal Deeds Legal deeds Customary or No Deeds deeds 1 Den Donar in District 7 < 20% 80% 0 2 Siah Sang in District 8 7% 63% 30% (post-2001) 3 Chel Soton in District 7 30% 70% 0 4 Sar-e-Tapa in District 7 5% 60% 35% (post 2001) 5 Mula Bozorg in District 7 28% 42% 30% (post 2001) 6 Naw Abad Deh Afghananan District 2 75% 19% 6% 7 UN-Habitat Project site in District 6 ‘few’ ‘most’ 0 8 UN-Habitat Project site in District 7 ‘some’ ‘most’ Sources: Wakil-e-Gozar and/or Residents 15 The originals of these deeds (Konda) are kept in the Kabul Province Registry/Archives (Markhzan). While it is now known that there are 6,332 books relating to property (Safar 2003), it is not known how many properties are in each book. 42 Box 3.4 STATUTORY EVIDENCE OF PROPERTY OWNERSHIP Article 4, Law on Land Under Decree 57, in Gazette Issue Number 795, 2000 Documents representing or demonstrating rights of land ownership include: (1) Document in accordance with Shariat as issued by a court for the purchase, ownership, gift, distribution, exchange of land, surrender letter, correction letter, and the document of the final decision of a court based on the issue of an ownership document, and which will be valid under the following conditions: (a) where there is an original copy in the court. Documents that are not registered in the court will be considered legal only after approval of the court; (b) where there are documents demonstrating a right where there is no evidence against its legitimacy; and (c) land where there is a valid taxation certificate. (2) Purchase documents issued by order of the Emirate and the Prime Minister will be valid under the following conditions: (a) Where the document has been issued by the correct authorized body or department; (b) Where the land is registered under the taxation department. (3) Tax paying documents are valid under the following conditions; (a) As set out in (2) above; (b) Where the land is noted in the original book of registration and taxation; (4) Documents of haqaba [water rights] are valid under the following conditions; (a) where there is no evidence against their legitimacy; (b) where the land is shown in the registration book of ownership and taxation; (5) Urfee [customary] documents will be valid under the following conditions; (a) the seller of the land must have the appropriate document acknowledging sale; (b) the customary document should have been prepared before the 15th of Asad 1354 [1975] and the buyer should have filled the declaration form and after approval by the neighboring landowners, submitted the document to the concerned department before the year 1357 [1978]. In areas where the declaration form had not been distributed prior to 1357 or it was distributed but the registration book has been fully destroyed, if there is no dispute concerning the ownership of the land and the purchase and occupation of the land is recognized as valid by neighbors and the area’s state department, then the documents will be accepted as valid. 3.36 Strictly speaking, by statute, customary documents are admissible evidence of tenure if they were prepared prior to 1978 (Box 3.4). However even the legislation is ambiguous, in at the same time accepting that local testimony as to the truth of the claimed tenure, is sufficient. Nor do judges necessarily follow statutes, but their own interpretation of Sharia or the common law as based upon Hannafi Sharia, and recorded in the Civil Code. This gives implicit support for customary prepared documentation and in fact rarely refers to documentation at all; the emphasis is upon local testimony as to the truth of occupation and rights, and an important article of the Code assures owners 43 security where they have lived “for a continuing period of 15 years and possessed (the real estate) without any dispute and objection (Article 2779). 3.37 The type of documentation underpinning ownership and conflict levels are linked - but in opposite ways to the expected. This review found that the more formal the documentation the more vulnerable it is to dispute – and to its alteration. This is a function of the fact that more valuable properties are those most likely to be wrongfully occupied, and evidence corrupted in support of this occupation. The more valuable the property, the more likely it is evidenced by a deed prepared by the court, endorsing inheritance, purchase, gift or other transaction. The smaller, poorer and least serviced the property, the less attractive it is to wrongful occupation. Such properties are also likely to be owned on the basis of customary entitlement. This takes the form of bills of sale or subdivision at inheritance, in hand-written statements, witnessed by neighbours or elders, by thumb prints. 3.38 Wakil-e-Gozar are routinely asked to countersign customary transactions and do so for all those they acknowledge as members of the community. That is, newcomers who have located themselves on public lands adjacent to the settlement in recent years and through purchase of plots from warlords, are often not accorded status as community members. Several Wakil interviewed, refuse to countersign those transactions. All Wakil consider one of their main functions to be the countersigning of documents. 3.39 The content of a court-prepared deed of ownership and a customary deed is not very different. Both describe the property under transaction and list witnesses with thumb- prints and dates. Photos of parties to the agreement and witnesses are appended to court documents and sometimes now to customary documents. However it is the nature of the customary document as merely written testimony to an agreement that is known in the community and can be easily checked up on, from neighbours, relatives, mosque leaders and the Wakil-e-Gozar, that makes it less easy to counterfeit or challenge than documents prepared by judges and with witnesses who may not be known in the community. That is, it is less the document that keeps customary land agreements protected from routine corruption, but the fact that the transaction is embedded in a community context. Disputes surrounding customary ownership are accordingly fewer. 3.40 In these circumstances, it is therefore not surprising that most formal disputes deal with court prepared deeds. This was indicated as the situation in regard to claims put before the Special Court. NRC records that legal deeds are involved in 69 percent of its cases. E. Governance Efforts and Issues 3.41 A high proportion of property disputes are caused or facilitated by poor governance or alleged corruption on the part of civil servants. Although in different ways from those found in rural areas, the hand of officialdom in urban property disputes is highly evident. This occurs first in the legacy of policies of the conflict period 1978-2001. This ranges from expropriation of the urban estates of wealthy persons during the Communist administration during the 1980s (such as the subdivision of one of the King’s estates in the city into building plots, now under restitution claim), to unconsidered speedy 44 cancellation of both building plot allocations and especially provisional apartment ownership by absentee owners during the Taliban. 3.42 More potent has been related maladministration or abuse of process. Thus officials in the Department of Shelter admit to still following the Taliban regulation that ownership of an apartment is cancelled where only the first ten percent deposit has been paid and where the owner has been absent for more than a year. Only one month from issue of Notice of Intent to Retrieve the Apartment is given for the owner or his relatives to make good further instalments, to stall loss of ownership. One official calculated that at least 10 percent of owners have lost their apartments since 1992, and that this continues right up until the present (Annex 6). Cancellation of ownership of building plots by the Distribution Department of the Municipality may be at similar rates – and also continued well after December 2001. There are also allegations that members of distribution committees, past and present, favor reallocation of plots and apartments to relatives, friends or themselves. Meanwhile the illegal ownership of multiple plots and apartments is rarely pursued. 3.43 Many more disputes are triggered initially by private persons who generate false testimony, impersonation of owners, and even claims to be heirs of deceased persons later found to be alive and well. Misuse of powers of attorney for Afghans living overseas has proven particularly common in the Special Disputes Court. However, once again the question frequently arises as to why a certain official or even judge approves a submission, allocation, reallocation, request for legal certificate or like document, without checking its validity. 3.44 In dealing with the disputes that eventually result, the Special Land Disputes Court finds that ‘most’ cases have elements of corruption NRC more bluntly observes that every case it mediates has an element of corruption (Table 6). 3.45 Efforts to limit the rise in disputes have been made by the Administration but with weak effect. The post-conflict Administration has not ignored the demands for property restitution of returnees. The outstanding practical intervention has been the establishment of the dedicated Land Disputes Court for returnees (see below). While this is an important and necessary service, it remains a fact that it serves a limited and better-off sector – those who owned properties in the City before and during the disturbances. Much less attention has been given to assisting the many more citizens who left Afghanistan homeless – and return homeless. 3.46 Significant policy changes have also been instituted since 2003. The most notable has been the de facto restraint (with periodic lapses) upon eviction of thousands of households who have constructed or purchased houses on Government land. Possibly a million or more poorer people have benefited from the blind eye turned to continued new occupation of open spaces in and around the city. The benefit has been many times greater for rent-seeking elites, including militia commanders have during the 2002-2004 period, appropriated large areas and sold plots or houses to beneficiaries. 45 3.47 In terms of dispute resolution and much-needed restoration to rule of law: how to regularize the occupancy of the needy majority, encouraging further corrupt and rent- seeking behavior or further unplanned occupation of Government land is a challenge for the new Government. 3.48 An identifiable policy of the post-Bonn Administration relating to urban tenure has been to restore control over Government lands and limit revived post-Taliban allocation of these by officials (Boxes 3.5 & 3.6 and refer Annex 10 for list of all property legislation relevant to Kabul). The freeze upon sale of new building plots by the Municipality was important and in the main followed by the Municipality after a change of leadership in March 2004 – but not by individuals who continued to develop various Government land areas in the city right up until the end of 2004. How far this is continuing beyond the election of the President and appointment of a new Cabinet will be seen in 2005. Box 3.5 THE LEGAL DEFINITION OF GOVERNMENT LAND (STATE PROPERTIES) • All lands for which the Government has paid compensation and for which there is related documentation; • All lands for which the Government has paid compensation and where, if the relevant documentation has been lost from Government offices, there are sufficient witnesses to testify that the estate is Government property, or where there is evidence of public development or structures; • Lands registered as Government land with documentation, even though compensation may not have been paid; • Lands that have been under the control of Government since 1965 and developed by Government; • Water channels that are not under proven private ownership and the lands irrigated from these channels; • Land designated for housing in urban areas that has been allocated, but where no construction has taken place within the specified time limit; • All Government properties sold to the private sector by municipalities of other Government departments without written statement of transfer; • All Government lands that were distributed from April 1978, but where no subsequent development was undertaken and where no documents of transfer were issued. Sources: Law on Land 2000 and Decree With Regard to Properties, No 83, 2003. 3.49 Unsuccessful efforts have also been made to limit rent hikes, reviving existing regulations (e.g. Law on Rents, 1999 in Gazette 794). Liberalization of restrictions upon the land market have also been attempted, but less in ways which protect the majority and limit racketeering and speculation than in measures designed to encourage private investment in land and housing based enterprises, including a new constitutional provision that foreigners may lease if not own land (Box 3.6). Investors have also been given the legal opportunity to access surplus Government land for approved developments. 46 Box 3.6 NEW LAWS SEEKING TO CONTROL ALLOCATION OF STATE PROPERTIES Decree of the President of the Interim Administration Forbidding Distribution of Unutilized and Intact Government lands, Decree No. 99, 4.2.1381 (2002. This prohibits distribution of unutilized and intact lands for housing or other purposes and orders Loy Saranwali (Attorney-General’s Office) to ensure there is no deviation and to report offences. Presidential Order of the President of the Interim Administration on Non-Allocation of Government lands Contrary to the City Master Plan, Order No. 830, 11.2.1381 (2002). This forbids municipalities to allocate Government land for any purpose contrary to the orders in a Taliban regulation on the distribution and sale of residential/commercial plots and multi-story Government buildings in Kabul City (Gazette 794, of 10.7.1421 (2000). Decree of the Head of the Transitional Islamic State of Afghanistan With Regard to Properties, Decree No. 83, 18.8.1382 (2003). Inter alia, this decreed that:- • Properties that have been under the control of the State since 1978 should be deemed to be State property (Government land); • Land and plot numbers allocated by Municipalities that have not been built on within the stipulated period, shall revert to the State; • Properties that have been appropriated (with witness that compensation was paid) by previous regimes for public benefit (e.g. roads, housing schemes) and have been implemented shall be regarded as Government land even if the original owner has legal evidence of ownership; • Land that has been distributed by Government since 1978 within the urban plan area and developed by the recipient in accordance with the map and plan, will be considered his legal property, provided the land has been paid as fixed at the time; where no development has taken place or not as agreed, the land shall revert to Government with payments returned, unless the owner promises to build in accordance with the official plan and with time specified; • Government that has been sold by municipalities or other State agencies in the name of companies or institutions shall be invalid if there is no written evidence; • No sub-renting or leasing of Government properties is permitted (e.g. apartments); • No new survey and mapping shall be permitted without express order of the President; • No information about Government lands may be distributed publicly (to limit occupation); • Where it is known that Government land or properties have been taken by persons or State agencies and no action has been taken, this may be pursued by the Ministry of Justice. Decree of the Head of the Transitional Government Regarding the High Commission for City Development, Decree No. 3860, 16 September 2003. This prevents all but a special commission from distributing plots of land for houses and high rise buildings, and warns Vice Presidents against becoming involved, including in the absence of the President. Decree on Domestic and Foreign Private Investment, Decree No. 134 of 2 Sumbula 1381 (2002) in Gazette 803. This permits foreign investors to lease land for 10, 20 and 30 years, only for the purposes of investment. Compensation will be paid at open market values should the property be required for public interest. Decree Regarding the Transfer of Government Property, Decree No. 89 of 8. 1382 (2001). This defines surplus State Property as property not currently being used by the Ministry or agency and/or not formally granted to that agency, and which will be made available to the High Commission for Investment for allocation to investors, as a matter of priority. No minister or agency may sell, lease or rent out those properties. Order of the Head of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan on the Identification of Grabbed State Land in Deh Sabz District of Kabul Province and its Registration to an Urban Project for Distribution to Homeless People, Order No. 21 of 22.4.1383 (12 July 2004). This ordered the restoration of this stolen land through false documentation and directed the Ministry of Urban Development to plan the area and hand over to the Urban Development Supreme Commission to allocate to returnees and homeless persons. 47 F. The Special Property Court 3.50 The Special Property Disputes Court was instituted specifically to deal with property restitution claims of returnees and important changes have been made to its operation since it was instituted by the Supreme Court in 2002. The Court began with three Judges but due to the rising number of claims, now operates with 18 judges in two Courts, one receiving cases from Kabul Province and the other dealing with restitution claims from the rest of the country, although still located in Kabul. A further important addition has been establishment of a second-level court for appeal within the overall Special Court. Annex 7 provides details and Annex 8 provides the decrees issues in its regard since 2002. The creation of the special court has a high profile and represents so far the most active initiative in property relations by the Interim and Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. 3.51 Nonetheless the Special Court is failing to deal swiftly or effectively with claims. Overall, progress is very slow. In the first instance, immediate access to the Court is limited with most grievances being first addressed or investigated by other agencies, including the Police. Surprisingly few cases are brought to the Court directly, but pass through other official agencies, including other courts (Table 9). (Also refer Annex 6). Table 3.3: Source of Cases Brought to Special Land Disputes Court Source Number Percent 1 Case was referred by Hoquq 54 26.5 2 Case was referred by Saranwali 18 8.8 3 Case was referred by NRC or another NGO 0 0 4 Case was brought directly by claimant 3 1.5 5 Case was forwarded by other agencies (e.g. Municipality, Ministry 129 63.2 of Housing, State Security, Secretary of State, Security Command Headquarters, Kabul Appeal Court) Total 204 100 Source: Special Land Disputes Court (Kabul only) with 1st Quarter 1383 cases only as sample. 3.52 Once in the Court, progress is even slower. As shown in Table 2 earlier, less than five percent of registered cases have been resolved. This is despite the statutory requirement that cases are resolved within two months. A significant number of cases are dealt with only to the extent that they are referred to other offices or courts for investigation and do not necessarily return to the Special Court. Many others are simply withdrawn by the claimants who have tired of returning weekly or sometimes daily to hear its status. 3.53 Enforcement of decisions by the court is also problematic. Judges estimate that only a minority of their rulings are acted upon, as many require a level of cooperation from the Police which has not been forthcoming. Even where the decision does begin to be implemented, the process is laborious, such as where a property has passed through the 48 hands of three or four owners and each has to seek compensation from the former before the matter is finally closed. In addition, since the establishment of the right of appeal, an astounding 80 percent of cases are returned by the party who lost the case, suggesting either acute dissatisfaction with the ruling or frivolous litigiousness. 3.54 Judges in the court explain these failings as the result of too few Judges to review cases, too little investigatory assistance, and insufficient incentive in the form of decent salaries to work the long hours required. Nor has the court been provided with transport to see disputed properties for themselves. They complain of constant time-wasting caused by the inability or unwillingness of local police to bring defendants to court when they are summoned to appear. Instances were mentioned where defendants who are alleged wrongful occupants of houses and who may be making large sums of money through renting out the properties to international agencies, are believed to be paying the police off weekly to claim the occupant cannot be found. To remedy the weakness of support, the Supreme Court asked the President to order the Ministry of Interior to provide a Special Police Corps. This was done a year ago but has not yet been implemented (Annex 7 and 8). 3.55 Judges also note that review of cases is time-consuming, particularly as many claims are based upon disputed documentation and documents need to be sent to the Documents Registry in the Supreme Court (Markhzan) for authentication. Or, where one disputant or witness claims the thumb print or signature on a document is not his own, comparisons have to be collected and sent to the Criminal Department of the Police for authentication. The two-month period is often insufficient for these and related steps in investigation to be taken. Judges also explain that the Sharia requirement that no fewer than two judges and a senior judge decide a case, limits the number of cases that may be decided in one month as the Kabul Court has only one Senior Judge and he is able to meet only once a week with each of the five pairs of assisting Judges. Those claimants casually met with outside the court confirm the frustrations of repeated visits and lack of progress. One person for example who has returned from Iran said that the person who is wrongfully occupying his house had made a very rough ownership deed by hand, and which is “clearly a fake to anyone who looks at it� and he could not understand why it is taking the court so long to confirm this. He has meantime spent eleven months “running up and down to the court while the man is living happily in my house�. 3.56 Some clients using the Court offer other explanations for shortfalls. The most common claim being made is that no case will be swiftly heard or resolved without paying bribes. This is a very serious allegation but one that is so common that it is difficult to ignore. Obstructionism is the alleged mechanism, with applicants returning repeatedly to the Court and waiting long hours to see the two Judges assigned to review the case and then being sent away on a minor pretext. It is of note that NRC specifically emphasized that although it too hears these complaints, it has not experienced these difficulties in the one third of cases it helps clients bring to the Special Court. NRC finds that the cases they support are generally heard within the two months specified and furthermore, no bribe taking is involved. It believes that this may be partly because much of the case preparation is undertaken by itself, thus saving the Court’s time and partly that 49 the Court feels itself under international scrutiny when dealing with NRC-facilitated cases. 3.57 Other problems noted as inhibiting performance by the Court include the fact that the Judges are generally elderly and that they have limited legal education beyond Sharia. Nor does there appear to be a sufficiently comprehensive and systematic procedure for investigating, collecting, recording and evaluating evidence, which, clients say, is often ad hoc at best. The effort may be extensive in one case and extremely limited in another, possibly depending upon the appellant. The use of statutory instruments to guide decisions is limited, with religious rules and regulations providing guidance (Box 3.7). BOX 3.7 LEGISLATION USED BY THE SPECIAL LAND DISPUTES COURT Religious Law: Religious Rules and Regulations1 Compiled by Mohammad Osman Zhobal, Religious Scholar, Supreme Court, Kabul, 1381 (2002) Volume I: Preface, Prices, Leases Volume II: Power of Attorney, Mortgages, Occupation, Destruction of Property, Counterfeiting Volume III: Types of Partnership Civil Law: The Civil Law of the Republic of Afghanistan 1977 Articles 1,900 to 2,412 G. Formal versus Informal Mechanisms 3.58 The distinction between formal and informal property dispute resolution is not clear-cut. Many owners consider both the customary and court-based dispute resolution to be formal mechanisms and informal mechanisms to be those where no formal institutions, officials or persons of locally-acknowledged status such as the Wakil or Mosque leader are involved. Informal dispute resolution in these circumstances is considered as cases where two private individuals resolve the dispute with the help of mediators or witnesses of their choice, but not the above, and/or where no customary or legal documentation exists. Mediation is an instrument used both formally and informally. 3.59 A more useful distinction through which to classify disputes may therefore be as between official and community-based procedures. Even the courts, formal institutions and dispute commissions prefer complainants to keep their grievances out of the courts for as long as they able. As shown earlier, many of the cases that they address are in practice resolved through their mediation. For example, the Attorney-General’s Office in Kabul Province mediates around one third of all submissions itself and only one quarter of cases accepted for investigation are eventually forwarded to the quarters (Annex G). The actual purpose of Hoquq in the Ministry of Justice is mediation. Even judges in the Special Disputes Court make mediation between parties their first objective. This is both 50 in accordance with Sharia and to limit the problems associated with enforcement of an unpopular ruling (so far unsuccessful, for as recorded earlier, 80 percent of cases are returned to the Court’s Appeal level). 3.60 The two independent Norwegian Refugee Council Legal Aid Centres in Kabul provide an over-arching facilitating service for both informal and formal dispute resolution. Like other agencies, they aim to keep as many cases out of the courts as possible and attempt to bring the disputants to agreement as to the resolution of their dispute. In practice, the two Centres find they are only able to mediate one third of cases through bringing disputing parties together under the guidance of an appointed NRC Counselor. One third of cases require a relevant shura of elders to be called to help mediate the dispute. In the remaining third of issues, NRC assists the complainant take the case to court. Cases which involve returnees are guided directly to the Special Court. NRC helps the client prepare documentation relating to the case, and accompanies the client to the court as Counsel. No other assisting legal aid agencies were identified. Bodies like the Independent Human Rights Commission raise concerns about cases but do not formally provide legal aid facilitation. 3.61 At the community level the mechanisms for property dispute resolution are three- fold; firstly, in decisions arrived at with the help of neighbours and elders; secondly in those arrived at with the help of the Mosque Council (generally comprising representatives of each Mosque in the neighborhood), and thirdly those arrived at with the help or endorsement of the Wakil-e-Gozar. Often all three sources of mediation and resolution are utilized through the aegis of the Mosque Council which calls relevant neighbours and elders to discuss the case and whose chair is the Wakil-e-Gozar. Documentation is almost always prepared upon agreement. 3.62 An important feature of these mechanisms is that actors are not always the same, and none of those carrying assisting in resolving the dispute, are paid. The composition of the meeting, large or small, varies according to the case in hand. No permanently standing council for dispute resolution exists. NRC considers this its strength; participants cannot become institutionalized and accordingly require salaries. This informal status also makes them less vulnerable to bribe-taking. 3.63 Community level dispute resolution is preferred. Although the brevity of this review meant that interviews directly with disputants were extremely limited, the reported balance of favor is upon localized, informal resolution of property disputes. The conduct of the forthcoming National Urban Vulnerability Assessment (NUVA) should provide a statistically sound assessment of this. The reasons have been elaborated earlier. The most common relate simply to questions of time, cost, trust and enforceability. Poorer people usually lack the knowledge, time, connections, confidence and funds (to pay anticipated fees or bribes) to bring grievances to formal institutions, or the courts. Nor are they confident that case will necessarily be fairly heard and adjudged, or the decision enforced. In addition, those who lose the case are highly likely to appeal. 3.64 Other factors limiting the bringing of disputes into the official arena include anxiety that the case will trigger a worse effect, such as in respect of properties which have been 51 acquired or constructed on land known to be Government land. This is so even where the house is bulldozed or their private space otherwise invaded, for fear of eviction. Even where this has occurred with consequent public outcry, the technical illegality of their occupation in the first instance does not normally result in the restoration of houses or alternative accommodation to those evicted (and despite clear evidence of undisturbed occupation for fifteen or more years, at which point the Civil Code and Sharia favor the occupant). In general, the aggrieved person or community will avoid taking any issue to the courts where the State or its agencies are the defendants or where the land base belongs to Government. They do not wish the case to trigger investigation as to how the property was obtained or reveal payable tax upon transactions or rents, evidence that more than one apartment is owned, or the like. Where malfeasance within the institution is alleged, such as relating to allocations, it may also seem futile to fight the case through the courts. In contrast, even bitter family feuds over the ownership of a house on acknowledged private land (by legal or customary documentation) may reach the courts, including the Special Disputes Court, where the complainant is a returnee. 3.65 Not all cases are solvable through localized mechanisms. Not all disputes are suitable however for local mediation. In the first instance, the dispute may centre around legally-prepared documentation and which requires official procedures of one kind or another for authentication, and upon confirmation of which the agency itself (e.g. Police, Attorney-General’s Office) may prosecute the accused wrongdoer and/or forward the case to the court. Intimidation may also be a factor. The outstanding reason however why property disputes are not, or cannot be dealt with locally stems from the nature of the local community. For local procedures to bring result, both parties to the dispute need to agree to submit to the will of the advisers. Social coercion is also required for the decision to be acted upon. It is predictably the case that where community identity and force are weak, disputants are less bound to submit to decisions. Weakness of this sort occurs at two extremes: first, in wealthy and developed suburbs where home-owners often do not even know their neighbours, let alone the elders, mosque leaders or Wakil-e- Gozar. Some of these may not even exist, or exist largely in name only. In contrast, where informal settlements are being rapidly developed and have no particular ethnic or other community-driven cohesion, very poor people may also not know their neighbours or local leaders to the extent of being able to rely upon them. Or, as reported earlier, Wakil-e-Gozar may refuse to assist disputants where they consider both parties to be acting illegally, such as where settlements have been established recently on Government land. Or the disputant may find that local actors do not possess the authority to resist the dominance of the defendant, such as where a commander or other notable is involved. 3.66 There are in any event instances where a particularly aggrieved individual may decide to pursue or re-open an issue through official channels and eventually the courts. A common first stop is a visit to the District Woluswali, who will normally call the Wakil-e-Gozar for comments. He may then refer the complainant to the Municipality Property Office (Amlak) for action, or to the Provincial Ministry of Justice Office (Hoquq) for mediation or to the Provincial Attorney-General’s Office (Saranwali) for investigation. In due course the case may be referred to the Primary Court or to the Special Property Disputes Court where the complainant is a returnee seeking return of private property. 52 3.67 Official/formal property dispute resolution may represent the tip of the iceberg. The numbers of formal court cases relating to property and those disputes handled by government institutions like Commissions and Saranwali have been recorded earlier as surprisingly few in number. The limited nature of this review means that an accurate grasp of the number of so-called informal disputes, has been difficult to gauge. Such information as collected suggests that these too are not as numerous as might be expected, and are at a very low level in suburbs which are well-established, whether within or outside the City Master Plan aegis. Most informal disputes that do arise are broadly dominant in informal or new settlement areas, and prominently concern classical boundary and access disputes, most prolific in randomly allocated, unplanned and settled zones. There is also likely a great deal of contestation between sellers, buyers of plots or homes in these areas and their tenants, but which never reaches the formal status of dispute in either the formal or informal arena, due to status of the land as belonging to Government land the subordination of occupants to powerful persons. A mass of simmering grievance likely exists throughout this sector and which will crystallize into tangible disputes in the future, should security of tenure or occupancy be further threatened. H Conclusions and Policy Implications 3.68 In considering interventions, insecurity of tenure and conflicts need to be treated separately16. Formal dispute has been shown to be relatively limited and largely the preserve of the better-off, given the nature and location of properties that tend to be involved and the time and costs involved in pursuing justice through formal means and especially the courts. In contrast, chronic insecurity of occupancy is tangibly the fate of the majority, the poor. In Kabul this primarily takes the form of fear of eviction. This may be due to (a) the fact that homes and shops have been constructed over the last 15 years on Government land and without the formal permission of Government; (b) inability to pay rising rents to landlords; (c) the need to eventually leave the homes of relatives and friends due to over-crowding and (d) involuntary expropriation of private properties due to upgrading plans for roads or services. Regularization of informal settlements through private entitlement exercises is the most promising route forward. However the regularization process itself may trigger multiple disputes between developers and house owners which will need to be carefully managed. 3.69 A pro-poor strategy should underlie regularization of informal settlements. This means that while poorer households should be given the opportunity to secure formal ownership of their homes on Government land, those who originally stole Government land in order to make money out of plot and house sales, should be brought to book. 16 While it may be appropriate to treat dispute settlement and regularization/formalization separately, at least at this point, it will be important to see that they function in a complimentary fashion. If they clash, it will cause more insecurity. Sporadic titling, especially if carried out by institutions subject to corruption, can be a major source of insecurity for those without clear legal rights to occupy land. The informal users in a state of “suspended tenure insecurity� often find it becomes real and urgent when someone turns up with a legal deed from a court or land registry (Peer reviewer). 53 3.70 Conflict resolution strategies in rural and urban spheres should be considered separately. Most urban property disputes concern individually-owned properties and especially houses. This contrasts with rural disputes where common properties like pastures are at the centre of many disputes and involve whole communities. Moreover, while community-based resolution will ultimately be essential to close many rural land disputes, informal mechanisms in cities are less potent, especially where disputants are unknown to each and where legal documentation (counterfeit or otherwise) is at stake. In these cases court resolution is needed. One lesson from the current wave of disputes is that legal documentation (i.e. deeds prepared, endorsed or accepted by courts) have proved no more resilient to abuse than customary documentation and have the added advantage of community reference as a source of testimony. Future titling exercises, such as will be carried out in the regularization of informal settlements, should take this into account and experiment seriously with localized and locally accountable and accessible systems. 3.71 A strict conceptual or strategic distinction between formal and informal property dispute resolution is to be avoided. In practice both formal and informal processes are essential foci of action. There are no grounds for supporting the improvement of one form of dispute resolution over the other. Both have a role to play, determined by a complex of factors such as the nature of the case, its location, and resolvability. Some disputes are simply unsuitable for community-based interventions while many others are unnecessarily brought to officialdom or the courts – and which bodies would, in any event, direct that the matter is resolved locally (e.g. boundary disputes, right of way access) or by local actors (e.g. inheritance matters). In other respects, the nature of the case is not at issue, but the extent to which satisfaction and enforcement may be secured. Disputes that are first sought to be resolved at local level may eventually end up in the courts. Overall, the inter-relationship of the formal and informal (or official and community-based) mechanisms is close and usefully upgraded together. Public confidence in achievable justice in the courts is in practice an important backdrop to successful community-level dispute resolution. 3.72 The realities of the interrelationship are already entrenched in policy and guiding legislation. Sharia, the Civil Code and the Civil Procedures Code as well as relevant state laws share an emphasis upon procedures which in practice blur the distinctions of formal and informal process. In the first instance, mediation towards reconciliation is invariably the preferred first-line mechanism and in the second, local bodies such as shuras and local leaders are advisedly involved. Long-standing acknowledgement of the existence and authority of local shuras permeates public process in all spheres. Under the new Constitution will be delivered into more formally instituted elected local governments at village/neighborhood and district levels (Article 140). Meanwhile, the Judicial Commission has begun drafting a ‘Peace Councils Law’. Although this allegedly began life as a mechanism to formalize local shuras in their dispute resolution roles, the current version of the proposed law restricts these to district and provincial levels and with membership that includes elected persons from formal institutions - Hoquq, Saranwali and the Court itself (Article 15). The stated objectives of these new institutions are to assist reconciliation among the disputants, to assist courts to settle disputes through peaceful means and ‘to reduce waste of time and the wandering and distress of disputing 54 parties’ (Article 1). The members of these jirgas would be unpaid (Article 19). They would assist disputants to reconcile their differences, taking into consideration local norms, human rights, laws and Islamic values (Article 7). While the proposal requires a good deal more thought and development, it could represent a significant link between formal and informal spheres of dispute resolution. 3.73 Improving court procedures, performance and public accountability in the handling of disputes will be an essential step not just for dealing swiftly and fairly with existing disputes but for limiting the rising number of new disputes. Formal litigation is currently broadly the preserve of the better-off, mainly because of the type of properties involved, and likely to remain so. However, given the dramatic rise in urban property values since December 2001, rampant rent-seeking, and lack of public confidence in the capacity of official agencies to detect or prosecute wrong-doing, combined with suspected collusion on the part of some civil servants including some in courts, a further rise in such ownership disputes is likely to arise. 3.74 The logical target for both procedural and governance support is the Special Land Disputes Court which is a manageable and usefully discrete unit with which to begin reform. Professionally planned and executed support and monitoring which significantly raise its success rate, and in ways which the public identify as honest and fair, will have an impact on public confidence in the State and rule of law that far outweighs the numbers of its cases it actually handles. Depending upon performance, consideration could usefully be given to widen its mandate and incrementally, its loci, to embrace all property disputes cases which involve disputes over property rights, not just those affecting returnees. 3.75 An additional useful target for public governance reform will be those municipal and ministerial commissions which have the power to allocate building plots, housing and apartments. The important political transformations currently taking place launched with the democratic election of the President, offer an important window of opportunity for re-examining procedures and players, with transparency firmly in mind. New and more publicly available systems of record-keeping will be key elements of reform. 3.76 Local institutions and actors in property dispute resolution are worthy of support. The evidence from this short examination of disputes suggests that localized, community-based mechanisms are both widely operating and indispensable instruments for not just keeping cases out of the over-clogged courts but also for resolving disputes in cheap, available, less heated and more peaceful, and lasting ways. Building upon what exists seems logical and essential. This needs to be accomplished in ways that avoid their formalization to an extent that jeopardizes the very advantages of being local, at the grassroots and essential informal. 3.77 Lack of formal documentation of title as compared to informal entitlement is not the cause of disputes and formal titling will not on its own resolve or eliminate property disputes. Those with most security of tenure seem to be not those who necessarily hold legal deeds of ownership but those living in middle to low-income properties in older, unplanned (unserviced) but established settlements in the city. An essential factor in this 55 is that first, most have acquired and still sustain their rights customarily (customary deeds of inheritance or purchase) and second and related, live in socially-intact environments, in which local leadership and respect for local norms and social sanction systems are effective. In contrast, although it is the appeal of more valuable properties that has engendered possible corruption of process and forging of documents, and thence dispute, the promised sanctity of title deeds (legal deeds) has broadly not been upheld. There are few grounds at this point for claiming that issue of legal title deeds is indispensable to security. There are however, grounds for claiming that security of tenure is primarily premised on local cohesion and social stability. 3.78 Customary norms provide an excellent platform upon which to build accountable, reliable and trusted systems of evidencing ownership and which will be more readily available to the mass of urban owners. The majority of city-dwellers are living today on Government land and therefore have no legal surety of tenure (by customary evidence or rightful acquisition or otherwise). It does not necessarily follow that this surety may only be granted through acquisition of either court prepared entitlements or the conduct of expensive cadastrally-based survey and registration of house plots. Practically speaking, the scope for advancing cheaper and more localized community-based systems for the issue and maintenance of evidence is very high. Such a system could build upon the existing customary traditions of evidencing. An essential feature of its modernization would be to retain the centre of evidencing at the local, community level and involving community actors. This could not only heighten reliability and accountability of records but enable thousands of families to secure their occupancy cheaply and in relatively short periods. Suggestions for Action 3.79 In broad terms, the rise in property disputes in Kabul reflects the weak rule of law in the post-conflict state and insufficient supply of organized and legitimate shelter to meet the needs of thousands upon thousands of homeless families General requirements to limit property disputes include actions to – • Limit further informal occupation of Government land in the City, including bringing primary culprits to book; • Regularize existing occupancy as swiftly as possible, in at least those areas where environmental damage is not excessive; • Strengthen the practice and raise the legal status and support for informal machinery for resolving disputes; • Support and reform the judiciary in ways which dramatically speed up the resolution of property disputes and public confidence in decisions; • Encourage provision of autonomous legal aid services; • Reform of policies and procedures in the public sector which allow pro-rich injustices in housing and land allocations, and private speculation and racketeering in public property (Government lands) to continue unabated; and • Impose new transparency measures to bring reduce corruption and collusion on the part of decision-makers in the property and housing sector, including formal procedures for routine accounting in the public domain. 56 3.80 In short, most requirements to bring order and justice to property relations in the City are necessarily basic good governance measures. Only with such changes will public confidence in the State and the rule of (property) law have a chance to be restored. 3.81 Government is not in a position to pursue all desirable interventions simultaneously but even a limited number of modest but solid interventions will lay a foundation for incremental improvement. The following are suggested as priority actions. Target the Special Property Disputes Court for Concentrated Improvement and Expansion 3.82 Public confidence in any part of the court system is at an all-time low but not all its services can be successfully overhauled at once. The concept of a court with special responsibilities is sound and given the proliferation of property disputes, a concerted focus to improve the performance, capacity and accountability of the Special Property Disputes Court is an appropriate first target for reform. Raised confidence in this court will go a long way to improving public demand and confidence in the judiciary in general. Many of the recommendations of the Judicial Commission for the overhaul of the Judiciary could be specifically implemented as a first step in regard to this Court. 3.83 To this end, the Supreme Court should be provided professional legal development advice from experts experienced in the establishment of restitution courts and legal service development. Among others, these actions should be considered - • The expansion of the remit of Special Court to allow it to handle all property disputes relating to claims of wrongful possession or ownership, not just those deriving from refugees or IDPs who have lost properties in their absence; • The expansion of its service to the community through establishment of staffed branches in different zones of the country; • The appointment of more senior judges in the Kabul Province Court to allow the existing ten assisting Judges to form three separate teams/courts t speed up review and rulings; • Provision of more clerical support to speed up investigation, review and preparation of cases; • Provision of transport (and for ex-Kabul cases, per diems) to enable Judges to hear cases in situ including taking testimony from neighbors; • Implementation of the Presidential Directive that the Ministry of Interior provide the Court with a Special Police unit, made accountable for identifying and bringing summoned defendants to Court and enforcing rulings; • Extension of the statutory time within which a case must be heard from two to three months; • Provision of training courses for Judges to ensure they are at the very least fully familiar with the legislation beyond the Religious Rules and Regulations including the Civil Procedures Code and all land related state laws and upgrades their skills in the collection, recording and analysis of evidence; 57 • Limitation in the recruitment or posting of more Judges to those with modern legal training and qualification; 3.84 The above recommendations should be strengthened with a public accountability plan. Such a plan would: • Require Judges to account for failure to resolve submitted disputes within the stipulated time; suspends judges who have failed to do so in a stipulated number of cases within each quarter; maintains complete records of proceedings, and makes these available on request to an established Monitoring Unit; and which establishes an agreed system for collecting and recording evidence; • Oblige the Court to make the full text of Decisions available to the public on request; • Oblige the Court to prepare and publish a Code of Practice for the Court and makes this available to every District Office as well as being posted outside every branch of the Special Court, and which includes public information of how attempts to collect fees or bribes or other complaints are to be reported; and • Require the Chief Justice to establish a Monitoring Process to spot-check performance of the Court and to publish an Annual Progress Report in the public press. 3.85 Help limit the number of disputes entering the court, through providing public and practical support to informal mechanisms. • This would be best launched and tested in selected Districts and would target Wakil-e-Gozars, Mosque Councils and other informal institutions like committees formed at community level. This could occur in conjunction with establishing new localized land administration procedures that may be piloted in upgrading schemes or where informal settlements are regularized. Establishment of new permanent institutions may not be advisable as these may in due course require unsustainable support and/or encourage rent-seeking by the members. However, articulation of clear procedures which community members, committees and leaders may adopt to maximize fair resolution of conflicts will help raise the status and authority of informal mechanisms. Training in basic legal principles and mediation and reconciliation process would be helpful. Manuals could be developed for this Public guidance could be more widely given through radio, television and press. Simple systems for the recording and reporting of reconciliation or decisions should be developed and consideration given to straightforward means through which such decisions may gain the weight of law. • Development should also be continued to find the right forms for already proposed district level jirgas or peace councils, which have the potential to integrate community and formal mechanisms, and to further limit the introduction of cases into the courts. 3.86 Assist the new post-election leadership and staffing of the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing to take action to tighten up and monitor the implementation of social housing policy with targeted subsidies which disallow any individual to acquire more than one government-built or Municipal allocated housing plot, by – 58 • Establishing independent review capacity of the plot and apartment records of the Municipality and Maintenance Department (MUHD) with systematic expropriation pursued of those who were allocated more than one such asset; • As a basis of this provide the Shelter Department of MUDH with computer assistance to computerize each and every Block Register Books, which is kept up to date by hand annually. This will enable owners to be quickly identified and those who own (or whose wives or families own) more than one apartment to be identified; • The establishment of publicly accountable procedures and reporting of the decisions of such allocation authorities as well as the decisions of internal complaints commissions in the Municipality and Ministry; and, • Systematic investigation and prosecution of officials found to have acted corruptly since December 2001 in respect of apartment and building plot allocations, and public land appropriation and developments • In the long term, move towards the privatization of Government-built housing by selling off to willing buyers, thus shifting responsibility of maintenance to owners and generating a supply of capital to invest in servicing urban land 59 Chapter 4: Conclusions 4.1. This report outlines the problems and challenges that the Government faces in advancing the management of urban land in Kabul, and by extension, in other urban areas of the country. The challenges are formidable given the lack of capacity in the concerned institutions and the vested interests which will pursue the maintenance of the status quo. 4.2. The chief challenges include modernizing attitudes and behaviors to the way urban land is managed. This means moving away from centralized urban planning to more dynamic approaches involving careful monitoring of the land and housing market to determine the direction in which urban development should evolve. It means confirming the economic and social value of existing informal residential settlements and to build on these assets to create improved standards of living through the provision of basic infrastructure services. It means creating a more conducive institutional environment to encourage the private sector to both service land and construct economic housing in the city, leaving the provision of social housing to the public sector. It means creating a regulatory system operated at the municipal level which ensures that quality of construction is adequate. 4.3. The challenge extends to the subject of creating appropriate systems for secure tenure in informal residential areas. Data pertaining to the nature and extent of land tenure insecurity and irregularity need to be collected and analyzed. The lessons learned should be used to design appropriate systems of land tilting which are cost effective and inspire trust in the Government institutions responsible for land matters. The overall system of land management must include reaffirming informal methods of property rights dispute resolution and the strengthening as well as improving the efficiency of formal court systems. Standards of transparency and accountability need top be raised in both fora. 4.4. The achievement of the reform agenda is a large and complex undertaking that will require a resolve by all parties to make the changes which, in the long term, will serve to make Afghanistan’s urban areas better engines of economic growth and healthier places for the growing proportion of the country’s population choosing to dwell in cities and towns. 60 ANNEX 1: THE HOUSING TYPOLOGY OF KABUL 1. Because of the fast growth of Kabul in recent years, and the understandable preoccupation of the municipality with solving day-to-day crisis, there is no detailed land use breakdown for the city, or detailed population census data. However, using 2 sets of Ikonos satellite images17 taken in 2002 and 2004, a rough estimate of the population of Kabul and its spatial distribution was made. The distribution of land use between residential and non residential, and finally a residential typology differentiating between formal and informal housing and further differentiating within these two types according to house design and the percentage of plots already occupied on each site was also made (Table 2). Table 1: Kabul – Land use and population 2. The residential areas occupy about 104 km2 or about 74% of the total built-up area of Kabul. This residential area has been divided into a “tree� typology. The first category concerns the type of settlement and is divided into 2 settlement types: formal and informal (see Table 3). Each settlement type is divided among 5 dwelling types (apartments, townhouses, detached dwellings, courtyard dwellings and houses on slopes), each dwelling type divided into 3 subtypes depending on the percentage of plots occupied within the settlement. It was necessary to establish this last subtype because so many areas in Kabul are in the process of being developed, and it is therefore important to evaluate their additional absorption capacity with time. In addition, because the typology is used to calculate densities, it was necessary to differentiate between settlements that had not reached their full density capacity. 17 Ikonos Satellite images have a resolution of 1 meter, i.e. it is possible to clearly identify individual houses and even partition walls between properties. These images could become an source of very important data for the future development of Kabul. 61 Table 1: Kabul - Housing Typology One housing type is missing from Table 1: the tent settlements of refugees estimated at about 10,000 people in Kabul in 2004. These settlements are difficult to identify accurately on the satellite image. Their absence in the typology does not mean that they do not represent an important social issue which should be solved soon. However, it should be noted that if refugees had waited to be allocated land legally in formal development instead of building spontaneously informal settlements, the population living in tents would be much larger than what it is now, probably reaching the millions. One should therefore acknowledge that the construction of informal settlements has acted as an effective safety valve. Table 4 shows the distribution of housing area per type. Of the 17 types identified in the typology, only 14 are represented. There are no courtyard houses in formal settlements. 62 Figure 5: Map of detailed typology corresponding to categories in Table 3 Table 2: Kabul -distribution of the Housing Stock by types and Sub-Types (2004) 63 Calculation of densities Table 3: calculation of densities derived from the typology Calculation of Housing stock capital value Table 4: Calculation of the capital value of the Housing stock 64 Calculation of additional absorption capacity of existing housing stock Table 5: Calculation of the additional absorption capacity of the housing stock 65 ANNEX 2: TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR THE PREPARATION OF KABUL DEVELOPMENT PLAN TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR PLANNING FOR AFGHANISTAN’S CITIES Background 1. The Government, through an IDA/IBRD loan from the World Bank, is preparing plans and feasibility studies for the future development of Kabul, Jalalabad, Herat, Mazar and Kandahar. The Ministry of Urban Development and Housing is thus seeking the services of a qualified firm/s to assist it and the targeted municipalities prepare such plans and begin a process of institutionalization of a planning process in the cities of Afghanistan. 2. The last plan for Afghan cities was one prepared for Kabul in 1978. Since the preparation of that plan, the city has seen 23 years of war with the destruction of most of the city’s infrastructure and its economy, and tremendous population growth consisting largely of marginalized refugees and displaced persons and numerous Government changes. Most recently, that Master Plan has been suspended by the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing as a planning tool for the municipality; thus leaving a vacuum in operations. 3. The status of planning has had several negative effects on urban management and development. Most importantly, it currently acts as a barrier to secure tenure. Currently, many settlements fall outside the Master Plan of Kabul or fall within areas not identified as residential according to the Master Plan. Most often, these areas house poor residents, IDPs and returnees. The lack of recognition of these areas is also a barrier to the provision of services by the municipality. Additionally, settlement is occurring on untenable land that will be impossible or expensive to service in the future. 4. Clearly, a new plan is necessary. However, the current framework is a Master Planning one which is unable to cope with the demands of a rapidly changing environment. Overall, the Master Planning methodology is currently considered outdated worldwide for the following reasons: it is cumbersome, top-down, it lacks flexibility, people do not feel ownership, and it requires too much analysis and data gathering. By the time the Master Plan is ready, usually 2-3 years later, the urban reality is no longer the same, resulting in a poor implementation record. Subsequently, the planning field has made significant changes in the way that city plans are prepared to focus on strategy, and priorities and also the implementation of the plan through the identification of actions, projects and required investments and human resources. 5. But moving towards the new planning framework, and indeed formulating a new plan, will prove difficult given the current level of skills and capacity within country and also existing conceptions of planning. Regarding the latter, the plan and planning is viewed currently in Afghanistan as ‘graphic design’ and not as ‘strategy’. Furthermore, 66 the idea of linking planning to budgeting at the municipal level is also non-existent partly because capital budgeting does not occur at that level. An almost 30 year vacuum of outside engagement has led to a concurrent vacuum in skills necessary for plan formulation. 6. Finally, institutional confusion in responsibilities between the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing and the municipalities stymies efforts to formulate a new plan. Purpose of Exercise 7. It is against this backdrop that plans for the major cities needs to be formulated, covering a period of 7 years. These would need to encompass a more long term strategy for the cities as well as short term investment plans including identified projects and subsequently feasibility studies. However, the absence of a modern planning system in Afghanistan, the vacuum in skills and capacity require these exercises to go beyond mere plan formulation, but should also address these issues in some way. 8. Subsequently, the exercise will: • Develop an Interim Land Use Plan for the identified cities to replace the existing Master Plan18; • Identify a development agenda for the identified cities including needed; • Infrastructure, housing, economic development, social facilities and a subsequent development plan; • Identify clearly the respective role of the private sector and the Government in the development of cities; • Identify the impact on various part of the population of current Government policy and regulations and proposed; • Identify the actions and resources necessary for the success of such a plan; thus identify projects and an investment plan for the identified cities. • Develop feasibility studies for key investments including projected impact on the welfare of different income groups; • Identify the human resources necessary for the success of such a plan; thus formulate a capacity building plan for planners in the identified municipalities and in the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing; • Clarify some roles and responsibilities of the municipality and the ministry in a future planning system; • Start a process to institutionalize a participatory planning system in Afghanistan. Description of Services 9. The successful firm will work directly with planners and engineers from the Department of Planning in the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing and with the 18 The interim land use plan will provide the basis for development decisions. This will be adjusted after the adoption of an appropriate Land Use Management System. 67 planners in the identified municipality to formulate the development plan, feasibility studies, capacity building programs and some instruction to the institutionalization of planning. 10. The development plan will be produced in a participatory manner taking into account the development needs at the community/neighborhood level, the district level and the municipal level. The development plan will focus on land management and in projecting the spatial distribution of the future population of Kabul in the next 5 years. The development plan is not a substitute for the sectoral planning made within line agencies, like public works, water, sewer, health, education, etc. The development plan including a projection of the spatial distribution of the population becomes an input and document of reference in the planning exercise conducted by the line agencies within their own sector. It is futile for the planning department to project for instance the location of schools, size of classrooms etc. This is better done by specialized line agencies that are better aware of their own constraints in manpower and budget. 11. It is envisaged that the planning process will include several phases. Phase One: identification of National and Municipal Government objectives. 12. The consultant will consult with various level of government to express Government priorities objectives concerning urban areas and the welfare of the urban population. These priorities will be ranked and cover access to land, housing, infrastructure and social services and the quality of the urban environment. 13. During the course of the study the consultant will regularly consult with Government to discuss the implications of objectives on the development of the city in light of new data which may arise. Phase two: Data Gathering and Data Analysis. 14. During this phase, the consultant will review existing data, conduct field visits, hold discussions with relevant stakeholders to collect information necessary for the formulation of the Kabul Development Plan. The availability of Ikonos satellite imagery at 1 m resolution for 2002 and 2004 will greatly facilitate spatial data gathering and processing. All data collected by the consultant will be spatially referenced and integrated in GIS form to allow further analysis and the development of time series by the ministry and the municipal Government. It would be useful if the consultant divided the city into homogenous neighborhoods or planning zones following the administrative boundaries of Districts and Gozars. The consultant will avoid burdening the report with long descriptive parts. Most data will be presented in the forms of tables and graphs followed by succinct interpretation and analysis. 15. Needed data includes, but will not be necessarily restricted to: 68 • A review of current urban population estimate for Kabul by various institutions, average household size. Identification of the current natural growth rate and hypothesis for rate of migration toward Kabul for the next 10 years. • A detailed existing land use map of Kabul. It is expected that this analysis will identify: a. A typology of neighborhoods/districts of the city. It is expected that needed data for this assessment will include land use (commercial, residential etc), type of housing, density (dwelling units/ha, people/ha, floor area ratio) range of households’ income, land tenure, price range for land, cost of construction per m2 and rents, cost of water per m2 in various housing types. b. The location of primary schools, secondary schools, dispensaries and hospitals • A map of population densities . The consultant will make an evaluation of current population and densities based on already existing neighborhood survey and on the typology developed above. Additional spot check may be needed to increase reliability. • Evaluation of daily population movements from residential areas to place of employment. This will be based on existing traffic counts completed by spot surveys. • A map of current land values, and rents per m2 • A map of Kabul showing the areas of land belonging to the Government differentiating municipal land from land owned by various branches of Government • Current economic and social data in Kabul including: a. Household’s income distribution and % of income spent on rent. Consistency between housing typology and income distribution; b. Ratio of School age population and attendance by gender. Consistency between school attendance and number of schools identified in the land use map; • Current infrastructure network and current planned investments including: a. Community and social facilities, particularly schools and health clinics b. Coverage and capacity of the following networks: water supply, sewage, roads and transportation, electricity, telecommunications and solid waste. Infrastructure network in preparation by line agencies and already budgeted. • A Basic Priority Needs Assessment from Communities based on Neighborhood and District Level consultations. Phase Three: Formulation of a spatial strategy: 16. Based on the data collected and analyzed above, the consultant will identify the current spatial development trends of Kabul for population, jobs and retail distribution. 17. Based on the Government land data analyzed above, the consultant will recommend a strategy concerning the densification of existing neighborhood, the expansion of the city in new areas. This strategy will be concretized in the following documents: Land Use Regulations and Housing Standards • A zoning map showing the existing areas and new areas likely to be developed in the future 69 • A set of land use regulations corresponding to the various zones, which would include when relevant: use restrictions, plot sizes, set backs, floor area ratios, street width. • A proposal for new land subdivision regulations including the same parameters as above with different standards dependent on topography and households income groups. For each type of subdivision, the resulting cost for land and on site infrastructure per m2 of usable land will be calculated. Subdivision regulations will be used in conjunctions with real estate market prices and local infrastructure costs to calculate the minimum income required to afford the standards proposed. The corresponding minimum income map will complement the zoning map for new areas to be developed. • An affordability test of the new proposed zoning and land subdivision regulations. Based on current land and construction prices the consultant will calculate the minimum household income required to afford a plot and a minimum house in each residential zones and in new land subdivisions. Iterations may be made to adjust standards so that 90% of households could afford a dwelling in formal subdivisions. • A map of projected densities and population per neighborhoods. This map and corresponding tables will be provided to the various Municipal and National line agencies to allow them to plan their investments in social services and infrastructure. Assessment of required Primary infrastructure investments: 18. The consultant will assess the need in primary infrastructure investments to service the needs of the projected population, taking into account the level of services affordable in various neighborhoods. This will include roads, water supply, storm drainage, sewers, and electricity. The consultant will provide a calculation of necessary capacity per neighborhood, a preliminary layout of the primary network and indicate the approximate costs of the main infrastructure investments needed. The consultant will make an estimate of the cost of the share of the cost of the primary infrastructure network per neighborhood, per ha of land developed and per household. Additional investments 19. The consultant may identify the location and costs of additional investments related to the development of the city, such as need for gardens, park, tree planting, restoration of historical monuments, etc. Capacity Building 20. The planners in the MUDH and the Municipality will receive on the job training and capacity development through the process of preparing the plan. 21. A training program in current planning techniques consisting of a series of study tours, seminars, lectures and on the job technical assistance will be developed for the planners of the Kabul Municipality and the MUDH. Suggested seminar topics will include: 70 • Concepts in Planning – an examination of structure planning, integrated development planning, land use management, functioning of real estate markets. • Tools for Planning – including GIS systems, data collection systems and methodology. • Processes for Planning – including participatory planning. 22. Towards the Institutionalization of Planning. Some clarification of the roles and responsibilities of each of the agencies will emerge, through the preparation of the plan. These will be documented and submitted to the MUDH for consideration. Outputs and Deliverables 1. An Inception Report outlining the Consultants detailed approach, timing of individual Consultants inputs, counterpart requirements will be prepared and submitted within 2 weeks of the commencement of the study. 2. Phase 1 report: “identification of National and Municipal Government objectives� delivered within 1 month of the commencement of the study. 3. Phase 2 report: “Data Gathering and Data Analysis.� will be prepared and submitted within 3 months of the commencement of the study. The report will include all necessary maps, texts, charts, table diagrams, etc to support the plans recommendations and to respond to the scope of work outlined earlier. 4. Phase 3 report: “Formulation of a spatial strategy�. (items 12 to 21) This report will be presented in draft form within 5 months of the start of the study. The consultant will organize a 2 days seminar during which the findings and recommendations of the report will be discussed. The Government will review it and provide comments within 3 weeks of the date of the seminar. 5. Following the review and comment on the Draft Spatial Strategy a final Spatial Strategy report reflecting the comments submitted by relevant stakeholders will be submitted within 1 month of the receipt of such comments. 6. Five hard copies of each report will be submitted to Government in addition to 5 digital copies on DVDs containing all report and background information. 7. Presentation of data used during the preparation of the report. All data used during the preparation of the report, including all tables and maps will be prepared using off the shelf spreadsheets and GIS software ARCVIEW compatible. All documents will be submitted in digital form on DVD disks. 71 Needed Skills 23. It is expected that a variety of skills will be needed throughout the duration of the project. These are outlined below. Team Leader/Urban Planner 7 Municipal Engineer 5 (Kabul) Social Planner 3 Economist/ Financial Analyst 3 GIS specialist 3 Other Specialists 4 Local Staff 36 sub-total 61 Team Leader/Urban Planner 4 Municipal Engineer 3 (1 Provincial Town) Social Planner 1 Economist /Financial Analyst 1 GIS Specialist 2 Other Specialists 2 Local staff 24 sub –total 37 TOTAL - Kabul and 4 Towns 209 72 ANNEX 3: COLLATED INFORMATION ON FIVE SAMPLE GOZARS IN KABUL CITY SAMPLE INFORMATION 1 2 3 4 5 FROM FIVE GOZAR IN KABUL CITY Name of Gozar Siah Sang Chel Soton Sar-e-Tapa Kart-e-Naw Mula Bozorg, Wasel Naw Abad Deh Abad Afghanan District 8 (Zone 1, Section B) 7 (2nd phase) No. 2 7C 7 2 Services Was a new settlement in Planned with 48 tap 100% unplanned streets. Planned and serviced Water taps but not 1960s but not planned. stands & electricity. Had electricity in past, with public tap enough water; only Water and electricity for not now. stands and electricity mosques and 20 Zone A. before war, and new houses low on transformers being mountain have water. installed. Traditional settlement, no planned streets Sanitation Books (Ketabcha All old settlers (1960s) 80% Electricity Book 45-50% hold Safaie All old settled have 100% have Safaie Safaie) hold Electricity and 80% Sanitation Book books books books Electricity Books (Ketabcha Sanitation Books. No 50-60% houses near Barq) those from 1989 road have water tap access but very low pressure/none Settlement type Mixed Private and Private Land. Government land Private Land Was Government Government land Originally all arable But 5% have legal docs Used to be farmland. land but now land, and lack of from King’s time. 50% effectively legalized. irrigation, esp. area was pasture, sold to A very old Taliban period, settlers. settlement, going caused steady back 200 years. conversion to housing Year Wakil-e-Goazar appointed 1989 1981 2001 2001 1999 73 SAMPLE INFORMATION 1 2 3 4 5 FROM FIVE GOZAR IN KABUL CITY Status Wakil-e-Gozar Father was Wakil Living in Kabul Educated, works for Lived in area 40 yrs Several generations 1981, no other data NGO. Living in area in area. Worked 18 since 1980. yrs for Hoquq during 1970s and 1980s. No. households (HH) 470 accepted + 200 1,751 1,200 1,680 590 squatters (c. 11,000 people) (c.5,400 people) Age of settlement 3 periods and zones 1946-51 2 periods: 3 periods: 200 years A 1960s Returnees rebuilt A 1951 A 1950 B 1989-2001 houses after 2001 B 1983 B 1973-1978 C after 2001 + c. 50 houses since C 1986-1992 2001 D 2001 New houses built since 2001 Est. 200, illegally on Handful only, on Est. 50, illegally. 500 houses built on 36 new houses, built Government land above agricultural land of Bought Government upper half of hill above old settlement old settlement by private owners by customary land from especially one since 2001, Also on hill... individuals transfer Kuchi who claimed built 40 houses on ownership of school grounds, and pastureland, bribed houses on district and municipality graveyards. officials. Reason new construction Apparently Commanders, Private demand Kuchi allegedly sold on Apparently Apparently force. basis false title deed Commanders, force Commanders Disputed by Wakil. Under extreme dispute: Wakil will not recognize new HH Size of house plots 100m2-500m2 300m2 – 600m2 300m2 – 4000m2 300m2 – 1000m2 200m2 to 300m2 (some 1000m2 Est. % HH hold legal deeds of 7% (regularized 1960s) 30% 5% but all built illegally 28% 75% ownership Est. % HH hold customary 63% self-allocation 70% (all signed by 60%, stamped by Wakil 42% 19% documents 1989-2001), not stamped Wakil) by Wakil 74 SAMPLE INFORMATION 1 2 3 4 5 FROM FIVE GOZAR IN KABUL CITY Est. % HH have no documents 30% (commander-led Few, as no illegal 35%. Mostly bribe 30% 6% occupation since 2001) occupation Police to let them build. 500 Panjsheris, (36 households only) occupying Mula Bozorg & Bereshna Kot Est. % HH left during 1978- ‘Many’ 80% 100% 95%, esp. during 90% 2001 (War Period) 1992-95.Most returned with Taliban. Effect on houses Minimal. 80% houses damaged Looted and destroyed Looted and Looted and destroyed by bombs and During Mujahiddin destroyed, especially during Mujahiddin looting. period by Hizb-Islamy period (Gulbuddin), occupied houses during 1992-1995 Effect on tenure Minimal to none. No wrongful Only 1 wrongful Wrongful occupation No wrongful Some minor intra-family occupation occupation by Pashtun during Mujahiddin occupation because disputes on return Talib who fled in 2001. but fled when people returned Reason so low wrongful Taliban came (1996). during Taliban occupancy is because Very stable during period. people returned rapidly Taliban period & no on collapse of Taliban. empty houses for warlords to take after 2001 Disputes on return Low, some intra-family Few, only Mainly relating to None after 2001 Only 2 inheritance disputes. Many disputes reconstruction. access rights (paths too except the 500 cases. caused by bad planning; Some intra-family. narrow), privacy Panjsheris issue lack of access, waste No boundary disputes (windows onto other (major conflict). problems, etc. as old and clear. But houses. One inheritance Main problems relate many planning dispute involving to waste disposal, related disputes returnee. water, boundaries, caused by problems Winter snow disputes “youngsters having with toilet waste, this year 2004-05 as problems� 75 SAMPLE INFORMATION 1 2 3 4 5 FROM FIVE GOZAR IN KABUL CITY streams from houses, high snowfall. snow being chucked on others properties, etc. Disputes taken to which body Wakil - Wakil. Wakil Wakil Wakil - High Court of Mosque Council (reps Mosque Council Mosque Council (15 Mosques (4 members from 12 mosques, with Elders (10 mosques, Mosque reps) & Wakil is Chair. Wakil as Chairman. Wakil is Chair). If unsolved, to Fines levied Fail to resolve, then to No cases since 2001 District Police, Only robbery & Police, or parties take referred to District although rare. murder to Police there on their own. Police. Only 1 case taken to court since 2001, not accepted because no legal docs Preferred avenue for dispute Informally to Wakil Informally to Wakil Informally, to Wakil & Informally, to Wakil Informally, to Wakil resolution by members of & Council Council because- & Mosque Council community No bribes, also time- Cheaper, no bribes consuming ‘running Do not have legal titles up and down to the Faster courts’ Type of disputes Wakil easily Most which stem from All those involving All except could not All, except Panjsheri All cases, except able to solve planning over paths waste people from the defeat the corruption of case. relating to the 36 new etc. Wakil refuses to hear Gozar. Only go to the Kuchi who got houses boundary or other tenure court when Wakil or Police on his side to sell disputes where no Council cannot get land to 16 people but customary or legal deeds resolution. they have no Wakil of ownership. stamp on purchase, ‘so invalid’ Est. % sales since Wakil in post Low in oldest area, higher Under 3 % since 10-15 houses sold since 30 houses only sold Only 1 sale in 6 years in middle and new areas. 1981 (c. 40 houses of 2001 (c. 1.25%). since built ((2.5%). Wakil is Property Dealer 1,751 HH) Often Property Dealers Often Property for most. Property Dealers now involved. Dealers now 76 SAMPLE INFORMATION 1 2 3 4 5 FROM FIVE GOZAR IN KABUL CITY often involved. involved. Est. % have sold farmland 0 Most as area all 50% of area Area originally None, and very old farmed until 1980s. pastureland, now houses farmland and pasture settlement Remaining and now mostly sold, cultivation lands due to water stand empty. shortage. Irrigation was by Bala Joy Stream, dried up during conflict. Price rises since 2001 Dramatic Not significant Dramatically, by 10 Risen by 4 times Five times rise. times Main factor in differences in Demand Not appealing area to Demand Demand Demand price rich Current prices Old roadside with Land prices vary 4,400,000 Afs for recent 100m2 = 50,000 Afs The one sale was for services: 18 lakh according to distance sale, but no legal dead in 2001, now 400,000 Afs old Middle zone, no services: from main road: only document saying 200,000 Afs. currency 3.5 lakh 30-40,000 Afghanis promises no other title New very large houses: per beswa if far from holder. >35 lakh, even without road services 80-100,000 Afghanis per beswa if near road. Effect of legal entitlement on Not as important as Nil as all ownership None, as sales continue, Nil. None – same for sales services & size is legal by custom and for high prices. customary and legal deeds Est. % renting out houses ‘many’ 15% 12% (also some have 30-40%. 70%, but with owner mortgaged houses) and tenant usually both on premises Rent rises since 2001 ‘Dramatic’ (partly Not significant High, because no rents High, owners paid High because no rents paid paid until 2001 people to stay in until 2001) their houses during Taliban 77 SAMPLE INFORMATION 1 2 3 4 5 FROM FIVE GOZAR IN KABUL CITY Rent rates currently High 2-4 room house: Varies according to 1 room = 500 Afs 1500-30000 Per Mth. distance from road; 1 room is 1500-2000 Afs. Per mth Some 12000 Afs. Per mth 78 ANNEX 4 ANALYSIS OF PROPERTY DISPUTE CASES Table 1: Property Cases in the Special Land Disputes Court (all branches) 21 March 2003 – 20 March 2004 (1382) DISPUTES OVER THESE ISSUES No. Percent 1 Disputed Ownership at Sale or Purchase 88 5 2 Disputed Ownership through Falsification of Documents or other ‘Inversions and Trickeries’ 448 26 3 Wrongful Occupation (Disputed Ownership of Occupant of the Property) 1,175 69 Total 1,711 100 Source: After Alden Wily, 2004b, based on data provided by the Special Land Disputes Court, December 2004. Note: Most of the cases relate to Kabul City and environs (see Table 2 below). Table 2: Number of Cases in the Kabul Court of the Special Land Disputes Court Period Cases New Cases Cases Cases Outstanding Carried for the Solved Referred to Cases Over from Quarter Other Previous Courts, Quarter Agencies or Withdrawn 2nd Quarter 1382 258 Nil Nil 3rd Quarter 1382 73 13 245 4th Quarter 1382 284 6 331 1st Quarter 1383 120 194 16 159 139 2nd Quarter 1383 139 211 11 173 3rd Quarter 1383 143 10 130 Totals 1,163 56 574 533 Source: Special Land Disputes Court, Kabul Branch, January 2005.Note: Blanks represent No Data provided 79 Table 3: Property Cases in all Courts in Afghanistan March 2003-March 2004 DISPUTES OVER THESE ISSUES NUMBER PERCENT 1 Inheritance of Property (Ownership issue) 2,499 25.8 2 Wrongful Occupation (Ownership issue) 2,332 24.0 3 Land Sales & Purchases (Ownership issue) 1,898 19.6 4 Farm Water Rights (Irrigation) 690 7.1 5 Rents & Mortgages 541 5.6 6 Houses/Building Sales & Purchases (Process) 431 4.4 7 Pre-emption (right to purchase ahead of others) 341 3.5 8 Awarding Possession 313 3.2 9 Inheritance (Moveable with Immovable Property) 279 3.0 10 Custody over Lands 207 2.1 11 Advance Payments Against Purchases & Sales 85 0.9 12 Boundary Disputes 66 0.7 Total 9,682 100 Source: After Alden Wily 2004b, based on data provided by the Supreme Court Kabul June 2004. Table 4: Property at Dispute by Percentage Type of Property NRC Cases NRC Kabul City Special Court Cases Jalalabad Town Cases in Kabul Only N = 13 N = 65 N = 194 1 House 61.5 33.8 51.5 2 Apartment 7.7 13.8 3 Shop 0 6.2 0.5 4 Land 30.8 46.2 38.1 5 Other 0 11.9 Percent 100 100 100 Sources: NRC January 2005 and Special Land Disputes Court, January 2005. Note: NRC cases include some cases which are resolved informally, not taken to court. 80 Table 5: Location of Cases Mediated by the Norwegian Refugee Council in Kabul ATTRIBUTE Percent (N= 65) 1 Land is Private 86 2 Land is Government 14 3 Property is within a serviced area 69 4 Property is in an un-serviced area 31 5 Case relates to wrongful occupation 71 6 Case relates to eviction by Government/agency/official 29 Source: Jacob Reimer, NRC, January 2005, using a 33% sample of cases handled by one Legal Aid Centre in Kabul Table 6: Actors in Disputes Mediated by Norwegian Refugee Council Categories Percent 1 Cases involving land grabbing 13 2 Cases involving disputes with Government officials, people from political parties, or Court Judges 16 3 Cases of alleged corruption, e.g. involving bribery by Municipality or Court 7 4 Cases resulting from eviction by Municipality for development projects 13 5 Unclear/ mixed/client has not returned or case not concluded 15 6 No officials involved: cases involve two personal parties, or family members 36 Total 100 Source: After Beall & Esser 2005 based on information provided by NRC for 2004. 81 ANNEX 5: ACQUISITION OF BUILDING PLOTS 1. One of the founding powers and responsibilities of Kabul Municipality is to acquire private property (at open market rates) and reallocate this to persons able to construct their own houses. Historically, the price of these plots has been deliberately kept below the open market rate, to enable poorer persons to acquire building land and to ensure that construction falls within formally planned areas (projects). Currently, a minimum of new Afghanis 25,000 – 35,000 ($500 - $700) is payable to acquire a plot number (for a 100 sq meter plot), and a fee of $1,050 for provision of services (roads, water, drainage, electricity etc). Although not technically illegal by the terms of the law, the Municipality should not accept payment by applicants for such plots until it is assured of the means to purchase and develop the intended areas it has planned for development. There has been no such possibility for some time now (although supposedly the substantial funds earned through up-front payments should have contributed to this). 2. Since the Mujahiddin period (1992-1996) Municipal officials estimate that a minimum of 26,000 plots have been paid for and allocated on land which the Municipality is yet to purchase or develop. One official intimated that the true number could be double this figure. The following table collates some of the cases. Examples of Number of Plots Allocated by Municipality on Already-Owned Land PROJECT No. of Plots 1 Khushal Khan District 5 No data 2 Khair Khana District 11 Project 5 (1995-96) 2,100 3 Ahmand Shah Baba No data 4 Arzan Qimat District 12 9,000 5 Qala Zaman Khan District 16 7,000 6 Rahman Mina District 8 5,500 7 West of Kabul Airport District 10 1,000 8 Ayub Khan District 7 ‘several thousand’ 3. Officials acknowledged that the Municipality continued to accept payment for plots and award owners plot numbers up until March 2004, when a new Mayor was put in position. Often the land on which the plot numbers are indicated is already privately- owned land. Sometimes houses already exist on the land and are occupied by their owners. Needless to say, this produces plenty of fuel for heated disputes between the existing owner of the land and the allocatee, who may proceed to construct a house on the private land. Since March 2004, the current Mayor has resolved around 5,000 of what are estimated as around 14,000 disputed plots. This was achieved through purchase of other land and reallocation. 4. The routes through which plots have been formally acquired are reportedly heavily tainted with what current officials now say was outright corruption. Many plots were sold for which there was simply no real plot. Others were indicated on land that is already occupied and owned. In addition to the fees lost to applicants, bribes often had to be paid, doubling or tripling real costs. 82 5. Quite outside the official project-bound plot planning and allocation of land which is not in the power of the Municipality to allocate, are allegedly a host of other cases where plots have been acquired, and legal letters of allocation and court entitlement issued, in respect of plots which fall well beyond planned areas. Kabulis cite a common practice and effective right up until at least March 2004, in which an influential individual secured allocation of State Land plots directly from the leadership, or simply through force. Such persons are reported to have used their military might to construct houses and offices on such properties, and allegedly coerced or colluded with others to secure court documents evidencing title. Municipality officials have by no means always colluded in these developments: on the contrary, some key officials have received violent beatings when attempting to challenge building activity on such sites (see Box 3.3 on Sai Sang, District 8). 6. The Municipality has allegedly also been party to at times unjustified cancellation of building plot allocations. Again, as is the case with the Ministry in respect of constructed apartments, there are legal conditions which officials may manipulate to corrupt and unjust ends. The outstanding requirement has been that failure to build upon the plot within one year can result in loss of the plot allocation. This condition is perfectly common and justified in non-conflict situations but not in conflict situations where it is obviously difficult for owners who have fled to start construction. Officials indicate that most cancellations occurred during the 1992-2001 period, but that cancellations did also continue up until March 2004. ‘Some’ cases of alleged wrongful cancellation have been submitted to the Property Department since March 2004. Those who benefit may not be those at the head of the waiting list; this now runs at more than 50,000 households. (It is not clear whether this list includes only those who have paid for plots or includes some who have merely put their names down as plot applicants). Self-Allocation on State Land 7. A significant estate within the City (original Master Plan limits) is owned by Government, and variously made available to the Municipality to plan and allocate. Estimates of 1,000 ha are given, with several thousand additional hectares of State Land (or Government land) falling outside the original Master Plan area. It is in these areas that most unauthorized self-help housing has taken place, including on steep hillsides. Most of this construction has been entirely illegal. Accordingly, house owners risk eviction and insecurity of occupancy pervades such areas. Many, perhaps a million or so, poor people are affected. 8. However, as indicated above, there are a number of cases, where technically illegal construction of houses has been carried out with the collusion of senior officials, including Ministers. There are other cases where leaders of these developments have managed post-fact to gain formal entitlement to their properties. Nor are all beneficiaries poor. A not uncommon case is where a commander has appropriated a land area and proceeded to sell one beswa plots, at ever-inflating prices. Once the house is constructed, owners frequently in turn sell the house, and for significant sums. The Sai Sang Wakil-e- Gozar reports that the price doubles with each sale. A chain of evidential documentation of purchase is set up, removing the original land developer from detection without determined pursuit of the case. No trustworthy Wakil-e-Gozar will witness these transactions, although neighbors in similar situations readily do so. 83 9. While disputes at transaction or post-transaction may arise in such cases (for example where a brother of a family home has not been party to the sale), these disputes do not enter the formal arena (courts or even the Wakil-e-Gozar). This is because even the most recent buyer of the house is perfectly aware that their occupancy is illegal given the status of the land as belonging to Government. However the fact that prices nonetheless soar suggest that there is widespread confidence that their occupancy will in due course be regularized. Should this not be the case, then literally thousands of cases will result, in this instance, launched by Government seeking restitution of its properties. The fact that by no means all house owners are poor, or without choice, gives pause for thought. There are, that is, a significant number of owners who build speculatively (for sale) and/or build to rent out, not to provide themselves and their families with desperately needed shelter. They are however, numerically a minority. 84 ANNEX 6: ACQUISITION OF GOVERNMENT BUILT APARTMENTS 1. Since the 1960s, Government has taken responsibility for constructing houses for mainly civil servants and other deserving groups like war widow (the Nadir Shan Mina Estate was the first, with legislation regulating construction and distribution of some 23 block apartments in 1968).19 This responsibility falls to the Shelter and Maintenance Department of the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing. The Ministry has constructed and allocated an estimated 15,000 apartments, mainly in the Macrorayan Estates (c.11, 000 apartments in four developments). In addition the Ministry of Interior independently constructs, allocates and manages several thousand apartments (Sarandoi) for Police and military staff. Government Allocated Apartments Estate No. Blocks No. No. Now No. Still Rented Apartme Fully Owned Out by nts Privately By Owners Owned Ministry 1 Sera Mina No data 2 Tahia Maskhan No data 3 Nawad Yak Family 87 1,235 871 364 291 4 Shahahra Project No data 5 Macrorayan Estate 1 67 2,088 Est. 2088 * c.500 6 Macrorayan Estate 2 57 2,606 2,546 60 c. 500 7 Macrorayan Estates 60** 5,000 4,985 15 c. 800 3&4 * ‘A small number’ are owned but without title deeds yet, and some of these are disputed properties. ** Seven blocks are for administration, not residential purposes. 2. Allocation of apartments has been and remains a function of the Distribution Committee (Commission Tawze) of the Ministry’s Shelter Department. The procedure is regulated by the Municipalities Act (first promulgated in 1957 and last amended in 2000)20 and related decrees and subsidiary legislation (regulations).21 The Commission 19 Decree No. 2662 19 Qaws 1347 (1968) Regulations for the Distribution and Selling of the 23 Block Apartments of Nadir Shah Mina; Decree No. 570 7/3/1349 (1970) Regulations for the Distribution and Selling of Low Income Housing in Khair Khana Mina; Law of Acquisition of Khoshal Khan Mina Land Projects Decree No. 463 29/3/1354 (1975); Statute on the Running and Controlling of the Construction of Nadir Shah Mina. Decree No. 2300, 22 Hoot 1356 (1978). 20 Law of Municipalities 16 Jadi 1336 (1957), Law on Municipalities, Gazette 794, 25/06/1421 HQ (2000). 21 Ratification No. 147 Regarding Approval of Regulation on Distribution of Residential Houses, Government lHouses and Plots of Land in Kabul City Gazette Issue No. 14, Serial No. 593, 30 Mizan 1364 (1985); Ratification No. 90 Regarding Adjustment of Some Articles and Appendix of Regulation Concerning Distribution of Government lResidential Houses and Land in Kabul City Extraordinary Issue of Gazette, No. 613 22 Asad 1365 (1986); Decree No. 241 of 1/3/1367 Concerning Procedures for Selling Micrarayan Apartments of Shahrara and Parwan (1988); Decree on Selling of Apartments. Gazette 668, 31.3 1367 (21 June 1989); Regulation on the Procedure for Distribution and Sale of State Residential Apartments and Land Plots in Kabul City 1368 (1989) Gazette No. 355; Law Prohibiting Hoarding 1368 (1989); Law on Shelter, 2000 Gazette 794; and Regulation for the Distribution and Selling of Government lApartments in Gazette Issue 798 (2001). 85 is chaired by the Minister, with the Directors of Planning, Maintenance and Shelter as members, together with a representative of the President. Since December 2001, around 4,000 applications have been received and are still pending. Although originally limited to civil servants, this is no longer the case and any Kabuli of 18 years or above may apply to purchase an apartment. 3. The outstanding and still-existing condition is that the applicant does not own another house or apartment in Kabul, and to this end s/he must secure written confirmation of homelessness from all 22 district authorities. A Sawabegi Be Sarpanahe (Certification of Homelessness) is eventually issued to this end. Those selected deposit the ten percent down payment with the Bank of Afghanistan, and then pay an annual instalment on the balance over a long period, originally up to forty years, now thirty years. Only when the full balance is received, does the Ministry issue confirmation of tenure, which the owner takes to the Primary Court for issue of a formal entitlement deed (Qabala Sharyee). 4. Fewer than five percent of all apartments remain technically the property of the State. The vast majority have secured deeds from the courts, with a small proportion having not yet acquired the deeds given that a Taliban Decree placing a freeze on the issue of deeds for these properties has not yet been lifted. Its reason was to limit sales of apartments in the open market, an occurrence that is now normal practice, but which does constrain acquisition of formal legal deeds of transfer – unless of course, these may be obtained from the courts by other means. Even though the 1992 and re-issued Taliban restriction is still in place, it is generally ignored. Sales of apartments through Property Dealers have become very common since 2001 with Certificates or Receipts of Sale issued as evidence of transfer, and the buyer and seller failing to register the change of entitlement in a Court document. Avoidance of transfer tax is a likely additional incentive to by-pass the legal requirement to resell to the State (and in fact was the main reason for requiring owners to sell to the State in the first instance). It could well be the case that currently registered owners in the Registers of Blocks held by the Maintenance Department are no longer the de facto owners. 5. The Ministry has always possessed powers of cancelling provisional occupancy, particularly in these circumstances: (a) when the provisional owner has paid no more than the founding ten percent deposit on the property and (b) when the provisional owner has been absent for more than year. This has continued to apply even though many have been in exile and obviously unable to pay instalments. Even now, the Shelter Department allows no more than 30 days at least from summons (by letter to the owner, to his/her relatives, or to past employer) to appear to make payment and/or clarify the situation. An estimated 900 or so provisional ownership rights were cancelled in this manner by Mujahiddin or Taliban Administrations (1922-2001) and reallocated. At least 200-250 rights have been cancelled since December 2001 and (the Acting Shelter Director was reluctant to specify). The scope for angry dispute on the part of owners or their descendants when they return is obvious. 86 6. The Ministry runs a Dispute Commission (Commission Barrasi) to which such ownership complaints are submitted. This is chaired by the Planning Director of the Ministry, with the Directors of the Maintenance and Shelter Departments participating, along with the Ministry’s Legal Adviser and Director of Audit. Data on exactly how many complaints have been received and/or dealt with since December 2001 were not made available, with only samples of cases provided. The Shelter Department files and prepares complaints for discussion. The Head of the Department indicated that around 20-30 disputes had been amicably resolved by the disputing parties (original owner, current ‘owner’ and sometimes several interim owners) and that ‘only a few’ remain to be resolved. This does not seem plausible and the officer may have misunderstood the query. Another official indicated that complaints run into thousands. Another said that the Commission meets weekly and may address up to ten cases a session. Since 2002 this indeed could amount to well over 1,000 complaints. 7. Problems with rent hikes are legion in the apartment sector as much as in any other housing sector in the city and generate the greater number of disputes between landlords and tenants. However, due to avoidance of tax upon letting (a tax which is generally passed on to the tenant who has to pay one month’s rent to the Maintenance Department), such disputes are kept within the Block. Wakil-e-Block are often called to calm the dispute between rent collecting landlord and tenant. 8. Other than complaints as to unjust cancellation, most complaints reaching the Commission Barrasi relate to contested ownership between first and current ‘owners’, with sales frequently having occurred in the interim and complicating the dispute. Where the Commission in unable to resolve such disputes, it forwards the case to the Attorney- General’s Office in the Ministry to investigate (Saranwali Nizarat). Some of the cases where the Commission has been able to resolve the dispute have been where the second owner moves out, recognizing that the first owner has the primary right and that he was wrongly allocated the apartment (often during the Taliban period). The dispossessed is then placed at the head of the waiting list for a new apartment. 9. In summary, roots of conflict in relation to government-constructed apartments include - • Cases where provisional ownership has been formally cancelled by one or other Administration between around 1993 up until the present day and the apartment reallocated. While this may be legal, the scope for injustice is considerable as is scope for nepotistic or otherwise unfair choice of new allocatee. One official estimated that upwards of 80 percent of reallocations even since 2002 were unfair, with queue-jumping and favoritism rife; • Cases where an apartment has been wrongfully sold on by an occupant without requisite consultation with siblings or wife, often occurring at the point of inheritance; • Cases where an apartment has been wrongfully sold on by a person posing as original owner (often with false documents) or as acting with his or her power of attorney; 87 • Cases where powerful persons, including Mujahiddin leaders from 1993-2004 have coerced or otherwise intimidated tenants of owners and evicted them, or taken over empty apartments. It is of concern that some of these cases appear to have been ‘regularized’ by Ministry officials or by the courts. How far this is in turn through intimidation or by bribery is unclear. Strictly speaking the court should not issue new tenure without clearance from the Ministry that the claimant is in fact the registered and rightful owner. 10. Scope for corruption on the part of private persons is considerable, with counterfeiting of documents (with or without the collusion of officials) a not uncommon attribute of a case. Instances where a person sells the property and the family objects, generally do not appear before the Ministry Disputes Commission, but are taken straight to the Court, or to the Attorney-General’s Office in the Provincial Governor’s Office. 11. Opportunity for institutional injustice and malfeasance are ample, a fact of which the new administration in the Ministry is well aware of and anxious to minimize. A quite avoidable injustice occurs, for example, where the time limit for original owners to reclaim their apartments is patently too short and/or the search for the owner or his descendants is too cursory. Nepotism in the award of apartments which do come up for reallocation, by fair means or foul, is widely alleged, including since December 2001. Even where private individuals have wrongfully acquired or sold on apartments, it is quite possibly the case that Ministry, District Office or Court officials have colluded. At the very least, key officials in one or other stage of acquisition have failed to verify documentation sufficiently and/or adhere to conditions such as requiring surrender of apartments by those who own other properties in the city. It is widely alleged that not only do many apartment owners possess other homes in the city; some own more than one apartment, under the names of various family members. 88 ANNEX 7: THE SPECIAL LAND DISPUTES RESOLUTION COURT 1. The Special Property Disputes Resolution Court was initially created by Decree 136 of 2002 and reconstructed a year later by Decree 89 of 2003 (refer Annex F for legislation). From the outset, claims to this court have been restricted to private persons who are returnees or internally displaced persons (Article 1 of Decree 136) and who seek to retrieve private properties (land, houses, apartments, shops, commercial premises) of which they have been unwillingly deprived during the period since 27 April 1978. Neither Government nor its agents could use the Court to seek restitution of non-private property. 2. In its first six months of operation the dedicated Court dealt with just over 300 cases and a small percentage of which were fully resolved.22 The court operated only in Kabul and the cases concerned Kabul properties, all but one or two being large homes of wealthy returnees. Bias, corruption and other ills were alleged in the handling of cases. Initially the Court was provided with an investigation branch (Disputes Resolution Commission). This began life originally under the aegis of Kabul Municipality. Under the 2002 legislation there was no appeal against the decision of the Court. 3. Within a year the new Decree was issued to reform the Court. An important change was provision for appeal to a second level court. In addition, appeal from this court could proceed to the President, through the recommendation of a Supreme Court Revisions Committee The Court itself was made into two branches, one to deal exclusively with cases brought in Kabul City and Province, and the other to hear those from elsewhere. All cases are to be decided within a two month period from submission, and may be extended by ten days only in exceptional cases. 4. Further decrees have since been issued to improve performance. A year ago (January 2004, Order 4794) the Minister of Interior was ordered to provide the Court with a Special Police Force to facilitate in the bringing of defendants to court hearings and to help enforce decisions. The Ministry of Finance was also ordered to assist in finding salaries for the needed judges. While the Police corps has not been provided, many more judges are now serving the Court; there are now a total of 21 Judges, up on the original three provided for in 2002. The First Level Court for Kabul Province has ten Judges and a Senior Judge, the ex-Kabul Court has six Judges and a Head Judge and the Second Level (Special Land Disputes Appeal Court) is served by two Judges and a Senior Judge, who also serves as overall Director of the Court. 5. Nonetheless, none of the three Courts are able to keep up with the caseload, with a minority of cases decided within the statutory two month time-limit. By far the greatest load is upon the Kabul Court, and where most cases still relate to better-off Kabulis. As shown in the text, very few cases have been decided. Since provision for appeal has been made, an astounding 80 percent of cases are resubmitted to the Appeal Court of the Special Land Disputes Court. 22 Alden Wily 2003a. 89 6. Judges in the Courts identify several reasons for slow passage of cases. A great deal of time-wasting occurs when defendants refuse to appear in Court. They claim local Police do not actively search out defendants and are likely paid off by wealthy defendants, sitting on properties which they do not wish to return to original owners. One case was cited in which a defendant was making so much money from renting out the property to an NGO, that he was able to bribe the Police on a weekly basis to fail to bring him to Court. The failure of the Ministry of Interior to provide a dedicated Police Force to assist the Special Court is considered a major constraint. Another factor is the slowness with which documentation, finger prints on documents and other document-related searches are conducted, variously by Hoquq (Mediation Department in Ministry of Justice, with Provincial branches), Saranwali (Attorney-General’s Office with Provincial branches) or the Supreme Court’s own Registry of Documents (Makhzan), and within which some 6,332 Books directly relate to property ownership.23 A further delay is caused by the requirement under Sharia (Islamic Law) that no decision is made by less than three Judges. Therefore the ten Judges of the Kabul Special Land Disputes Court, for example, are divided into five teams of two, each of which meets once a week with the Senior Judge, in order to decide a case. The Senior Judge has proposed that at least two or three Courts be formed out of the one Court, to speed up decision-making. 7. Other changes have been suggested by the new Director of the Special Court. These include a request that a Commercial Branch to the Special Land Disputes Court be formed to deal with cases where refugees seek repayment of years of lost rent for commercial properties occupied by others or approved tenants. The Court would also like higher priority access to the Criminal Department of the Police which determines the authenticity of signatures, thumb prints and documents, given that such a high proportion of cases involve counterfeit documents. The Judges report that fabrication of documents is increasing. It is not unusual for a defendant or even claimant to have prepared a false Power of Attorney for a person residing outside the country, and to have on this basis occupied and/or sold a property. In several cases, fake Death Certificates have been discovered. Illegitimate heirs have presented themselves as rightful claimants of substantial properties, and then proceeded to sell these or rent them out to international agencies. On their return, the living owners face long battles to retrieve their houses, buildings, or in one case, a car park, by which point the estate has passed through several hands. The Court is also seeking additional capacity to be legally and practically able to pursue and prosecute the counterfeiters who support these crimes, not one of which has apparently been brought to book. 8. Judges in the Court observed that customary documents are less easy to counterfeit than documents prepared by the Courts. Those forging documents try to make them look as official and court-derived as possible. Local witnesses to customary transactions can easily be traced, and the Criminal Department is able to assess the similarity of thumb marks with those forcibly provided by the defendant. Relatively few customary documents are brought to Court; by far the majority are legal documents, fake or otherwise. Most of these may be checked against originals in the Markhzan. From time to time cases do arise where it the evidence suggests that a court official or Judge has colluded in the production of fake court-issued deeds. 23 Refer Safar 2003. 90 9. Some clients speak of the Court’s efforts less charitably. Accusations of obstructionism are frequently made, believed to be a means of encouraging bribes. Stories circulate as to how claimants are asked for payment and if they refuse or cannot pay, the defendant is then asked, and accordingly wins the case. The truth of such allegations is not known; not a single measure is in place which could limit the temptation to seek or receive bribes. No monitoring or spot inspection of case process and decisions is made. And indeed, three Judges have been relieved of their positions over the last six months for alleged corruption, including the original Director in charge of the Court. All Judges complain bitterly of their low salaries, which they say should be high given the responsibilities of their mandate and their seniority in the community. 10. Other problems in performance are mentioned. All the Judges are elderly and many do not spend normal hours in the office. Nor are they as familiar with the complete corpus of law as they should be. ‘Common sense’ and religious rules and regulations are the sources commonly used to arrive at decisions. None of the three Judges interviewed mentioned referring to the many statutory enactments, edicts or decrees on the subject of property ownership. It is as if state law has bypassed this core institution. 11. Office space is limited, computers few, and all eleven Judges of the Kabul branch of the Court use the one room for examining and hearing cases. No transport is available, which mainly inhibits the work of the ex-Kabul Court, which is unable to cover its costs of travelling and staying outside the City. Virtually no visits outside the capital are made, and it is virtually unheard of for the Court to visit the properties that are subject of the dispute, or to have the chance to interview neighbors or local leaders. The new Director of the Court has proposed to the Chief Justice that the ex-Kabul Court be expanded and sub-divided into three Courts, in Kandahar, Baghlan and Kabul, respectively covering eight, ten and 14 Provinces. 12. The Court acknowledges that especially in Kabul City cases, the claimants to the Court are usually educated, employed and possessing of means. The properties they wish to reclaim are generally large, many-roomed homes or business premises. The greatest proportion of cases concern contested ownership and occupation. The second largest category relates to family disputes, where one member of the family has entrenched his ownership, in the absence of other members. An important trigger to disputes over this is the sharply rising value of urban property and the considerable rent that may be made from letting to foreign agencies. 91 ANNEX 8: DECREES RELATING TO THE SPECIAL LAND DISPUTES COURT AND ITS CLIENTS, RETURNEES DECREE OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE AFGHAN INTERIM ADMINISTRATION NO. (297) OF 13.03. 1380 ON THE DIGNIFIED RETURN OF REFUGEES December 2001 The Afghan Interim Administration, confident that the Bonn Agreement on Afghanistan dated 14.09.1380 (5 December 2001) has laid down the foundation for lasting peace, stability and social and economic progress in Afghanistan, safeguards the right and freedom of all returnees, observes the freedom of returnees to establish residence, to participate in the process of reconstruction, consolidation of peace, democracy and social development, AIA guarantees their safe and dignified return, expresses its gratitude and thankfulness to the countries that have given them refuge in the very difficult and hard days Afghanistan experienced, and expects that in conformity with the principle of voluntary repatriation, Afghans will be given the opportunity to decide freely to return to their country, and declares the following: Article 1. Returning Afghan nationals, who were compelled to leave the country and found refuge in Iran, Pakistan and other countries of the world, will be warmly welcomed without any form of intimidation or discrimination. Article 2. Returnees shall not be subject to harassment, intimidation, discrimination or persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality and membership of a particular social group, political opinion or gender, and will be protected by the State. Article 3. All returnees, irrespective of their political affiliations, are exempted from prosecution for all (with the exception of individual criminal accusations) criminal offences committed up to 01.10.1380 (22 December 2001), prior to, or in exile against the internal and external security of the country, according to enacted laws. Article 4. The provisions of Article 3 of this decree will not apply to those returnees who have committed acts constituting a crime against peace or humanity, or a war crime, as defined in international instruments, or to acts contrary to the purpose and principles of the United Nations. Article 5. The recovery of movable and immovable properties such as land, houses, markets, shops, sarai, apartments and etc. will be effected through relevant legal organs. Article 6. All returnees will be guaranteed the same human rights and fundamental freedoms enjoyed by other citizens. Article 7. The implementation of the provisions of this decree is the responsibility of the Ministry of Repatriation; law and order organs are obliged to assist the Ministry of Repatriation in this task. Article 8. UNHCR and other relevant international agencies will be allowed to monitor the treatment of returnees to ensure these meet recognized humanitarian law and human 92 rights standards, and to ensure that commitments contained in this decree are implemented. Article 9. This decree is valid as of 1.10.1380 (22 December 2001) and will be printed in the Official Gazette. DECREE ON THE ESTALBISHMENT OF A LAND AND PROPERTY DISPUTES COURT, DECREE NO. 136 OF 2002 Circular Letter No. 4035 of 1381/6/19 Decree No. 136 dated 13.6.1381 of President of Islamic Republic of Afghanistan of Afghanistan contains the following: Based on the need for studying complaints of our refugee and displaced compatriots, who want to obtain their properties, a special court has been established according to the following Articles within the structure of Supreme Court: Article 1 In this decree, ownership includes land, residential houses, apartments, shops, commercial warehouses and other real estate. Article 2 Solving disputes of properties is limited on possession, which has taken place in the absence of the owner from 7 Saur 1357 (27 April 1978) until the establishment of Interim Administration. Article 3 This court is unique and centralized. If it is needed its delegation may travel to various provinces in order to study the relevant cases. Assigning this delegation takes place by the proposal of the chief judge of the special court and on the approval of the chief justice. Article 4 This court shall have three judges. Article 5 Relevant cases to the Special Court of Property Dispute are to be investigated by the Dispute Resolution Commission before being studied in the court; and the special court issues its judgment after receiving the view of commission as experts and juries. Article 6 Investigation of property dispute cases will be performed on the direct request of individual’s real person and body corporate or by referral from relevant Governmental departments. Article 7 The decision of the court is final and must be observed. Parties to the dispute cannot appeal against the court decision. The reviewing of the court judgment is the responsibility of President of the Afghanistan Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. 93 Article 8 The chiefs of police in Kabul and provinces are responsible for the enforcement of the court judgments. Article 9 Identification of forged documents is the responsibility of this court and forgery cases are referred to the competent authority for further follow-up and prosecution. Article 10 Governmental departments are responsible for the implementation of this decree. Article 11 Personnel for the structure and budget of this court are submitted by the Supreme Court and will be approved by the President of the Afghanistan Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. Article 12 Special courts on property disputes are active for as long as disputes on property exist. Article 13 This decree is effective after its signature and must be published in the official gazette. DECREE 89 REGARDING THE CREATION OF A SPECIAL PROPERTY DISPUTES RESOLUTION COURT 1382/9/9 (30 November 2003) Article 1: Based on the grave necessity for looking after returned refugees in Afghanistan and addressing their complaints, as well as to hasten the process of resolving property disputes, a Special Property Disputes Resolution Court (the “Court�) shall be created within the framework of Supreme Court on the terms contained herein. Article 2: (1) The Court will consist of two levels (primary and appellate). (2) The Court at the primary level will be divided into two courts, with one focused on cases involving real estate located in Kabul Province and one focused on cases involving real estate located in provinces other than Kabul Province. Both of these courts are located in Kabul. (3) The court focusing on disputes involving real estate in the provinces may, with the permission of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, travel to the provinces to hear certain of these cases in accordance with the provisions of this decree. (4) The Court at the appellate level (the “Mahkamae Nehayee�) may review cases heard at the primary level involving real estate located in either the provinces outside of Kabul Province or within Kabul Province. 94 Article 3: (1) For the purpose of ensuring justice, decisions or judgments of the Court’s appellate level (Mahkamae Nehayee) can be reviewed, according to the provisions of Article 482 of the Civil Procedure Law, published under Official Gazette No. 722, dated 31 Asad 1369. (2) Revising and rehearing of decisions or judgments of the Court’s appellate court shall be based on a proposal of the Supreme Court High Council in accordance with Paragraph (1) of this article and an order of the President to send the decision or judgment to a Revision Committee. Article 4: (1) The Chairman and judges of the Court’s primary and appellate courts shall be appointed on the recommendation of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court chairman and with the approval of the President. (2) The Chairman and judges of the Court’s appellate court, which constitutes three persons, shall be from among the members of the Supreme Court and appointed through President. (3) The Revision Committee consists of three persons from among Supreme Court members who are appointed by the President. Article 5: Property or real estate in this decree includes land, residential areas, apartments, shops, Mendavi (market) and other immovable properties. Article 6: Property disputes covered under this decree include and are limited to those which took place in the absence of the owners from the date 7th Saur 1357 (27 April 1987). Article 7: (1) The Court’s primary court (both for cases in Kabul Province and for cases outside Kabul Province) is obliged to decide on all filed cases within two months from the date of being filed. (2) The Court’s appellate court (Makamae Nehayee) is obliged to decide on all filed cases within one month from the date of being filed with it. (3) The two-month deadline in Paragraph (1) of this article may be extended by up to ten days in special and exceptional situations (i.e., complicated cases). (4) The Revision Committee shall review submitted cases within a one-month period after receiving the President’s verdict regarding such submitted cases. Article 8: Proof of forgery of property documents submitted under this decree, and the annulment thereof, is within the authority of the Court. When property documents submitted under this decree are determined to be forged, for the purpose justice, the matter may be referred to the relevant authorities. 95 Article 9: (1) Possession of property based on forged documents is illegal and the ownership of such property shall belong to the entitled person as based on the final decision of the Court. The cost of producing any new deeds any other related expenditures may be charged to the forger in accordance with the provisions of law. (2) When illegally possessed or occupied property is, based on the final judgment of this Court, returned to its actual owner, compensation from the date of such illegal possession or occupation until the date of this Court’s order for the actual owner to recover such property shall be given from the illegal possessor or occupier to the actual owner. Article 10: Cases of property disputes result from the direct application of natural persons and entities, and such cases may be referred to the Court, through relevant Governmental authorities. Article 11: This Decree is not applicable when one side in the dispute is a government administration. Such cases are reviewed in accordance with relevant laws and with the authority of the relevant court. Article 12: Judgments and decisions of the Court’s appellate court are generally obligatory and enforceable, with both parties and relevant authorities obliged to ensure their implementation. Article 13: The Revision Committee is obliged to timely review claims prescribed under Article Seven hereof and report on the implementation of decisions made to the Office of the President. Article 14: (1) The Ministry of Interior is specifically obliged to implement the final judgments and decisions of the Court, whether at the primary, appellate or highest level. (2) Other relevant Governmental authorities are obliged to implement this Decree and to cooperate with the Court. Article 15: This Decree, from the date of promulgation, is enforceable and should be published in the Official Gazette. From the date of this Decree, the dispute resolution commission referred to in Article Five, Decree No. 136, dated 19/6/1381, published under Official Gazette No. 804 is repealed, and such Decree No. 136 dated 19/6/1381, published under Official Gazette no.804, Decree no.161 dated 30/8/1381 regarding the amendment of Article 2 of such Decree 136, and the decree creating the dispute resolution commission referred to above in this Article, are annulled. 96 PRESIDENTIAL DECREE 112 ON REVISING THE JUDGEMENTS AND RULINGS OF THE SPECIAL PROPERTY COURT 2003 [Date: 3/12/1382] In order for a better approach on evaluating the judgments and rulings of the special property court established by the Decree No. 136 dated 13/6/1382 and to sort out the conflicts of the cases that should have been revised in accordance with article 7 of the decree, the following are to be put in place: Article 1: Pursuant to the presidential order no.482 of Civil Procedure Code and clause 2 of article 3 of presidential decree no. 89 dated 9/9/1382, revising the judgments and rulings of the former Special Property Court after proposal of the Supreme Court, and approval of the President of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, is hereby allowed. Article 2: The High Council of the Supreme Court shall in accordance with law, take action for the petitions and documents of those who have asked for revision. Article 3: This decree shall be enacted from the date of approval and shall be published in official gazette. PRESIDENTIAL ORDER CONCERNING THE SPECIAL LANDS DISPUTES RESOLUTION COURT, R. NO. 4794 9/9/1382 (2003) 1. In order to provide security for the Special Land Disputes Court Judges, the Interior Ministry must provide effective support. 2. In order to better implement their decisions, the Special Land Disputes Court must be assisted with Special Forces. 3. The Supreme Court is compelled to appoint professional and skilled personnel. The Ministry of Finance must be consulted in any matter of financial concern in order to better decide upon a case. 4. The Judicial Commission is charged with responsibility to train the judges of the Special Land Disputes Court. 5. In consultation with the Civil Service Capacity Commission the Ministry of Finance must make the necessary salary and special force services available to the Special Land Disputes Court so as to enable cases to be properly executed and decisions of the Court enforced. 6. This Decree must be acted upon by the relevant Ministries indicated. 97 ANNEX 9: SARANWALI, THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL’S OFFICE IN KABUL PROVINCE 1. Every Province has a branch of the Office of the Attorney-General, a body that is by constitutional law autonomous of both Government (Ministry of Justice) and the courts (Chief Justice). The mandate of the Attorney-General is to protect the rights of the public and ensure that the judicial institutions perform their duties in accordance with the law. Members of the public bring complaints and the Office investigates the case. The Kabul Office (Saranwali Madanee wa Hoqooq Ama –e –Wilayat Kabul) 2. The Kabul office is staffed by one head counselor and nine investigators for this purpose, all of whom are lawyers. Property cases traditionally are among the complaints received by the public but the Head reports that these have risen dramatically since 2001. Most complaints received are investigated by Saranwali following the taking of references for the complainant and confirmation that his/her complaint has substance. Saranwali endeavors to keep as many complaints as possible out of the courts through assisting the disputing parties to come together and agree a solution. These were described as ‘around one third’ of total complaints. 3. Around eighty percent of cases accepted for investigation in the 2003-2004 year (21 March 2003- 20 March 2004) were property-related. Prior to this an unspecified number are resolved in the office simply by bringing disputants together. Some of those which enter the books are eventually forwarded to other institutions to investigate or deal with. Only a quarter are sent to the courts following provision of information collected by Investigators. Only 12 of these 35 cases went to the Special Land Disputes Court, as they either did not involve returnees or involved breech of contractual agreements which the Commercial Court is considered better equipped to handle. Accepted Caseload of the Attorney-General of Kabul Province (Saranwali) 2003-2004 Status of Case No. Percent 1 Cases sent to court 35 25.5 2 Cases referred by other institutions 1 0.7 3 Cases investigated and then forwarded to other Offices to 8 5.8 deal with (Police, Municipality, Justice etc) 4 Cases under investigation 12 8.7 5 Cases for which Saranwali is providing representation for 27 19.7 one party due to his/her absence or death 6 Cases for which Saranwali provides a representative for 54 39.4 enforcement of a decision Total Cases Accepted for Investigation 137 100 Almost all the complaints received and followed up by Saranwali relate to the city rather than the rural districts in the province. Some concern returnees trying to trace the occupants/past occupants of their houses or shops. Others are family law issues centering upon property issues (e.g. in divorce cases). Saranwali investigations include document 98 searches, visiting the properties concerned and finding those who are accused of wrongdoing and witnesses. List of General Statutory Legislation Relevant to Kabul City Under Zahir Shah Administration 1933-1973 • Law for Appropriation of Property for the Public Welfare in Afghanistan, 1314 (1935) • Law of Survey and Taxation of Land (1956) • Law of Municipalities 16 Jadi 1336 (1957) • Land Survey and Statistics Law 31 Jawsa 1344 (1965) • Decree No. 2662 19 Qaws 1347 (1968) Regulations for the Distribution and Selling of the 23 Block Apartments of Nadir Shah Mina. • Decree No. 570 7/3/1349 (1970) Regulations for the Distribution and Selling of Low Income Housing in Khair Khana Mina. Under President Daoud’s Administration 1973-1978 • The Civil Law of the Republic of Afghanistan 1977 • [Articles 1900-2416 relate directly to property] • Law of Acquisition of Khoshal Khan Mina Land Projects Decree No. 463 29/3/1354 (1975) • Decree No. 367 26/3/1355 (1976) Law of Land Development Tax • Decree No. 692 20/5/1355 (1976) Regulations for Organising the Affairs of Accommodation of Residents, Accomplishment of Detailed and Expenditure Plans for 25 year State Projects in Kabul City • Decree No. 718 30/5/1355 (1976) Law of Survey, Settlement and Registration of Lands. • Civil Code of Afghanistan, 1976 (1355) • Statute on the Running and Controlling of the Construction of Nadir Shah Mina. Decree No. 2300, 22 Hoot 1356 (1978). After the “Saur� Revolution 1978-1979 • Law on Compensation and Selling Kabul City’s Detailed project Lands based On the Master Plan of 1357, Gazette Issue No. 3 Serial No. 426, 15 Thawr 1358 (1979) • Issue No. 426 May 5 1979 Concerning Acquisition and Sale of Land • Decree No. 2 on Land of Revolutionary Council in Gazette Issue No.4 Serial No. 427 of 31 Thowr 1358 (1979) 99 Soviet Period 1980-1989 • Issue No. 514 22 August 1982 The Law of Acquisition and Sale of Land • Issue No. 517 7 October 1982 Land Regulation • Decree No. 8 of Revolutionary Council on Land Issues Gazette 550 29.11.1362 (18 February 1984) • Ratification No. 147 Regarding Approval of Regulation on Distribution of Residential Houses, Government Houses and Plots of Land in Kabul City Gazette Issue No. 14, Serial No. 593, 30 Mizan 1364 (1985) • Ratification No. 90 Regarding Adjustment of Some Articles and Appendix of Regulation Concerning Distribution of Government Residential Houses and Land in Kabul City Extraordinary Issue of Gazette, No. 613 22 Asad 1365 (1986) • Decree No. 81 dated 30.2.1366 Regarding Approval of Land Compensation Law, Extraordinary Issue Gazette 10, Serial No. 639 of 10 Saratan 1366 (1987) • Ratification No. 224 dated 19.08.1366 Regarding Adjustment to Article 2 of Regulation on Urban Projects for the 25 Year Plan of Kabul City, Gazette No. 19 Serial No. 656, 15 Jadi 1366 (1987) • Ratification No. 244 dated 26.08.1366 Regarding Regulation on Land Leases Gazette No. 22 Serial No. 659 30 Dalwa 1366 (1987) • Regulation on Land Rents Gazette Issue 659 (1987) • Decree Concerning Return of Properties of Returnees 1366 (1987) • Decree Concerning Remission of Tax on Land, Shops of Individual Merchants, Companies, Rent of the State Owned Shops and Related Fines 1366 (1987) • Law of Land Expropriation 1366 (1987) • Statute of Micrarayans Maintenance Enterprise 1366 (1987) • Decree of Revolutionary Council for Exemptions Relating to Land for Returnees, Gazette Issue 637, 14.3.1366 (4 June 1988) • Decree of Revolutionary Council on the Exemption of Land, Shops, and Other Taxation of Returnees Gazette Issue 632, 25.1.1366 (14 April 1988) • Decree on Distribution of Land to Returnees. Gazette Issue 643, 12.5.1366 (2 August 1988) • Decree No. 237 dated 24.02. 1367 Concerning the Law of Cadastral Survey in Gazette No. 12 Serial No. 674 of 31 Sumbula 1367 (1988) • Decree No. 332 dated 06.04.1367 Regarding Law on Land Taxation, Gazette 14/676, 29 Mizan 1367 (1988) • Law Relating to the Organization of Land Relations 1366 (1988) • Regulation of Land Leases 1366 (1988) 100 • Decree No. 241 of 1/3/1367 Concerning Procedures for Selling Micrarayan Apartments of Shahrara and Parwan (1988) • Decree No. 332 Concerning Law of Tax on Land 1367 (1988) • Decree No. 333 Concerning Tax Exemptions of Private Individuals and Institutions in Kandahar Province 1367 (1988) Najibullah Period 1989-1992 • Decree on Selling of Apartments. Gazette 668, 31.3 1367 (21 June 1989) • Regulation on the Procedure for Distribution and Sale of State Residential Apartments and Land Plots in Kabul City 1368 (1989) Gazette No. 355 • Law Prohibiting Hoarding 1368 (1989) Decree No. 1438? • Civil Procedure Code, 22/10/1990. Gazette 722. • Decree No. 789 Concerning the Return of Houses and Residential Apartments and Land Plots in Kabul City 1369 (1990) • Regulation of Applying the Master Plan of Kabul City 1369 (1990) • Decree on the Return of Properties of the Returnees, Which are Under the Control of Government, Gazette Issue 715, 15.2.1369 (5 May 1991) • Decree to Return Houses, Apartments, which are Under the Control of Government to the Owners, Gazette Issue 725, 1.7.1369 (23 October 1991) • Law of Municipalities 1369 (1991) • Decree No. 519 of Amendment, Addition and Repeal of Articles in the Municipalities Law 1370 (1991) Mujahiddin & Rabbani Period 1992-1996 • Decree No. 98 Concerning Prevention of Sale of Stolen Properties 1373 (1994) • Decree on Prevention of Possession of Others’ Property without Any Reason. Gazette 767, 31.5.1372 (22 August 1993) • Land Law Gazette Issue 769 • Decree on Cancellation of Law for Arranging Land Relations Gazette Issue 771, 15.8.1373 (6 November 1994 • Law on Property Dealers 1374 (1995) • Taliban Period 1996 – 2001 • Edict on State Lands Gazette 783 dated 1.1.1376 (21 March 1997) • Edict No. 108 dated 19.05.1419 In Respect of Non-Intervention in Survey and Cadastral Maps in Extraordinary Issue as above (1420) 101 • Edict No. 20 dated 15.06.1420 Regarding Canceling Individual Plans on Government Properties and Avoiding the Destruction of Public Properties and Assets in Extraordinary Issue of Gazette as above (1420) (1999) • Edict No. 21 dated 05.06.1420 Regarding the Properties that have been Surveyed but not Yet Settled, in Extraordinary Issue of Gazette as above (1420) (1999) • Amendment to Law on Property Dealers, 1376 (1997) • Decree No. 577 Re Amendment of Article 6 (1) of the Rent and Podiums Law, 1376 (1997) • Decree No. 37 About Amendment and Addition to Article 6 of the Law of Property Dealers 1376 (1997) • Law of Considering Applications 1378 (1999) • Decree Concerning Exemption of Tax on Government land and Exemption of Rent on Government lCars for those Summoned for Military Service 1378 (1999) • Decree About Properties, 1378 (1999) • Decree About Empty Plots and Properties and Preventing the Loss of Public Property 1378 (1999) • Decree About Properties that have been Surveyed but Not Clarified 1378 (1999) • Law on Municipalities, Gazette 794, 25/06/1421 HQ (2000) • City Service Tax Law, Gazette 794 • Law on Shelter, 1999 Gazette 794 • Law on Rents, 1999 Gazette 794 • Law on Maintenance, Gazette 794 • Law on Master Plan Implementation, Gazette 794 • Land Acquisition Law, Gazette 794 • Regulation for the Survey of Land for Housing, Factories in Kabul City, Gazette 794 • Regulation of for the Distribution and Selling of Government Apartments in Gazette Issue 798 (2001) Karzai Period 2001 -2005 • Decree No. 297 on The Dignified Return of Refugees of 13.03.1380 (2001) Decree No. 66 of January 26 2002 Abolishing All Decrees and Legal Documents Issued and Enacted before December 20 200124 24 A misleading title; no laws were abolished by this decree; each existing law has to be scrutinized and determination made to repeal or amend the standing law. 102 • Decree No. 99 dated 4.2.1381 (2002) On Prohibition on Distribution of Government Unutilized and Intact Lands. Gazette No. 802. • Presidential Order No. 830 of 11/2/1381 (2002) on non-allocation of Government lands Contrary to the Master Plan. Gazette No. 802. • Decree of Interim Administration on the Establishment of an Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, 6 June 2002. • Decree on Domestic and Foreign Private Investment in Afghanistan No. 134 in Gazette No. 803 2002, 2 Sumbula 1381 (2002) • Decree No. 136 On Establishment of a Special Property Claims Court, 13.6.1381 (2002). Gazette 805. • Decree No. 161 of 30/8/1381 (2002) Amendment to Article 2 of Decree No. 136 of 13/6/1381 (2002) on Establishment of a Special Property Claims Court. • Decree 17 Regarding the Return of Immovable Properties to the Ministry of Defence 30/2/1382 (20 May 2003) • Decree No. 83 of 18/8/1382 (2003) With Regard to Properties (Amlak) Gazette 816. • Decree No. 362 Regarding the Illegal Occupation of Government Property, 19/1/1382 (8 April 2003). • Decree for Transfer of Government Property 8/1382 (2003). Unclear if gazetted. • Decree No. 89 of 9/9/1382 (29 January 2004) On The Special Property Court, Gazette 817. • Directive No. 4794 of 9/9/1382 on The Special Land Disputes Court and its Support (29 January 2004) • Decree 3860 of the Head of the Transitional Government Regarding the High Commission for City Development. 16 September 2003 (Gazette date unknown). • Decree No. 115 of 4/12/1382 (2003) on the Law for Interim Procedures for Courts in Afghanistan. Gazette 820. • Decree 112 of 3/12/1382 (2003) on Revising Judgements and Decisions of the Special Property Court. Gazette 823. • The Constitution of Afghanistan, 1382. • Decree on Formation of Provisional Supreme Court, January 2005. • Decree on the Adoption of Electoral Law, No. 28 of 27/05/2004 • Decree of Hamid Karzai the President of TISA on Identification of Grabbed State Land in Deh Sabz Wuloswali of Kabul Province and Registering to Urban Project for Distribution to Homeless People (12/7/2004 in Council of Ministers Meeting No. 21) Relevant decrees in draft or under consideration by Ministry of Justice • Proposed Peace Councils Law, 16/12/2004 • Amendment to the Civil Procedures Code 1990 • Customary Deeds Law 103 ANNEX 10 CASE STUDY: PROPERTY MATTERS IN SIAH SANG GOZAR Siah Sang in District 8 (Zone 1, Section B) provides an interesting case of different tenure situations and conflict scenarios. Siah Sang comprises three zones, extending from a main trunk road, lined with shops, and stretching upwards to nearly the summit of Marajan Hill. In the past Marajan was well guarded against intruders given that it contained an underground armoury (the status of which today is unclear but presumably still existing). Zone 1: Old Siah Sang The origins of Siah Sang are as a roadside residential area of many poorer Government land Army officers during the 1960s. Although the owners built their houses without permission, their status meant that their occupancy was accepted at the time of municipal upgrading of an adjacent area. They received water, drainage and electricity. Their plots were recorded and each owner was issued with an ownership document (‘title deed’). The settlement comprises three fairly orderly rows of houses from the road-front and is inhabited today by some 50 households. Many of the owners also own shops along the main road. Sales of properties in Old Siah Sang are rare (the Wakil-e-Gozar could remember only two sales in his 16 years as Wakil), with many current owners being the sons of the original title holders. The main transaction has been subdivision at inheritance, usually accomplished customarily with the Wakil-e-Gozar (or previously, his father) as the final certifier/witness. Only a few owners get this change endorsed by the Court. Disputes over ownership are few, all related to intra-family disputes as to shares in the house or inheritance. The Wakil-e-Gozar was adamant that not a single case has ever gone to the Court. Although many in the neighbourhood fled during the Soviet Occupation or later, those who remained looked after their neighbors’ houses, and not a single case of wrongful occupancy resulted. Zone 2: New Siah Sang Above the road-front settlement are a further 26 rows of houses, with some 420 households. This occupation took place during the Najibullah regime (1989-1992). Settlement was not organized and houses were built in a random manner by individuals. None of the house owners hold court-recognized or Government l/ Municipality issued acknowledgement of ownership, given the continued status of the land as belonging to Government. The community is considered part of the neighborhood, participates in the appointment of the Wakil-e-Gozar and shares in social obligations. Some inter-relations among the households of the two communities exist. Disputes relating to property are common but stem not from contested ownership so much as contested control over space, as a result of the poor planning of the 26 rows. New arrivals tended to help themselves to land, occupy an expanding space around them, until a new arrival and leave no room for access further up the hill. Disputes about access have resulted. There have also been disputes over the breaking of the Sharia rule that no house may overlook the yard of another (to afford women privacy). Problems with waste 104 flowing down the hill from one house into another have also occurred, and accidents occur annually in the winter due to water being carried uphill freezing on the steep paths. This causes anger and conflict. Boundary disputes also occur, particularly with the construction of walls, with many families elbowing for maximum space and sometimes blocking access to higher properties. The Wakil-e-Gozar is frequently called to mediate these conflicts and claims to generally succeed. He believes this is mainly due to the fact that none of the owners possess legal documentation for their plots and he could engineer their eviction. No owners take their disputes to Court, due to the illegality of their residence, and costs. Despite this insecurity, transactions routinely occur and houses are sold at prices which are only lower than those for secure roadside houses because of the lack of water, electricity and clean access. The Wakil-e-Gozar refuses to witness sales due to the lack of legal tenure. Local elders and neighbors provide this service. Customary documents have accumulated. Particularly in the earlier years when construction was going on (from around 1989), Municipal officials and Police threatened occupants with eviction “but usually went away happy with 20 Rupees�. No serious evictions have ever been attempted and the residents believe that in due course their occupancy will be regularized and upgrading services provided. Most of the houses are now ten or more years old. Zone 3: Karte Panjsher This zone comprises some 200 households and who have constructed houses above Zone 2 since 2002. Well connected individuals enjoying political support appropriated the area by force during 2002 and proceeded to offer one beswa plots for sale, starting at $2,000. No documents were issued and allegedly receipts for payment often not received. Allocation was entirely unplanned, plots being marked out randomly on the ground. Some houses were built directly for the purpose of sale. Some are very large and despite being high on the hill, un-serviced and without legal documentation, fetched very high prices up until the end of 2004. One house high on the hill still sold for 35 lakh new Afghanis ($70,000). In contrast a Zone 2 house sells from around 3.5 lakh new Afghanis ($7,000), reduced due to lack of services. Roadside houses with services could sell for 18 lakh new Afghanis ($36,000) but sales are infrequent. Documentation is a factor in the price but on balance, the Wakil- e-Gozar (who also runs a rental agency and whose son is a registered property dealer in another part of town) considers that prices are determined more by the size of the house, its materials and whether it has access to water or not, than to tenure documentation. Renting is very important in the area today with rents rising monthly. This differs sharply from the Taliban years where owners “had to pay to get someone to live in their houses to look after them if they were absent�. 105