| EkChhin
:
MS-Nepal Newsletter
2004 Issue
1 |
|
What
is a NGO?
“I am so sad. This is so unjust”. With tears in his eyes Lalji
Murau starts telling the story of his misfortune. How his land
lord has cheated him and his family, and how the Nepalese court
system has let him down.
In 2013 B.S. Lalji Muraus family was working in 5 bigha (amount of
land) in Baidali VDC, Kapilvastu. Both his father and grandfather
used to work on this land before he was born. After the land
reforms in 2021 B.S. his family was entitled to have Ukhada land.
But even though his father paid government tax he never got proof
of the legal right to the 5 bigha land.
At some point the land lord told Lalji Murau that he was ‘Mohi’(tenant),
which is another type of category in the many land right cases in
Nepal. By labeling him as a ‘Mohi’, the land lord implicated that
he could have half of the land according to the law. But only this
was not true since Lalji’s father and grandfather paid taxes and
thereby were in the category of ‘Ukhada’. It seems the land lord
deliberately changed the facts in order to maintain some of his
land despite the law telling him to give it all to Lalji Murau. So
the landlord split the land in two parts and later he split the
land belonging to Lalji Murau in two parts again. Today he works
in only 1 bigha and 9 katthas of land which is not in his own
name.
In 2041 B.S. Lalji Murau started to find out his legal rights.
Some neighbours made him aware that he was not ‘Mohi’. His
grandfather had paid taxes so his case was an ‘Ukhada’ case. This
new information made Lalji Murau visit the land office in
Taulihawa on a regular basis. And since the visits did not result
in any changes, he decided to take things in his own hand. He sold
his two buffalos and from the 10,000 rupees profit he paid the
government office to make him a paper saying he was ‘Ukhada’.
At the district court he won his case in 2051-52 B.S. But the land
lord took the case to high court where Lalji Murau lost his
strenuously obtained right to land. The farmer knows the reason
why: “The land lord bribed the authority 50,000 rupees in order to
not give me my land.”
Still Lalji Murau is confident that right will be right. The fact
that KSSC has taken up the struggle for the Ukhada victims has
given new hope to Lalji and the 16 members of his family: “This is
like a rescue. Bringing it to district and governmental level will
help us and if I will have my land in my name it will be like
being born again. I will die for this land.”
Lalji Murau who is a Nepali citizen has given his application to
the Ukhada office at KSSC and his case is now in progress. The
farmer was not in contact with KSSC before. As a matter of fact he
has never heard the term ‘NGO’s and has not been in contact with
any other social organisation before.
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