Oxfam Accuses Cargill of Violating Land Laws


Flickr CC via Ruin Raiders
Agribusiness giant Cargill has been buying large tracts of land in Colombia under multiple company names in order to skirt a law that would prevent a single entity from owning too much land.  Colombia has passed reform laws for agriculture that will support small farmers by limiting plot sizes by companies or individuals.  From 2010 to 2012, Cargill has purchased about 13,000 acres of land in the Altillanura plains.  Each purchase was nearly exactly the legal limit, and all owners are registered with the same address and agricultural purpose.

Oxfam says Cargill has amassed an amount more than 30 times the legally allowed space, and believes the company intends on farming the land as a single working operation.  While Cargill is not the only company engaging in this practice, it is the largest and most well known.

In Colombia, 14% of landowners have 80% of available land.  The government is trying to reform land laws that would provide access to new landowners.  Fights over land ownership were one of the catalysts for a bloody, decades-long rebellion in the country.  The government is currently negotiating further reforms with the guerilla group in Cuba.

Colombia Farm/ Photo via World Bank
Carlos Urrutia, a senior partner at Brigard and Urrutia law firm, is linked to the land purchasing.  Urrutia was a Colombian ambassador to the United States when the rumors about the corrupt practice began circulating.  The law firm facilitated all of Cargill’s land purchases.  Urrutia resigned in June.

Oxfam says that purchasing land beyond legal limits undermines efforts to combat social inequality in a country that is finally finding stability after fifty years of conflict.  A spokesperson from Cargill disagrees with Oxfam’s interpretation of the law.

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