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156x Tipe PPT Ukuran file 0.43 MB Source: web.worldbank.org
Georgia’s Laws and Regulations on Land Acquisition and Resettlement The Constitution of Georgia, August 24, 1995 The Civil Code of Georgia, June 26, 1997 The Civil Procedural Code of Georgia, November 14, 1997 The Law of Georgia on Ownership Rights to Agricultural Land, March 22, 1996 The Law of Georgia on the Rules for Expropriation of Ownership for Necessary Public Need, July 23, 1999 The Law of Georgia on Privatization of State-owned Agricultural Land, July 8, 2005 The Law of Georgia on Recognition of the Property Ownership Rights Regarding the Land Plots Owned (Used) by Physical Persons or Legal entities; 2007 The Law of Georgia on Protection of Cultural Heritage, 2007 The Law of Georgia on Public Register; December 19 of 2008; The Law of Georgia on Notary Actions, December 4, 2009 National legislation envisages the following mechanisms for land acquisition: Obtaining the right of way without expropriation through the payment of due compensation (on the basis of a willing buyer-willing seller agreement or a court decision by which an amount of compensation is set) prior to commencement of the activities. Expropriation which allows obtaining permanent right to land and/or other real estate property on the basis of Eminent Domain Law* or a court decision through the payment of due compensation. * Attempts should first be made to acquire private land on the basis of negotiation with individual affected entities. Should the negotiation fail, the power of eminent domain will be sought, and expropriation process will start. Main provisions of Georgia’s laws and regulations on LAR The national Laws provide that compensation for lost assets, including land, buildings, trees and standing crops, should be based on the current market price without tax and depreciation. Overall the national laws/regulations provide that the principle of replacement cost compensation at market value is reasonable and legally acceptable. The national laws categorize the damages eligible to compensation and indicate that both for loss of physical assets and loss of incomes are subject to compensation. National laws provide for income loss due to loss of harvest and business closure to be compensated to cover net loss. National laws contain provisions for consultation and prior notification to ensure that the affected persons participate in the process. WB’s Policy on Involuntary Resettlement The three important elements 1.Compensation to replace lost assets, livelihood and income regardless of the legality of land tenure. 2. Assistance for relocation, including provision of relocation sites with appropriate facilities and services. 3. Assistance for rehabilitation to achieve at least the same level of well-being with the project as without it. Gaps between national legislation and WB policies Georgia Laws and WB OP 4.12 Regulations Land compensation only for titled Lack of title is not a bar to landowners. Legalizable land compensation and/or rehabilitation. owners are compensated only upon Non-titled landowners receive registration of the titles assistance in livelihoods restoration. Only registered houses/structures All affected houses/structures are are compensated for damages/ compensated for damages/ demolition caused by a project demolition caused by a project Only registered landowners are Landowners and sharecrop/lease compensated for crop losses tenants whether registered or not are compensated for crop losses No specific provisions for the Time bound implementable process of resettlement planning Resettlement Action Plan needs to and its specific tools including be prepared, disclosed and duly preparation of any plan related to implemented before the project land acquisition and resettlement works start
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