Land Title Bottlenecks To Be Addressed This Year – Bawumia

Government will this year begin the process of streamlining the process of land acquisition, valuation and records consolidation as part of the process of moving Ghana beyond aid, the Vice President of the Republic, H.E. Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has announced.

Among other intended measures, plans are far advanced to begin the process of digitizing all land records in the country, a major intervention designed to reduce the turnaround time for land registration and eliminate, while a land reform conference bringing together all stakeholders in the land acquisition and management sector is slated for the end of February 2018.

The Vice President announced these when he paid a surprise familiarization visit to the offices of the Land Registration Division of the Lands Commission in Accra on Tuesday 13th February 2018, ahead of the Conference slated for February 28, to familiarize himself with their operations and discuss their challenges.

“Ghana will not be able to move beyond aid if we don’t tackle the issue of land title. There is so much land for which people cannot even extract any equity out of it because there is no proper title to it. That cannot and must not continue”, Dr Bawumia underscored.

“We have been living with this problem in Ghana for years but we are not changing it. It is time for us to change the system. We cannot accept the status quo, and the directions of the President are clear: we have to bring change to this whole process of the acquisition of land.

“In many countries land is key in the development of the country (but) in Ghana land is not part of the process in many cases, and that does not allow the development of the mortgage market. So we have come here to familiarize ourselves with the processes, and to discuss some of their challenges.”

Dr Bawumia expressed particular worry at the conditions at the records department of the Land Title Division, and the seemingly disorganized manner of the land management process.

“It is a very scary situation because there's not enough space there for them to keep the records, and you don't have these records in digital form so even finding somebody’s file can take you more than a month. Sometimes some of the files - because of misfiling - cannot be found and they will tell you your file has not been found. So we have to change the process and this is why we are taking this whole issue of digitalizing our land documents in Ghana very seriously.