Administration of Crown Leases under scrutiny
After scrutinizing the Auditor Generals 2006 report on the Economic Services Sector, the Committee stated that while there were several anomalies within the Department of Lands and Surveys, the worst breaches were those recorded by residential Crown Land Lessees who openly flouted the laxity in the system and failed to obtain approval of the Director Lands on development on the property.
The Committee notes that Crown lease holders were sub-letting the land, varying the use of the residential lease for commercial and industrial lease, constructing additional buildings and extensions, encroaching on the government road reserves illegally and refusing to pay the re-assessed rates amongst others.
In its report, the Committee said the very low rent was charged on Crown leases ranging from 10 cents to $10 per year, mainly for educational and religious purposes which had not been adjusted and reviewed to meet the current market rates.
The Committee said the Department was not aware of the breaches of lease conditions by the lessee's because of the poor monitoring and control system due to shortage of resources and personnel.
It is also noted that there was variance in records of Crown Leases maintained by the department through the two systems in use which showed that the Land System recorded 20,252 leases and the Land Administration System recorded 16,155 leases, leaving a variance of 4,097 leases.
The Public Accounts Committee stated that the inconsistent and selective approach adopted by the Department when dealing with lessees strongly suggested collusion between the director of Lands and the lease holders.
The Committee said the approval of mortgages by the Director of lands was done without the mandatory re-assessment of the lands concerned and that this caused substantial loss of revenue for the government.
Related Stories
We are committed to holding elections – Siromi Turaga
Questions were raised during Dialogue Fiji’s Constitution review discussion on whether the government can delay the general elections and complete the Constitution review however Acting Attorney General Siromi Turaga
Fijian economy on track to grow for fourth consecutive year in 2025 by 3.4%
The Fijian economy is on track to grow for the fourth consecutive year in 2025 by 3.4 percent, following a 3.5 percent expansion in 2024. The growth forecast is revised up marginally from the 3.2 percent projected
Heavy Rain Alert for Eastern Viti Levu, Southern Bua, Cakaudrove, Taveuni and maritime areas
A heavy rain alert is now in force for the eastern half of Viti Levu (Navua–Suva–Nausori to Serua–Namosi to Tailevu–Naitasiri–Ra areas), southern Bua, Cakaudrove, Taveuni and nearby smaller islands, the Lau an
We need to dismantle criminal enterprises, hitting them where it hurts most - Speaker
Speaker of Parliament, Filimone Jitoko has highlighted during the opening of the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions Conference that there is a need for prosecutors in the country to master the digital frontie
Fiji has learned from its past and we know that restricting media engagement or access is not the answer - Tabuya
At all times, the public interest in accessing information and the media’s role in scrutinising government must outweigh any unilateral power to silence or sideline a news outlet. In Fiji, we uphold the principle that
Wailea resident raises concerns about drug issues raised countless times with Police while COMPOL says official complaint must be lodged
Wailea Settlement Community leader, Inoke Utona says he has raised the issue of drug use and dealing in their area countless times with the authorities but there has still been no response from Police. However when