Issuance of Occupancy Certificates for Residents of Informal Settlements in Kabul and official launch of City for All

25 December 2018, Kabul. The Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan continued to distribute land occupancy certificates (OCs) to residents of urban informal settlements in Kabul city. On 25th December 2018, 1000 households received occupancy certificates by H.E President Muhammad Ashraf Ghani during a ceremony at the 5th National Urban Conference in Kabul.

This initiative is part of the City for All (CFA) programme, a government-led programme supported by UN-Habitat. The CFA programme is currently supporting twelve municipalities to survey and register all properties within their municipal boundaries. So far, CFA has surveyed and registered 553,728 urban properties. Preliminary findings indicate that only 14% of the surveyed properties in Kabul (and 17% in other provincial cities) are in possession of a formal title deed. The aim of the CFA programme is to survey and register 1 million properties by 2020.

” Legal property is a right. Each Afghan woman and man must have legal possession of their property”, President Ashraf Ghani said during the ceremony.

With a growing urban population, a significant amount of internally displaced people and returning refugees, the role of Afghan cities as catalyzers of economic and social development is crucial. For urban citizens residing in informal settlements, the issuance of occupancy certificates guarantees the right to stay in their homes without a threat of eviction. The formal registration of hitherto informal properties also encourages economic investment, increases property value and promotes economies of agglomeration. The de facto recognition of the contribution of well-planned, regulated and financed urbanization to the prosperity and sustainable development of nations, especially in developing countries, is one of the major novelties enshrined in the United Nations’ New Urban Agenda.

With financial support from USAID and the EU, and technical assistance from UN-Habitat, the Ministry of Urban Development and Land has opened a new chapter of land reform in Afghanistan by guaranteeing security of tenure to all urban dwellers including women. A newly adopted land regulation calls for occupancy certificates to be issued jointly to heads of households and their spouses for all properties on state owned land. This gender empowerment measure is unprecedented in the history of Afghanistan. At UN-Habitat, we congratulate the Government of Afghanistan for its commitment to sustainable urban development and inclusive, safe and resilient cities for all.

For more information, contact Mr. Koussay Boulaich UN-Habitat Head of communication in Afghanistan

koussay.boulaich@un.org