- Government draws permanent line at June 9, 2026 for new squatters.
- Future occupiers of Crown land will be barred from all settlement programmes.
- Sellers of Crown land will face prosecution; buyers will lose their money.
- Drone and spatial surveys have mapped all illegal Crown land occupation.
- A new structured programme for landless Jamaicans is forthcoming.
- SCJ Holdings names ringleaders in illegal sugar land sales across four parishes.
Jamaicans who move onto Crown land after June 9, 2026 will be permanently excluded from any government settlement programme, Minister of Economic Growth and Job Creation Robert Montague announced in Parliament during his contribution to the Sectoral Debate. The declaration marks one of the clearest lines any Jamaican minister has drawn on the decades-old problem of informal land occupation on state property.
“If you’re there already yuh there already,” Montague said, according to reporting by the Jamaica Gleaner, “but we not dealing with the new people.” The minister’s remarks were directed at a growing practice in which private individuals — including community figures and even elected representatives — have been facilitating the informal sale of government land to which they have no legal claim.
What Changed on June 9
Prior to this announcement, the government’s position on Crown land occupation had, in practice, left open the possibility of eventual settlement for long-standing squatters. That pathway has now been explicitly shut for anyone who moves onto state land after the stated date. The Ministry of Economic Growth and Infrastructure Development (MEGID) confirmed the policy shift, framing it as part of a broader effort to stop the cycle in which illegal occupation is eventually rewarded with formalisation. The government said it is not acting blind: drone surveys and spatial mapping have given the state a detailed picture of what exists on Crown lands across Jamaica.
The Scam Behind the Squatting
What makes this moment distinct from ordinary squatting concerns is the organised fraud element. Montague was explicit: people are not just occupying Crown land informally — they are illegally subdividing it and selling it to buyers who hand over real money for property no one has any right to transfer. “No MP, Councillor, JP, big man nor area leader can sell government lands,” the minister said, according to the Jamaica Observer. The government stated that sellers will be prosecuted and buyers will lose their money.
SCJ Holdings and the Sugar Lands Problem
The same week Montague spoke, SCJ Holdings Limited — the state entity managing Jamaica’s former sugar estates — announced it had identified ringleaders behind the illegal occupation and unauthorised sale of government-owned former sugar lands in St Thomas, Trelawny, Westmoreland, and Clarendon. SCJ Holdings Managing Director Nigel Myrie confirmed cease-and-desist orders, notices to vacate, and no-trespassing signs had been issued. Demolition of illegal structures is also on the table, according to the Jamaica Observer.
Who Is Being Hurt
The people most directly harmed by this activity are those who pay. Working-class and lower-income Jamaicans — including returnees from abroad and diaspora families — are among those documented to have paid informal “sellers” for land parcels on former sugar estates and Crown land. They have sometimes built homes, improved the land, and organised their families around what they believed was a legitimate purchase. When enforcement arrives, it is they who face eviction, not the individuals who pocketed the money.
What Property Buyers Must Do
Any land transaction in Jamaica requires a clean registered title. Before paying a deposit, buyers should search the title at the National Land Agency to confirm ownership, verify the seller is the registered owner or holds a registered power of attorney, use a licensed attorney-at-law for due diligence, and treat any informal sale of land without a registered title as unenforceable. Crown land cannot be purchased from any private individual — a government-registered parcel cannot be sold by a community figure, local representative, or self-appointed intermediary.
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