A growing conflict over public land governance has emerged in Grenada after national authorities issued urgent 7-day eviction notices to dozens of residents living illegally on unapproved Crown land in the Gwankai district of South St George. The enforcement action, which marks a sharp shift in the government’s approach to longstanding squatter issues, has upended the lives of long-term occupants, many of whom have built homes and put down roots on the land over the course of years or even decades.
Many affected residents say they believed they were following proper legal protocols to secure formal ownership of their properties, leaving them blindsided by the sudden eviction orders. One long-term occupant, who has resided on his plot for nearly 10 years and constructed a permanent concrete home there, told reporters he submitted a formal ownership application in 2022 but never received any feedback on his request prior to the April 7 eviction notice granting just one week to leave. Another resident echoed that frustration, noting that repeated trips to the national Ministry of Agriculture and Lands yielded no clear updates on the status of her land application before enforcement began.
The dispute has pulled back the curtain on a long-simmering tension between widespread informal land occupation across the country and the state’s formal legal authority over public Crown lands. It has also prompted fresh scrutiny of the government’s backlog of unprocessed land applications and the lack of transparent communication with applicants before punitive action is taken.
In an official public address on land policy released Thursday, Javan Williams, Permanent Secretary for the Ministry of Agriculture and Lands, made clear that the government is pursuing a new, stricter course of enforcement aligned with existing legal frameworks. Williams warned residents to adjust their expectations around access to Crown land, emphasizing that the ministry is committed to managing all public property in strict adherence to national law. He noted that while many people submit legitimate applications for Crown land allotment, a growing number of individuals have simply moved onto and occupied government property without any formal approval, reminding the public that squatting remains a criminal offense under Grenadian law.
Williams referenced the Prevention of Squatting on Crown Lands Rules, Statutory Rule and Order (SRO) 5 of 2007, which lays out the official protocols for serving eviction notices to illegal occupants. Per the regulations, eviction notices must be delivered to squatters in person whenever possible; if occupants cannot be located or served within 48 hours of the notice being issued, authorities are permitted to post the notice in a clearly visible location on the occupied land or any structure built on the site.
Williams confirmed that enforcement teams conduct formal investigations into suspected squatting cases before any notices are issued, but acknowledged that noncompliance with eviction orders has become an increasingly challenging issue. He added that some occupants have gone so far as to remove posted eviction notices to avoid compliance, and issued a formal warning against both the removal of official notices and the construction of unapproved structures on public Crown land.
The permanent secretary also outlined the legal penalties residents face if they ignore eviction orders. Under the current law, any squatter who fails to comply with a properly served eviction notice commits a criminal offense, punishable by a fine of up to 1,000 Eastern Caribbean dollars (EC$) or a jail sentence of up to three months upon summary conviction.
According to Williams, this expanded enforcement push is part of a broader government policy shift aimed at addressing a decades-long, complex problem of widespread illegal squatting. For years, he explained, many people have deliberately occupied public or privately held land, operating under the assumption that they will eventually be granted amnesty or formal approval. “We want to advise persons, let us all follow the law because we now are seriously invoking the eviction section of the SRO 5, 2007,” Williams stated.
Williams acknowledged that some Gwankai residents have submitted formal applications for land allotment, but stressed that submitting an application does not grant automatic right to occupy the land. Under Grenadian law, after an application is received, a formal land survey must be completed and the request must be reviewed and approved by the national Cabinet. Only after a written authorization is issued following Cabinet approval does an individual gain legal right to use the Crown land. Any occupation prior to that formal approval, Williams emphasized, is considered illegal squatting.
“Under the law, the Cabinet is the sole authority to direct an allotment. So, if you are not allotted a piece of Crown land, then you are deemed a squatter,” Williams added.
The unfolding situation in Gwankai is already emerging as a critical early test of the Grenadian government’s commitment to bringing formal order to Crown land management across the country, and of how communities with longstanding informal settlements will respond to the new stricter enforcement regime. For the residents facing eviction, the conflict is far more than a policy debate: it is a fight to keep their homes, their livelihoods, and the years of financial and personal investment they have put into their properties. For the government, by contrast, the priority is upholding the rule of law and reasserting formal control over public land, amid longstanding public concerns about unregulated squatting and inefficiencies in the formal land allocation process.
The outcome of the Gwankai dispute is expected to set a major precedent for how similar informal occupation cases will be handled across Grenada in the coming years, particularly in communities where informal settlement has outpaced formal land approval for decades.