Police Engage as Indian Creek Dispute Escalates

A years-long dispute over land tenure and community leadership in Belize’s Indian Creek has boiled over into open confrontation, pushing government officials to deploy police to the area to de-escalate rising unrest marked by property damage and targeted intimidation. The conflict has split the tight-knit community into two deeply divided camps: one faction backs the traditional local alcalde system, which advocates for Maya customary land rights aligned with longstanding Indigenous tenure practices, while the other supports the elected village council, which pushes for individual, nationally recognized land titles identical to those held by landowners across the rest of the country.

Dr. Louis Zabaneh, Belize’s Minister of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs, confirmed that law enforcement has been on the ground responding to the unrest since tensions first flared into violence. Recent incidents have included trespassing and vandalism at the private property of the village council chairman, as well as tampering with a field station operated by the Ya’axché Conservation Trust, a leading local environmental and land rights organization. The conflict has been simmering for decades, but recent escalations have raised alarms across national and regional stakeholders.

Minister Zabaneh emphasized that community leaders from both factions had committed to peaceful negotiation just weeks before the outbreak of violence. Just two months prior, he had held a productive meeting with representatives from both sides, and just two weeks before the confrontation, another senior cabinet minister had brokered a second agreement to resolve differences through dialogue rather than confrontation. He has now issued an urgent appeal to all residents to honor these earlier commitments, warning that years of structured negotiation could be undermined by violent retaliation that would only deepen divides and harm community members.

Zabaneh also stressed that a formal institutional process already exists to address the core land rights dispute, tied to a consent order from the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) that outlines a path to formalize Indigenous land claims across Belize.

Beyond the community’s internal divisions, new controversy has emerged over the unauthorized issuance of hundreds of land certificates, a move that has thrown national efforts to formalize Maya land rights into chaos. According to analysis from the Ya’axché Conservation Trust, local alcalde leadership has already issued 280 individual land certificates to community members, far more than the number initially reported to government officials.

Christina Garcia, executive director of Ya’axché Conservation Trust, explained that the issuance of these certificates directly clashes with ongoing national negotiations between the Government of Belize and the Maya Leaders Alliance over a formal Maya Land Tenure Policy and accompanying land rights legislation. While these policy and legal frameworks, which outline a structured, agreed-upon process for recognizing and registering collective and individual Maya land rights, have not yet been finalized or approved by all parties, the unilateral action by the alcalde has pre-empted this national process.

Garcia noted that the lack of clear, agreed-upon procedural guidance has sparked widespread confusion and frustration, extending beyond Indian Creek to affect private landowners and leaseholders across the Toledo District. Despite the escalation, she reaffirmed her organization’s commitment to dialogue, stating that Ya’axché stands ready to resume joint negotiations with Indian Creek community leaders, government representatives, and other stakeholders to craft a lasting solution that aligns with national policy and legislation and benefits all parties involved.

The situation has drawn urgent criticism from regional landowner associations, who are calling for additional security deployment to stem rising violence. Toledo Private and Lease Landowners Limited has sent an official letter to Minister Zabaneh demanding the immediate deployment of additional security forces to the area. The association’s letter documents escalating volatile activity, including organized mob action, targeted attacks on private homes, and direct threats against both community leaders and Ya’axché field station staff. Tensions have been further amplified in recent days following the unexplained disappearance of the alcalde who led the certificate issuance effort.

This report is a transcript of an evening television newscast, with all Kriol-language remarks transcribed using a standard spelling system for accessibility.