Bangladesh govt prods local investors to farm cotton, food in Africa
    The move comes after two fact-finding missions led by the foreign secretary last year found farming in the so-called dark continent "exceedingly lucrative" for Bangladeshi investors.
    • Financial Express
    • 30 Mar 2011
    Accaparement des terres arables : La Côte d'Ivoire menacée, selon la CIBIOV
    Même si l’ampleur des dégâts n’atteint pas encore celle des 28 Etats africains déjà durement frappés par l’accaparement des terres, il n’en demeure pas moins qu’en Côte d’ivoire, le phénomène existe.
    • FratMat
    • 05 May 2010
    Ivory Coast land tensions fester ahead of polls
    The question of land ownership in Africa has become more pertinent as foreign investors tap a global need for food and energy security by investing in land and agricultural or biofuel projects in the developing world.
    • Reuters
    • 09 October 2008
    Hebei's farmers discover fertile opportunities in a distant land
    "Initially we asked the Africans how much they wanted in rent. They said it's free, just share the food with us. We made a deal that we only pay $1 per year per acre in rent. At the start we didn't promote the idea because we didn't want people to say we were grabbing land."
    • Irish Times
    • 27 August 2008
    Chinese workers seek fortunes in Africa
    Liu Jianjun, a former Chinese government official who runs the Baoding-Africa business council, has contracts to farm 10,000 acres in Uganda, to build a cornflour processing factory in Kenya and for a farm project in the Ivory Coast.
    • The Telegraph
    • 17 February 2008
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