Top Abraaj executives arrested on US fraud charges
    Founder and CEO of the firm that was active in the rush to buy global farmland on the heels of the 2008 financial crisis has been arrested for defrauding investors, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
    • Reuters
    • 11 April 2019
    Behind the spectacular fall from grace of private equity firm Abraaj
    Abraaj Capital, the PE firm that was very active in the rush to buy global farmland after the food financial crises of 2008, has collapsed and is under investigation for “mismanagement, comingling of funds and misappropriation of assets"
    • Deal Street Asia
    • 30 July 2018
    Why Gulf money did not flow into agriculture?
    Pakistan is now turning to agribusiness rather than land sales as a means of luring Gulf investment.
    • Dawn
    • 20 October 2014
    Agrarian mirage: Gulf foreign direct investment in Pakistan’s agricultural sector
    How did such a promising idea (which appeared to offer a textbook example of a win-win situation) fail?
    • MEI
    • 02 October 2014
    Abraaj Captial is said to be in talks to buy stake in Citadel of Egypt
    Both companies are active farmland investors, with Citadel controlling a reported 200,000 hectares in Sudan and operating Egypt's largest dairy farm.
    • Bloomberg
    • 08 June 2011
    Investing abroad to secure food at home
    Gulf states are following in the footsteps of China and looking beyond their shores to make heavy investments in agriculture
    • Gulf News
    • 09 Mar 2011
    When wise investing leads to full stomachs
    Why produce a low-value crop such as wheat using expensive water when the FAO says the global wheat harvest will this year be second only to last year’s record?
    • The National
    • 16 November 2009
    Giving away the family silver
    If all these land deals will be beneficial to Pakistan in the long run, why is the government refusing to divulge the details of what is the citizens’ common property?
    • Newsline
    • 26 October 2009
    Corporate farming…A wise development strategy or land grab?
    Critics say that by seeking to solve their food shortage problem through foreign farmland acquisitions, the rich emerging economies may succeed in producing enough quantity for their populations but may in the long-term be exporting their food insecurity to other nations.
    • Desertification
    • 08 October 2009
    Pakistan: Our leaders' voluntary submission to colonisation
    Instead of offering incentives on a similar scale to local farmers, Islamabad is offering legal and tax concessions, with legislative cover, to foreign investors in the form of specialised agricultural and livestock 'free zones' and may also introduce legislation to exempt such investors from government-imposed tax bans. The most worrisome aspect of such wheeling-dealing is the government's decision to develop a new security force of 100,000 men spread across the four provinces to ensure stability of the Arab investments.
    • News International
    • 26 August 2009
    Pakistan: The great land grab
    THESE days, as we follow the struggle against the Taliban in the northwest, we can be forgiven for missing other important news. For instance, I had filed away a report on plans to lease large chunks of agricultural land in Punjab and Sindh to overseas investors in the back of my mind, planning to write about it later. When I ran a Google search on the subject, however, I realised the enormity of the scam.When I ran a Google search
    • Dawn
    • 09 May 2009
    Much tilling without harvest
    Essentially, the Middle East is left with two choices. “The region has to import. The question is, invest abroad or rely on the free market?” said Dr Eckart Woertz, program manager in economics at the Gulf Research Center in Dubai.
    • Zawya
    • 16 April 2009

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