Cambodia: A land up for sale?
    Global Witness, an environmental pressure group, estimates Pheapimex now controls 7% of Cambodia's land area.
    • BBC
    • 12 August 2009
    Die große Jagd nach Land
    Regierungen und Investmentfonds erwerben in Afrika und Asien Ackerland, um Nahrungsmittel anzubauen – ein lohnendes Geschäft, weil die Preise rasch steigen. Das Milliarden-Monopoly führt zu einem modernen Kolonialismus, dem sich viele arme Länder notgedrungen unterwerfen.
    • Der Spiegel
    • 27 July 2009
    Existing laws seen adequate to prevent foreign exploitation
    Nigeria allows foreigners -- like Thailand's Riceland International Co -- to lease land for growing rice and to run rice-related businesses including milling and processing.
    • Bangkok Post
    • 13 July 2009
    Land grab Cambodia
    Cambodia is experiencing what's been called an epidemic of land grabbing. Huge tracts of the country have been granted to private companies for large scale agriculture or other purposes.
    • BBC
    • 09 July 2009
    Cambodian fund Leopard Capital makes two new investments
    The Leopard Cambodia Fund has set aside $1.8m to establish Cambodia Plantations, a Singapore-based company which will serve as an offshore finance vehicle for agricultural investments in central Cambodia. The drawdown will fund the establishment of a subsidiary that is in the process of obtaining a land concession in the province of Kompong Chhnang for rice cultivation.
    • AltAssets
    • 26 June 2009
    Land grabs becoming more popular
    Many land transactions occur without a paper trail, therefore making regulation even more challenging.
    • Farmland Forecast
    • 24 June 2009
    Singapore firms aim to invest in farming
    At least six Singaporean companies want to start joint ventures with Cambodian partners to invest in the Kingdom's agricultural sector.
    • The Phnom Penh Post
    • 18 June 2009
    The food crisis continues - in the form of a global scramble for lucrative farmlands
    It's a tsunami of land deals and, as all of the experts who have studied the phenomenon have agreed, no nation is truly prepared for its implications.
    • CounterCurrents
    • 17 June 2009
    Holding the actors involved in the global land grab to account: the Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights urges action from Cambodia
    During the recent review of Cambodia before the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, several Committee members raised concerns about the potential effects a land deal with the Kuwaiti government could have on various economic, social and cultural rights in Cambodia, including the rights to food, housing and an adequate standard of living.
    • 3D Three
    • 17 June 2009
    Asia: Land grabs threaten food security
    Sam Pov, a rice farmer in Cambodia’s western Battambang Province, is very worried that his land will be taken over by a foreign investor.
    • IRIN
    • 10 June 2009
    SKorean firm to invest $150m in corn plant
    South Korea's KOGID Cambodia plans to invest US$150 million to grow and process corn for animal feed to be sold overseas.
    • Phnom Penh Post
    • 09 June 2009
    Wikileaks: Qatari officials discuss currency, sovereign wealth funds, investment, and Iran with Secretary Paulson
    "Finance Minister Yousef Hussein Kamal said he had personally been traveling to Vietnam, Cambodia, Yemen, Sudan, Tajikistan, and elsewhere to look into investing in agricultural production for the Qatari market," reports the US Embassy in Doha about a visit from US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
    • Wikileaks
    • 04 June 2009
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