France culture : Main basse sur les terres agricoles
- France Culture
- 17 December 2009
Main basse sur les terres agricoles : le cas de l'Afrique et le cas du Brésil.
Main basse sur les terres agricoles : le cas de l'Afrique et le cas du Brésil.
"Hassad [Food] has innovated by considering investments in overseas agribusinesses rather than only purchasing land in countries with questionable property rights, and where the indigenous population may not benefit from such purchases," writes the US embassy in Doha
The head of state at the last session of the Council of Foreign Investors informed that China had requested to lease 1 million hectares of Kazakh farmland for cultivation of rape and soya. According to A. Evniev, "It is not a lease, it is a question of joint manufacture. In this case, it is soya and later it will be corn and rape."
Sudan's minister of state for investment said yesterday he expects investments of $6-7 billion in the country in 2010, adding that Africa's largest nation is seeing increased interest in its agricultural sector.
US embassy in Kuwait reports on discussions with Kuwaiti officials on acquiring farmland overseas for food security or profit
Il n'y a pas de mal à louer nos terres en Afrique ? Ou stade suprême de l'aliénation du monde rural ?
Kazakhstan will not "sell" land to China, Kazakh Prime Minister Karim Massimov has announced
Dozens of Kazakh activists staged a protest today in front of the Chinese Embassy in Almaty against the planned leasing of Kazakh land to China, RFE/RL's Kazakh Service reports.
No less than 4,000 hectares in the Davao region have been identified by Middle Eastern-based companies to grow their products.
The United Nations agency that promotes commerce to fight poverty kicked off a meeting today aimed at finding ways in which trade, investment and technology transfers between developing countries – so-called “South-South” cooperation – can improve farming to boost food security in poorer nations.
The launch in Mozambique of the Chinese Centre for Agricultural Technology will serve to meet demand for food from the Chinese population, said Emeka Chiakwelu, director of Afripol-African Centre for Economic and Political Strategy.The launch in Mozambique of the Chinese Centre for Agricultural Technology will serve to meet demand for food from the Chinese population, said Emeka Chiakwelu, director of Afripol-African Centre for Economic and Political Strategy.
UNCTAD is hosting a meeting on South-South cooperation in agricultural investment, where land grabbing is on the agenda