
Rich Arab states such as Saudi Arabia have bought huge tracts of land across Africa in recent years. "Food production in Arab countries is limited by scarce land and water resources," the World Bank said in recent report. "Arab countries are highly exposed to international food commodity price shocks … because they are heavily dependent on imported food." The land-buying spree by the Arab states is likely to continue as desertification worsens.
China has leased 6.91 million acres in the Democratic Republic of Congo for the world's largest oil palm plantation.Ethiopia has approved 815 foreign-financed agricultural projects since 2007.
Philippe Heilberg, CEO of the New York-based investment fund Jarch Capital has leased between 998,000 and 2.47 million acres in southern Sudan from the warlord Paulino Matip Le Monde Diplomatique reported.It quoted Heilberg as saying, "When food becomes scarce, the investor needs a weak state that does not force him to abide by any rules."
Some critics say with African farmland in foreign hands, the continent faces widespread conflict over resources in the not-too-distant future.Resource wars are expected to erupt across the Middle East and Africa in the years ahead."Unchecked land-grabbing carries with it the seeds of conflict, environmental disaster, political and social change, and hunger on an unprecedented scale," Le Monde Diplomatique warned.
The future looks bleak. In a capitalist world , land and food are simply commodities to be sold and traded on the stock markets,(and then, if need be, acquired by the AK-47) and not as the means to satisfy the needs of people and provide for their well-being.
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