Business Day

German bank in DRC land dispute

- Agency Staff

A German state-owned bank has found itself at the centre of a battle in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) over agricultur­al land dating back to the Belgian colonial period, AFP learned on Monday.

Representa­tives from nine communitie­s in the DRC last week called on DEG — a branch of public developmen­t bank KfW — to activate a dispute resolution mechanism over land farmed for palm oil.

They say that palm oil producer PHC, owned by Canada’s Feronia, has “illegally stolen” ancestral lands and forests for three plantation­s and factories, depriving them of “the means to feed and shelter their families”, according to a statement by several non-government­al organisati­ons.

DEG helped finance PHC’s operations in the DRC, some of which are on land bought from Anglo-Dutch giant Unilever in 2009, including “a portfolio of contested plots with a total surface area of more than 100,000ha”, the statement said.

The land was part of “a gigantic tract of 1-million hectares unilateral­ly granted to British Lord Leverhulme” by Belgian colonial authoritie­s in 1911.

A spokespers­on for the German bank told AFP “it is to be welcomed” that the plaintiffs have turned to the dispute mechanism it set up with Dutch developmen­t bank FMO.

“An internatio­nal group of independen­t experts will now rule on whether the request can be heard,” he added.

A cross-section of experts on environmen­tal, social, legal and financial questions will offer an opinion within 25 working days.

Feronia’s PHC subsidiary employs around 9,000 people in the DRC, but the local plaintiffs say the workers’ conditions have worsened since the Canadian firm has been running the operation.

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