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Resources depletion fosters land disputes and conflicts
SupportiveArgument
1
#11075
Exploitation of natural resources (gold, oil, etc) under unregulated procedures destroys land area and hampers agricultural development.
CONTEXT
(Help)
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Africa: A Continent in Crisis? »
Africa: A Continent in Crisis?
Africa: A Continent in Crisis?☜Plotting the arguments relating to those issues which should be addressed (and how) in order to restore Africas position (and that of its people) as an equal amongst nations.☜F1CEB7
▲
What Issues Defines Africa's Crisis? (AFR) »
What Issues Defines Africa's Crisis? (AFR)
What Issues Defines Africa's Crisis? (AFR)☜What existing issues would you identify as those that are creating the intensely difficult period Africa and its people are now going through?☜FFB597
▲
The depletion of non-replenish-able resources »
The depletion of non-replenish-able resources
The depletion of non-replenish-able resources☜Natural resources, in most African countries, has been the leading cause of conflicts on the continent, and probably the fuel for the crisis.☜59C6EF
■
Resources depletion fosters land disputes and conflicts
Resources depletion fosters land disputes and conflicts☜Exploitation of natural resources (gold, oil, etc) under unregulated procedures destroys land area and hampers agricultural development.☜98CE71
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[1]
GHANA: Favouring gold over farmers
Author:
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Cited by:
Earl Burrowes, Sr.
8:37 PM 28 January 2009 GMT
URL:
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=82624
Excerpt / Summary
ACCRA, 28 January 2009 (IRIN) - Farmer John Osei Kamkam paces the hallway of Ghana's Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice, waiting his turn to file a complaint. He is one of an estimated 10,000 small-scale farmers who say their land was destroyed after Newmont, one of the world's leading gold mining companies – headquartered in the United States – cleared 3,000 hectares of land to begin digging for gold in 2006. Operating a surface gold mine involves clearing a large tract of land – often hundreds of square kilometres in size. Civil society and human rights groups in Ghana say that Newmont’s mining operations have stripped local communities of land and water resources.
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Entered by:-
Earl Burrowes, Sr.
NodeID:
#11075
Node type:
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Entry date (GMT):
1/28/2009 8:31:00 PM
Last edit date (GMT):
9/30/2009 1:31:00 PM
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