Abuse in the Palm Oil Industry
Part of Land and Ocean Grabbing

Growing vulnerability in fishing communities
Cape Verde - 2023

Abuse in the Palm Oil Industry
Liberia - 2023

Portraits of palm oil farmers
Liberia - 2023

Not so sweet
Ghana - 2022

Cocoa farmers portraits
Ghana - 2022

Land for sugarcane
Malawi - 2022

Sugarcane workers portraits
Malawi - 2022

Our land our nature
Tanzania - 2021

Life in the Boma
Tanzania - 2021

When the Senegal Sea runs dry
Senegal - 2020

Protein drying
Senegal - 2020

Fishing in dangerous waters
Senegal - 2020

The great fish robbery
Mauritania - 2019

Bloody batteries
Kolwezi, DR Congo - 2019
In Liberia, international companies are taking over 1.5 million acres of land, causing problems for local communities, including loss of their land, livelihoods, and negative environmental impact. One of these companies is the multinational Equatorial Palm Oil (EPO), accused by various NGOs of illegally clearing land and not consulting or supporting local communities. Many of the land acquisitions in Liberia were made during the country’s civil war and in the subsequent period, when the government was weak and unable to effectively regulate property transactions, often without local community consent and with little or no compensation. Child labor is also a significant issue in the palm oil industry in Liberia. Children are employed for tasks such as land clearing, planting, fruit picking, and heavy lifting. They are also used for dangerous tasks such as using machinery and handling chemicals. Poverty and lack of labor regulation are some of the main reasons for this phenomenon. In Buchanan, in particular, there have been serious human rights violations in the palm oil industry, including forced eviction of local communities, destruction of their homes and agricultural land, and exploitation of workers, including children. (text by Luca Catalano Gonzaga).










































