
A year after the World Bank approved a plan to redress community grievances over inadequate compensation and sexual harassment at Liberiaâs Salala Rubber Corporation, a progress report provides little evidence that any of its key commitments have been implemented. In February, the International Finance Corporation, the private sector arm of the World Bank, published a [âŠ]
Bolloré : le fonds souverain norvégien se désengage de #Bolloré pour le non-respect de droits humains par la #Socfin https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socfin en #Afrique https://www.bfmtv.com/economie/entreprises/il-detenait-90-millions-de-dollars-de-titres-le-fonds-souverain-norvegien-se-desengage-du-groupe-bollore-en-raison-d-un-sujet-de-droits-humains-dans-des-plantations-d-huile-de-palme-au-cameroun_AD-202603060550.html
HarcÚlement, violences et violences sexuelles, non-respect du droit du travail⊠https://reporterre.net/Bollore-bafoue-les-droits-humains-en-Afrique-selon-l-un-de-ses-actionnaires
Procédure-bùillon : le #média indépendant belge «Médor» https://mastodon.social/@Medor_mag dénonce une procédure-bùillon de la part de #Socfin https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socfin (Société financiÚre des caoutchoucs), détenue par #HubertFabri https://lama-fortune.com/famille-hubert-fabri-socfin/ et le groupe #Bolloré
Suite Ă la publication en 2019 de l'enquĂȘte «Socfin/ #Cambodge : les terres rouges des Bunongs perdues Ă jamais» https://medor.coop/nos-coups/socfincambodge-les-terres-rouges-des-bunongs-perdues-a-jamais/?full=1 lâentreprise Socfin a attaquĂ© MĂ©dor devant la #justice luxembourgeoise https://medor.coop/communique-quand-socfin-bollore-et-fabri-attaque-medor/
â â #ExploitationSexuelle, expulsions et #pollution autour des plantations de #Socfin đš https://responsabilite-multinationales.ch/etudes-de-cas/plantations-problematiques-socfin/
#Suisse #Switzerland #Schweiz #Fribourg #Friburg
#sexploitation #caoutchouc #HuilePalme #Kautschuk #Palmöl #PalmOil #rubber
Une enquĂȘte rĂ©vĂšle divers cas de violations des droits humains autour des plantations de la multinationale agricole Socfin, qui gĂšre une grande partie de ses affaires depuis la Suisse.
SOCFINâs African Empire of Colonial Oppression: Billionaires Profit from #PalmOil and Rubber Exploitation
An investigation by Bloomberg exposed that despite being RSPO members, #SOCFIN plantations in #WestAfrica are the epicentre of #humanrights abuses, sexual coercion, environmental destruction, and #landgrabbing. Operating in #Liberia, #Ghana, #Nigeria, beyond, SOCFINâs #rubber & #palmoil plantations continue historical colonial legacies of exploitation
Investigation by Bloomberg exposes that despite being RSPO members, #SOCFIN plantations in #WestAfrica are the epicentre of #humanrights abuses, sexual coercion, environmental destruction, and #lanâŠ
Investigation by Bloomberg exposes that despite being RSPO members, #SOCFIN plantations in #WestAfrica are the epicentre of #humanrights abuses, sexual coercion, environmental destruction, and #lanâŠ
SOCFINâs African Empire of Colonial Oppression: Billionaires Profit from Palm Oil and Rubber Exploitation
An investigation by Bloomberg exposed that despite being RSPO members, #SOCFIN plantations in #WestAfrica are the epicentre of #humanrights abuses, sexual coercion, environmental destruction, and #landgrabbing. Operating in #Liberia, #Ghana, #Nigeria, and beyond, SOCFINâs #rubber and #palmoil plantations continue historical colonial legacies of exploitation. Despite widespread evidence of abuse and deforestation, SOCFIN and its partners benefit from weak sustainability certifications such as #FSC and #RSPO. Europe and the US buy products directly linked to these violations, greenwashing the destruction in the process. Indigenous communities and workers are actively resisting this huge injustice âThey seek proper redress in the form of stricter #EUDR regulations and better protections of their health, livelihoods and families. Consumers can boycott palm oil and rubber in solidarity. #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife
#News: đš #SOCFIN #palmoil and #rubber is linked to sexual #violence, forced #labour, #landgrabbing #deforestation in #WestAfricađŽđ„đ€ąâ ïžđđ« French tycoon Vincent BollorĂ© profits while communities suffer. đâđœ #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife https://palmoildetectives.com/2025/10/22/socfins-african-empire-of-colonial-abuse-how-billionaires-profit-from-palm-oil-and-rubber-exploitation/
Share to BlueSky Share to TwitterA recent Bloomberg investigation into SOCFIN, a plantation empire co-owned by French billionaire Vincent Bolloré, reveals ongoing human rights violations, sexual exploitation, deforestation, and colonial-style land grabs across West Africa. SOCFIN, based in Luxembourg and co-owned by Bolloré, operates sprawling palm oil and rubber plantations in Liberia, Ghana, Nigeria, Cameroon, and elsewhere. The investigation uncovered systemic abuses and environmental destruction, exposing the toxic greenwashing reality behind RSPO corporate sustainability claims.
According to Bloombergâs extensive report published in April 2025, SOCFIN plantations in Liberia and Ghana are sites of widespread sexual coercion, rape and sexual abuse.
Women workers at the Liberian Agricultural Company (LAC) plantation, one of SOCFINâs largest operations, routinely face demands for sex from supervisors as a condition for securing daily work. Women like Rebecca (a pseudonym) describe daily harassment and abuse, forced to accept demands out of economic necessity. Contract workers earn as little as $3.50 a day and face threats of dismissal if they refuse sexual advances.
Similar accounts emerge from SOCFINâs Salala Rubber Corporation (SRC), recently sold after violent worker protests over labour abuses, inadequate medical care, and poor housing conditions. Women workers have described supervisors openly demanding sexual favours in exchange for continued employment. Mamie, a former SRC worker, described being violently raped by her supervisor after repeatedly refusing his advances. Such experiences remain common, despite superficial anti-harassment measures like âNo Sexual Harassmentâ signs erected by the company (Bloomberg, 2025).
SOCFINâs operations are rooted deeply in colonial history. Established in the Belgian Congo in the late 1800s, SOCFIN expanded aggressively during colonialism, exploiting rubber and palm oil resources across Africa and Asia. Today, its co-owners, Vincent BollorĂ© and Belgian businessman Hubert Fabri, control vast landholdings, perpetuating neo-colonial dynamics of wealth extraction. According to an article by Tony Lawson for Shoppe Black, the plantations replicate exploitative plantation models, extracting wealth from African land and labour for European profit, reminiscent of colonial rubber plantations and antebellum slave operations like Louisianaâs Nottoway Plantation.
This neo-colonial exploitation is glaringly evident in Nigeria, where SOCFINâs subsidiary, Okumu Oil Palm Company, operates 19,062 hectares of palm plantations and 7,335 hectares of rubber plantations. Palm Oil Detectives (2024) documented widespread displacement of local Indigenous communities due to plantation expansion. Villages such as Lemon, Agbeda, and Oweike have been forcibly dismantled, leaving hundreds homeless. The affected communities received no compensation or consultationâviolating international human rights standards on Free Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC).
Austin Lemon, whose family established Lemon village in 1969, recounted witnessing his ancestral land seized by SOCFIN and converted into plantations without consent or compensation. The trauma from losing their homes, livelihoods, and ancestral heritage remains profound, with many residents still unable to recover decades later.
In Ghana, SOCFINâs Plantations Socfin Ghana (PSG) has systematically destroyed vital rainforests, despite clear warnings from environmental assessments. PSG admitted clearing over 1,089 hectares of natural forest between 2012 and 2016. The loss of biodiversity and increased carbon emissions from these activities directly exacerbate the climate crisis, severely impacting local rainfall patterns and agricultural productivity. Farmers around PSGâs plantations suffer reduced yields, poverty, and food insecurity.
Meanwhile, the EU continues to import vast quantities of palm oil and rubber from SOCFIN, despite mounting evidence of human rights violations and deforestation. Europeâs reliance on SOCFINâs supply chains for products such as Michelin tyres, NestlĂ©âs consumer goods, and numerous cosmetic brands implicates major companies in these abuses. Investigations show European tyre manufacturers purchasing rubber sourced from plantations like Liberiaâs LAC and SRC, despite credible allegations of labour abuses, sexual coercion, and land theft.
SOCFIN and its partners rely heavily on weak and ineffective sustainability schemes like the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO). But investigations repeatedly reveal these certifications as ineffectual greenwashing tools. For example, SOCFINâs Cameroon plantationsâRSPO-certifiedâface lawsuits alleging severe environmental damage and community displacement. Water pollution tests conducted near these plantations revealed dangerous contamination levels, threatening public health (Bloomberg, 2025).
Vincent BollorĂ©, despite his influential position as a major shareholder and board member, consistently denies responsibility, claiming limited involvement. Yet BollorĂ©âs role remains central. Known for his vast media empire and conservative political influence in France, BollorĂ© has maintained his SOCFIN stake despite decades of documented abuses. Lawsuits brought under French duty-of-vigilance laws now challenge BollorĂ© directly, arguing that his oversight constitutes effective control, making him legally responsible for SOCFINâs actions.
Public pressure is growing. In 2024, Norwayâs sovereign wealth fund excluded BollorĂ© Group and strongly recommended divestment from BollorĂ© and SOCFIN, citing overwhelming evidence of abuse. Luxembourgâs stock exchange delisted SOCFIN the same year, further isolating the company. Despite these actions, European governments and multinational corporations including the RSPO continue to support SOCFIN financially, facilitating ongoing abuses in Africa.
Communities across West Africa resist despite enormous personal risk. Liberian union leader Mary Boimah was jailed after protests against SRCâs labour conditions. Nigerian community member Iyabo Batu was shot by SOCFIN-affiliated security personnel while protesting environmental contamination and blocked access to her village. Despite these risks, communities persist in their demands for justice, compensation, and the return of their lands.
SOCFINâs stated commitments to human rights and sustainability remain hollow. Decades of documented abuses, superficial responses to audits, and persistent denial illustrate systemic failure and wilful negligence. As long as global markets reward SOCFINâs rubber and palm oil, the cycle of violence and exploitation will continue.
The time has come to demand real accountability. Regulators and law-makers in the EU and USA must recognise their complicity in human rights abuses and ecocide in palm oil and rubber supply chains. Until this time, people and landscapes will continue to suffer from forced labour, sexual coercion, and environmental destruction. SOCFINâs ecocide and human rights abusesâmust end now.
Learn more
Bloomberg. (2025, April 17). The Rubber Barons. Retrieved from https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2025-socfin-plantations
Palm Oil Detectives. (2024, July 31). Socfinâs Destructive Empire: Palm Oil Deforestation and Human Rights Abuses in West Africa. Retrieved from https://palmoildetectives.com/2024/07/31/socfins-destructive-empire-palm-oil-deforestation-and-human-rights-abuses-in-west-africa/
Shoppe Black. (2025). Labor Abuses: Nottoway and Liberia Plantations. Retrieved from https://shoppeblack.us/labor-abuses-nottoway-and-liberia-plantations/
ENDS
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