The Central African Republic just dropped one of the boldest moves in Web3 geopolitics — it's selling tokenized land plots to global investors using its own CAR token on the Solana blockchain. Not NFTs of monkeys. Real. Damn. Dirt.
President Faustin-Archange Touadéra confirmed that the land is cleared, registered, subdivided, and connected to roads — ready for farming or construction. But mining rights are excluded. This is about building homes and farms, not extracting diamonds.
“We want development, not exploitation,” said the President.
Tokenization means turning real-world property into digital assets that live on-chain. It allows anyone (yes, even you reading this in Bali or Berlin) to invest in land in CAR — no lawyer, no bribe, no paperwork nightmare.
Solana was picked for:
This isn’t just about digital land deeds. It’s a new national strategy:
Call it Sovereignty-as-a-Service — built on-chain.
The government’s not stopping at land. CAR is prepping a framework to tokenize natural resources next. Imagine oil, gold, or timber rights issued as digital tokens. It’s about transparency, citizen empowerment, and cutting out shady middlemen.
This isn't some futuristic utopia pitch. This is a real country selling real land via crypto — and if it works, it could redefine how nations fund growth, attract investors, and leapfrog broken systems.
The Central African Republic may have just become the test lab for blockchain nation-building — and Solana is the engine under the hood.
If you’ve ever wanted to own land in Africa, now you can — from your wallet.
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