A month after making bitcoin a legally recognized currency, the Central African Republic has unveiled plans to create a “crypto hub” to attract global crypto enthusiasts.
The plans have been dubbed Project Sango, according to a post on the government’s official Facebook page dated Monday that directed people to a landing page at sango.org. After registering for the waitlist, users were sent a link to a 24-page online presentation with further details on the proposed project.
There was no confirmation of the Facebook post on the Twitter account of Faustin-Archange Touadéra, CAR’s president. Although he had tweeted on Saturday that “very soon we will announce the next planned phase” with the hashtag #bitcoin.
According to the presentation, which is filled with images of undulating skyscrapers and sailboat-dotted lakes, the Sango project involves creating “the first legal crypto hub recognized by a country’s parliament.” CAR’s plans include founding a Digital Nation Bank, facilitating land purchases in bitcoin, and developing a crypto wallet.
The government will support crypto firms’ access to natural resources such as gold, diamonds and uranium and institute a “citizenship by investment” program with zero-rate tax on income and businesses, according to the presentation.
The landlocked African nation ranks among the least developed economies in the world with agriculture the largest contributor to its GDP. According to World Bank figures, CAR’s economic output stood at only $2.38 billion as of 2020 and the country ranks near the bottom of the United Nation’s Human Development Index.
Last month, CAR became the first African nation to adopt bitcoin as an official currency, alongside the France-backed CFA franc.
With reporting by Adam Morgan McCarthy and Osato Avan-Nomayo.