andung the 198, ri amany indigenous ivorian people that had been li, say,n urban areas, moved cko ruraareasok fl there was lile land left and considerableeany foy anti-foreigner sentiment. and... asomeases, nsf ousas. ere'sin sense--re's been fn not by the ivorian government, but it's peoe aring (some forest, i lied.nslorl wee s, hnosquailometers each year, we have problemsthg . feeding ourselves. narrator: and from neighboring countriese came to e sparsely-populatedrat to find work on the plantations or obtain land. (animals calling ) ( man speaking french ) translator: we come here from the region of sakassou. ame ghur when he arrived, he went to see the bakwes, the natives. he explained to them why he had come and what he wanted. they were very nice. they gave him some forest- very good forestin fact. that's how we ended up here. narrator: nipy is a village in the southwest-- the land of the bakwe people. ( man speaking french ) translator: we received our brothers from neighboring countries-- burkina faso, guinea, mali, the baule from other parts of the ivory coast-- who we allowed to s