Phnom Penh Post, Issue 15 / 17, August 25 - September 7, 2006
Prey Veng province, where farming, the only industry, is stricken by the alternating curses of flood and drought, is facing an exodus of poverty-stricken villagers to Phnom Penh to escape starvation.
Rural poor from all over Cambodia are migrating to the capital in search of work, but nowhere more than Prey Veng, which provides the most workers from any province for Phnom Penh's garment factories, according to an Asian Development Bank (ADB) report on the industry.
The 2004 report said that almost 20 percent of the nearly 300,000 workers in the garment export industry come from Prey Veng province. But as legions of young workers trade an agricultural lifestyle for the industrial workforce, findings from the Economic Institute of Cambodia (EIC) suggest that the transition may hinder the long-term development of the province.
"People in the province have two classifications of well-off people these days: first, those who have capital, and second, those who have daughters working in the garment industry in Phnom Penh," said EIC researcher Visal Lim on August 18.
Lim said that in 2005 the EIC made an assessment of four poverty-prone districts around Cambodia, one of them Prey Veng's Me Sang district. He said the only real production in the district was rice farming. "People in Prey Veng don't have any choice - either farm or come to Phnom Penh," he said.
The EIC's report, released in March, said that, in general, in Cambodia, though the rich are getting richer, the poor find themselves in a "poverty trap." The report says that although the garment industry has given Me Sang a comparative boom in recent years, the only possibility to increase prosperity in the future is through agriculture, and that required irrigation and other capital investment to succeed.
In Me Sang district's Prey Krakhob village, 32-year-old Nan Pha said that last year she went to Phnom Penh to work in the construction industry.
"But I cannot go to work in Phnom Penh this year because my health is not good," she said.
"My three sons and I don't have enough food. What I earn in the morning is just enough for the morning, and what I earn in the evening is just enough for the evening. I can't save anything for the next day."
The lives of most people in Prey Krakhob village are no different from Pha's: many go to work in Phnom Penh to avoid starvation.
Keo Ney, Prey Krakhob village chief, said about 100 out of the 169 families in his village had daughters and sons working in Phnom Penh.
"People in my village have given up hope with rice farming now. They don't get good results from rice cultivation because we often have droughts and we've got no major irrigation system," Ney said.
"Even my family has two children working in Phnom Penh - one daughter is a garment factory worker and one son is a construction worker."
He said there were 16 families in his village who were in a more serious situation.
"They have no land for planting rice, no cattle, and live in small huts. They make their living working for others," he said.
The ADB report said Prey Veng was one of the three most populous provinces. Because of lack of infrastructure, population pressures, natural disasters common to the Mekong flood plain, and the proximity to Phnom Penh, Prey Veng had a large migrating population, the report said.
The EIC report said that people with no land were worse off than before because labor wages had not kept up with inflation. Also, depletion of natural resources such as fish stock had deprived them of food sources.
Ramaraj Saravanamuttu, acting country director of the United Nations World Food Program (WFP) said poverty and malnutrition rates were very high in Prey Veng. He said the WFP, in conjunction with the National Committee of Disaster Management (NCDM), had given drought relief to 1,276 Me Sang families, who had each received 50kg (an average month's supply) of rice on August 2-3.
"Migration is a coping mechanism in Prey Veng - their options are limited," he said.
Chheav Nak, assistant to NCDM first vice-president Nhim Vanda, said reports from local authorities showed many Prey Veng families were "vulnerable" and could not survive.
"Until now the main concern has been drought, but now the rains are coming, so it's turning to flooding," Nak said.
Khem Kanh, 60, also from Prey Krakhob village, said three of her children would soon go to Phnom Penh to work in construction when they had finished planting rice; the rest of her children were already working there.
"I'm sending all my children to go to work in Phnom Penh because it doesn't look good for rice this year. Worms have eaten almost all of the rice I've just planted," Kanh said.
"If my children don't go and work in Phnom Penh, my whole family will have nothing to eat."
Pha said she did not have land for farming rice. Since she had been divorced from her husband for three years, she now had to look after her three children on her own.
"Nowadays I have to sell cakes and work in people's rice fields in exchange for food."
Men Makara, ADHOC coordinator in Prey Veng, said Me Sang and Prey Veng districts were the poorest in the province.
Hang Savouth, Me Sang district governor, acknowledged that his district was the poorest district in Prey Veng because of the drought during last year's rice planting season and the flooding at the end of the rice season.
He said 10 to 15 families per village in his district faced food shortage. Me Sang had 118 villages and more than 22,000 families; 85 to 90 percent of the population were rice farmers, he said.
Savouth said the rain his district had had in the last few days was good for the recently planted rice, but he was concerned that the crop would die if there was no more rain in the next 10 days.
"The only thing that can solve food shortage in Me Sang is to build a major irrigation system that can store water for both the dry and rainy seasons," Savouth said.
In neighboring Chipouch village Noun Thim, 42, also said drought was a problem.
"Now I don't have any rice to eat because last year I didn't get a good crop due to the drought," he said. "But luckily I have two children working as garment workers in Takmao who send me $20 every month."
The EIC report said the average amount sent home from garment factory workers was around $30 per month, which was "very high" compared to the average annual $100 per hectare income earned from rice paddies.
Makara said food shortage caused a lot of problems in society, including crime, domestic violence and a rise in beggar numbers when people migrated to Phnom Penh and could not find a job.
According to the EIC report, Me Sang had been "infamous" for begging, but people were now better off than before, largely due to their daughters working in the garment industry. However, the very poor could not take up jobs at garment factories because they could not pay the commission fee demanded by middlemen, the report said.
Me Sang villagers denied that any of their relations were making their living by begging in Phnom Penh, when asked by Post reporters last week. They and district governor Savouth also said they had no information about Prey Veng women working as prostitutes in Phnom Penh.
However an International Labor Organization study, cited in the 2004 ADB report, stated that Prey Veng was the province "most at risk for having women and children exploited through labor or human trafficking", due to poverty and the proximity to Phnom Penh.
Hun Huong, operational chief of Me Sang Referral Hospital, said this year the number of people infected with HIV/AIDs had increased in Me Sang district. Most were women infected by their husbands who had gone to work in Phnom Penh.
Huong said one in 10 of the 100 or so people who came to his center for an HIV test each month tested positive.
Rural poor from all over Cambodia are migrating to the capital in search of work, but nowhere more than Prey Veng, which provides the most workers from any province for Phnom Penh's garment factories, according to an Asian Development Bank (ADB) report on the industry.
The 2004 report said that almost 20 percent of the nearly 300,000 workers in the garment export industry come from Prey Veng province. But as legions of young workers trade an agricultural lifestyle for the industrial workforce, findings from the Economic Institute of Cambodia (EIC) suggest that the transition may hinder the long-term development of the province.
"People in the province have two classifications of well-off people these days: first, those who have capital, and second, those who have daughters working in the garment industry in Phnom Penh," said EIC researcher Visal Lim on August 18.
Lim said that in 2005 the EIC made an assessment of four poverty-prone districts around Cambodia, one of them Prey Veng's Me Sang district. He said the only real production in the district was rice farming. "People in Prey Veng don't have any choice - either farm or come to Phnom Penh," he said.
The EIC's report, released in March, said that, in general, in Cambodia, though the rich are getting richer, the poor find themselves in a "poverty trap." The report says that although the garment industry has given Me Sang a comparative boom in recent years, the only possibility to increase prosperity in the future is through agriculture, and that required irrigation and other capital investment to succeed.
In Me Sang district's Prey Krakhob village, 32-year-old Nan Pha said that last year she went to Phnom Penh to work in the construction industry.
"But I cannot go to work in Phnom Penh this year because my health is not good," she said.
"My three sons and I don't have enough food. What I earn in the morning is just enough for the morning, and what I earn in the evening is just enough for the evening. I can't save anything for the next day."
The lives of most people in Prey Krakhob village are no different from Pha's: many go to work in Phnom Penh to avoid starvation.
Keo Ney, Prey Krakhob village chief, said about 100 out of the 169 families in his village had daughters and sons working in Phnom Penh.
"People in my village have given up hope with rice farming now. They don't get good results from rice cultivation because we often have droughts and we've got no major irrigation system," Ney said.
"Even my family has two children working in Phnom Penh - one daughter is a garment factory worker and one son is a construction worker."
He said there were 16 families in his village who were in a more serious situation.
"They have no land for planting rice, no cattle, and live in small huts. They make their living working for others," he said.
The ADB report said Prey Veng was one of the three most populous provinces. Because of lack of infrastructure, population pressures, natural disasters common to the Mekong flood plain, and the proximity to Phnom Penh, Prey Veng had a large migrating population, the report said.
The EIC report said that people with no land were worse off than before because labor wages had not kept up with inflation. Also, depletion of natural resources such as fish stock had deprived them of food sources.
Ramaraj Saravanamuttu, acting country director of the United Nations World Food Program (WFP) said poverty and malnutrition rates were very high in Prey Veng. He said the WFP, in conjunction with the National Committee of Disaster Management (NCDM), had given drought relief to 1,276 Me Sang families, who had each received 50kg (an average month's supply) of rice on August 2-3.
"Migration is a coping mechanism in Prey Veng - their options are limited," he said.
Chheav Nak, assistant to NCDM first vice-president Nhim Vanda, said reports from local authorities showed many Prey Veng families were "vulnerable" and could not survive.
"Until now the main concern has been drought, but now the rains are coming, so it's turning to flooding," Nak said.
Khem Kanh, 60, also from Prey Krakhob village, said three of her children would soon go to Phnom Penh to work in construction when they had finished planting rice; the rest of her children were already working there.
"I'm sending all my children to go to work in Phnom Penh because it doesn't look good for rice this year. Worms have eaten almost all of the rice I've just planted," Kanh said.
"If my children don't go and work in Phnom Penh, my whole family will have nothing to eat."
Pha said she did not have land for farming rice. Since she had been divorced from her husband for three years, she now had to look after her three children on her own.
"Nowadays I have to sell cakes and work in people's rice fields in exchange for food."
Men Makara, ADHOC coordinator in Prey Veng, said Me Sang and Prey Veng districts were the poorest in the province.
Hang Savouth, Me Sang district governor, acknowledged that his district was the poorest district in Prey Veng because of the drought during last year's rice planting season and the flooding at the end of the rice season.
He said 10 to 15 families per village in his district faced food shortage. Me Sang had 118 villages and more than 22,000 families; 85 to 90 percent of the population were rice farmers, he said.
Savouth said the rain his district had had in the last few days was good for the recently planted rice, but he was concerned that the crop would die if there was no more rain in the next 10 days.
"The only thing that can solve food shortage in Me Sang is to build a major irrigation system that can store water for both the dry and rainy seasons," Savouth said.
In neighboring Chipouch village Noun Thim, 42, also said drought was a problem.
"Now I don't have any rice to eat because last year I didn't get a good crop due to the drought," he said. "But luckily I have two children working as garment workers in Takmao who send me $20 every month."
The EIC report said the average amount sent home from garment factory workers was around $30 per month, which was "very high" compared to the average annual $100 per hectare income earned from rice paddies.
Makara said food shortage caused a lot of problems in society, including crime, domestic violence and a rise in beggar numbers when people migrated to Phnom Penh and could not find a job.
According to the EIC report, Me Sang had been "infamous" for begging, but people were now better off than before, largely due to their daughters working in the garment industry. However, the very poor could not take up jobs at garment factories because they could not pay the commission fee demanded by middlemen, the report said.
Me Sang villagers denied that any of their relations were making their living by begging in Phnom Penh, when asked by Post reporters last week. They and district governor Savouth also said they had no information about Prey Veng women working as prostitutes in Phnom Penh.
However an International Labor Organization study, cited in the 2004 ADB report, stated that Prey Veng was the province "most at risk for having women and children exploited through labor or human trafficking", due to poverty and the proximity to Phnom Penh.
Hun Huong, operational chief of Me Sang Referral Hospital, said this year the number of people infected with HIV/AIDs had increased in Me Sang district. Most were women infected by their husbands who had gone to work in Phnom Penh.
Huong said one in 10 of the 100 or so people who came to his center for an HIV test each month tested positive.
1 comment:
Beyond the economics...
Economics reason may be just one of the problem surrounding this rural flooding of P. Penh from Prey Veng province. Of equal interest, one may also be wondering as to how many Viets there are in Prey Veng province. Have native khmers in Prey Veng been outnumbered by the Viets yet? Who dares to do some counting?
8/27/06
AKnijaKhmer
Post a Comment