Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Organizing Farmers in Cambodia’s Last Frontier

September 27, 2010
By Mu Sochua
Originally posted at: http://sochua.wordpress.com/

Battambang. September 21, 2010

Lush corn, cassava and bean fields stretch a far as the foot of the limestone mountain range that separates Cambodia from Thailand, in the North West districts of Kom Rieng, Sompuev Loun and Phnom Preuk of Battambang province. It is the Cambodia that tourists don’t see, where little of the annual $2 billion U.S. development package is spent. This is the last frontier and one of the areas with the highest number of landmine victims in the country; an area in which malaria is still feared by the local residents.

Kon Reng, Cambodia
For years, the government has declared its strong commitment to the agricultural sector. However, such promise has brought no real results to improve the living conditions of the farmers in these three districts. Although the farmers have moved to the area more than two decades ago from all over the country, their rights to land tenure are not guaranteed until they have registered their land with the land management ministry the full title is issued to them. The land title registration process has benefited only 30% of Cambodians. Like farmers throughout the country, farmers in these three districts stand vulnerable to government’s economic land concessions policy that benefits mega companies at the expense of small farmers. Since 2009 over 150,000 families have been victims of land grabbing and economic land concessions.



Phnom Preuk: the Morning Mountain
Farmers work the land twelve months a year but due to lack of capital and access to credit, they depend on Thai farmers who are free to cross the border to sell seeds, fertilizers and farming equipment to Cambodian farmers. Thai farmers are well organized and have the backing of Cambodian local officials local who receive payments and cuts from deals; made at the expense of Cambodian farmers. Thai farmers set the price of the crops and this form of trade translates to Cambodian farmers using their own land to work for Thai farmers. Small farmers- who are mainly women and families of victims of landmines- talk of their concerns and fear of losing their land as they fall further into debt year after year.

Sampov Loun, Cambodia mung beans
Farmers hire extra labor, mainly women and children, to work in the fields, paying them less than US$ 1 a day. A great majority of workers are youth whose luck of finding work in their villages has failed. They work wherever they can, crossing the border every day to Thailand where they are offered US$3 per day. Border police and the middlemen take one third of their earnings and their savings are sent back home.

Organizing local farmers
Organizing farmers is essential to ensure that our farmers- Cambodian farmers- have bargaining power with Thai farmers.


Children working on the corn farms for daily survival
Loans at low interest rate and technical inputs should be provided to our farmers in order to assist them in obtaining higher yield and better use of their land. Special assistance should be provided to women farmers and farmers with disabilities.

Economic land concessions must stop. Furthermore, the Courts must not be used as a tool for the government to prevent farmers from exercising their right to protest against illegal land concessions to powerful companies.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

gov't should do more to help these farmers and crop growers like building good infrastructures for them to connect to the rest of cambodia, provide good schools, healthcare, etc...

Anonymous said...

Start from paying teacher salary properly..
This village people were Khmer-rouges.

Anonymous said...

ask Chan Sarun!!! he get paid for approving concession land.

Anonymous said...

of course, the people in these areas have bad historical labels attached to them, however, as time goes by, people will change and be integrated back into our long history of khmer pride, etc... we should learn to forgive and teach each other to be tolerant of our khmer people, despite bad history in some part of the country. that's how we healed, the country healed! yes, life do go on, believe it or not! so, it is better not to ignore the cry for help of all khmer people. use more of our good sides; learn to forgive and forget bad karma and put into practice good karma; and i'm sure will be appreciated by all in return, etc! god blesss khmer people.

Anonymous said...

i only blame the past on ignorance and isolationism! hope all will change for the better of my country cambodia. i do encourage khmer people to learn to think for themselves, etc! god bless all.

Anonymous said...

I don't get it; Annual U.S spent $2 Billion on development ? to where ?. Cambodia?. So, they can spent $2 billion annualy but cannot forgive the $300 million dirty debt?.

Anonymous said...

2:48AM! !!!! Go to library, old boy!!!

-One, is the rule of the game!

-Two,They better help people of Cambodia not the dick-head government of a Kwack Hun Xen!!!!

Do ah kwack ever do any good thing to Cambodian!!!! except his own family and thug?????

Anonymous said...

2:48!!!Dirty debt not for help the dirty government of ah Kwack!!!!

Anonymous said...

12:30AM said to 2:48AM; First of all, my Library don't have such information. I would be glad if you can pinpoint this info. Secondly, it's people like you that the u.S takes for a ride. You and MU SOKHUA need to team up and bend over harder for the U.S.

Anonymous said...

i think the US is smart enough not to always buys rumors or hearsay from sam rainy, mu sochua, etc... america knows the principle of check and verify, etc... and america is very awared that there are more to cambodia than some poitical maverick group of people, etc...

Anonymous said...

in the picture above, gov't should pave the town because if not, when it rains, the streets turned into muddy, not healthy for the people there, really!

Anonymous said...

Quote from the article, "Small farmers- who are mainly women and families of victims of landmines- talk of their concerns and fear of losing their land as they fall further into debt year after year."

I am no economist but if they keep falling further and further into debt something is fundamentally wrong. It is either that their investments (farming) yield losses or they spend more than they produce. Perhaps they need to check on these.

2:48AM, the article states "..annual $2 billion U.S. development package..". You are thinking the U.S. is spending $2 billion annually in aid on Cambodia.

Anonymous said...

12:34pm! Yes the US do alot of thing by USAID!!!

And when you so poor you need to survive you have no CHANCE to controle!!!