Showing posts with label Farmers hardship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Farmers hardship. Show all posts

Saturday, February 06, 2010

Farmers Lose Thousands of Dollars in Culling

By Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
05 February 2010


More than 60 families in Takeo province say they lost tens of thousands of dollars after their poultry was culled this week to prevent the spread of avian influenza.

Health and agriculture authorities culled more than 2,000 ducks and chickens in Koh Andeth district, following the deaths of as many as 15,000 more birds earlier in a suspected bird flu outbreak.

The outbreak centered around Pralay Meas village, Rominh commune, near the Vietnam border, where authorities have focused efforts to destroy birds that may have been infected with the H5N1 virus through contact with wild birds.

May Seng, second deputy chief of the commune, told VOA Khmer Thursday that 62 families lost their poultry, mostly ducks. The value of each duck was around $3, making a total loss of $51,000 in bird deaths.

“The outbreak of the H5N1 virus seriously destroyed our farmers’ livings,” he said.

Chhim Yorn, 45, who raises ducks in Pralay Meas village said, he would face increased poverty following the culling.

“I have no money to return to the bank a pay the interest of a loan,” he said. “I borrowed $3,000 from the bank to raise ducks. Now I have nothing. My house will be confiscated by the bank.”

Currently the government has no policy to compensate farmers for the loss of poultry in bird flu culling

“We need assistance from the government and non-governmental organizations to continue our business after we lost all in the bird flu outbreak,” said Vy Oun, a 30-year-old poultry farmer. “I lost $1,750 because my ducks died from bird flu.”

Despite the importance of poultry farms to the area, Kao Phal, head of the Ministry of Agriculture’s veterinary department, said farmers will not be allowed to raise birds for another 30 days, as authorities watch for signs of a return of the disease.

“We are watching this virus, and we have banned transportation of ducks or chickens from the affected area,” he said.

Avian influenza has killed seven Cambodians since 2005 and more than 200 people in Asia since an outbreak began in 2003.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Prices in Phnom Penh city fall from last year level

PHNOM PENH, Jun 12, 2009 (Xinhua) -- Phnom Penh's Consumer Price Index (CPI) has decreased 5.7 percent since inflation hit record high in May of 2008, local media reported on Friday.

Cambodia's inflation hit its highest ever level in May of last year, when price shot up by 25.7 percent compared to the same period in 2007, English newspaper the Cambodia Daily said, citing the latest CPI released this week by the National Institute of Statistics.

The most significant declines were in the prices of food and fuel, commodities that had driven inflation last year. The price of gas has plummeted by 41.1 percent in the last year, while the CPI for rice dropped 21.2 percent. Pork prices also fell significantly, decreasing by 15.7 percent compared to last year and overall food prices have fallen by 7.1 percent in the last 12 months.

Despite a decrease in year-on-year inflation, however, prices in Phnom Penh went up for the third month in a row. May's CPI was one percent higher than April's.

Phnom Penh's CPI is calculated for 259 items from observations taken at a sample of four outlets at each ot five markets throughout the city. To calculate the rate of inflation, some items are weighted more heavily than other to reflect how frequently they are purchased by consumers.