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  • "Stop Hunting For 'Foreign' Scapegoats!"

    very interesting
    http://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion....pegoats


    Stop hunting for 'foreign' scapegoats

    Writer: Sanitsuda Ekacai
    Published: 13/08/2009 at 12:00 AM
    Newspaper section: News

    It is one thing to nurse concern for small-scale farmers. It is another thing, however, to make foreigners the scapegoats. For the so-called backbone of the country, the lack of farmland indeed poses a serious problem to Thai farmers, who are also struggling with indebtedness from the high cost of farm investment amid chronically low prices, while their once fertile soil is rapidly dying due to intensive chemical farming. Should we focus on the root of their problems instead of resorting to xenophobia?

    The recent spate of news on proxy ownership of rice farmland by rich foreign investors has stirred much public anxiety and nationalist fervour, although much of the news has been based on the news sources' concerns, rather than on concrete evidence. According to these news reports, the foreigners - mainly those from oil-rich Arab countries - are buying up rice paddies in the countryside and hiring the locals to till the land in order to ensure sufficient rice supply for their countries, and to benefit financially from the various rice support schemes offered by the government.

    While this story is going nowhere, reportedly due to the farmers' fear to talk, the latest news angle focuses on the foreign husbands of Thai women who, through their wives, are buying up farmland in scenic areas in order to build resorts.

    Yes, we should be concerned about the farmers' rapid loss of land. But aren't we pointing the finger in the wrong direction?

    When the government launched the Green Revolution 40 years ago with an aim to make Thailand the world's biggest rice exporter, every farmer dreamed that the high-yield rice varieties and chemical rice farming would make them prosperous for good.No one knew that they would soon suffer from frequent pestilence as a result of mono-culture farming and a losing business. How could they survive when fluctuating rice prices in the world market just could not keep up with the skyrocketing prices of farm chemicals?

    While the farmers wilt, intensive chemical farming destroys soil fertility, contaminates the waterways, causes various illnesses from chemical residue in the food chain, or simply maims and kills farmers from prolonged over-exposure to hazardous chemicals.

    And now when the farmers feel they know better and are trying to switch to organic farming and herbal pesticides, guess who are their main opponents? Who else but the farm chemical giants - and our very own agricultural authorities.

    Remember their efforts to list such medicinal herbs that are widely used for herbal pesticides as "hazardous" and thus subject to tight control? Guess why.

    Amid the losing business of rice farming, many farmers decided to sell their land to speculators under rising demand from the tourism industry and the urban middle class' need for holiday homes. For those who wanted to keep the land, many experimented with contract farming with big business, only to find themselves in the same trap of chemical farming and empty promises.

    Out of familial gratitude, many daughters of poor farmers entered the sex trade to support their families. Many are severely exploited. Many have died from work-related sicknesses. But some, too, found love and security through marrying foreigners. They set up families and started doing business, as all couples do. We should be happy for them, shouldn't we? Why should we harass them with this proxy land ownership fervour?

    Is it because it is much easier to hassle them than take to task the big investors, Thai and foreign, who are paying the land officials big time to get prime resort locations illegally?

    Or is it because they prefer to turn a blind eye to the inequitable land ownership system, knowing that the politically powerful landlords are here to stay, regardless of their political colours?

    Have some guts. Deal with destructive farming. Deal with big landlords. Deal with corrupt officials.

    If the government cannot address the real cause of landlessness, leave those women who now have a life with their foreign spouses alone.

    Sanitsuda Ekachai is Assistant Editor (Outlook), Bangkok Post.

    Email: [email protected]
    "Imagination is more important than knowledge, for knowledge is limited while imagination embraces the world"
    Albert Einstein

  • #2
    Thank you for this information...
    Here, in Mozambique, the gov has decided to launch its "revolução verde" (green revolution), just 1 year ago...
    40 years ago you said? old idea in a country, new idea in another one...
    Actually, the concerns around here are about Chineses buying lands rather than Arabian fellows.

    I am going to print your post (hum... without forum´s logo...) and discuss about the article with some colleagues at the min of agric.
    Thanks!
    a froggy, lost in translation and in Africa... and no, I am not the one on the pic swinging a club ... I am the one holding the pin !!!

    Comment


    • #3
      When I look at farm land prices in Thailand today, it is clear the prices are way higher than what the land can ever return from growing crops on it. Selling land makes sense because the seller is getting more profit from selling than he ever will farming it. This is a huge win for the seller and for Thailand. Consider that the money is pouring in from abroad in sums a Thai person wouldn't pay anyway is a boon for the economy. Secondly, the owner of all such land is still and always will be a Thai person. Leases expire. The land will be absorbed back into local hands in due time. And let's not forget Thai's have a long history of illegaly encroaching on government lands and they will continue to do that anyway. Good article and a pleasant read coming from a Thai author, scape goat is right.

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      • #4
        The jist of the first post is true, the Arabs , Japs, Koreans especially are buying up large tracts of arable land all over the world. I didnt know Thailand was a target but its no surprise.

        Comment


        • #5
          (Tomcat @ Aug. 14 2009,15:16) I didnt know Thailand was a target but its no surprise.
          Largely it's not - as the land ownership laws prevent this and recently the government has tightened them up so foreign ownership is almost totally excluded now.

          But don't kid yourselves - most of the farm land is owned by large land owners not small farmers.
          Quite a lot of this land is tennanted under a system similar to the old copy hold right of tenure that used to be widespread in England before the land reforms of the 1920's Copyhold

          Something that no government in Thailand has yet seriously tackled is a reform of the land laws - I wonder why?

          RR.
          Pedants rule, OK. Or more precisely, exhibit certain of the conventional trappings of leadership.

          "I love the smell of ladyboy in the morning."
          Kahuna

          Comment


          • #6
            seems the other way around now since the 20's in uk. i live in the west country, if a farmer wants to build his daughter a house in a beautiful valley they will!! pay of the local council no worries''

            Comment



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