The Phnom Penh Post

Pesticide-wary vegetable buyers chided by premier

- Yon Sineat

PRIME Minister Hun Sen scolded Cambodians for complainin­g about pesticides contaminat­ing their vegetables during a one-hour speech in Siem Reap yesterday, stating that the solution is simply not to buy contaminat­ed vegetables.

Speaking at the grand opening of the Sokha Hotel in Siem Reap, the premier said that people “choose vegetables that look good and then blame the government”.

“Sometimes I think it’s an extremist request,” he added. “You decide to buy [the vegetables] by yourself and to cook them by yourself – why blame the government?”

Pesticide-contaminat­ed produce is a documented problem in Cambodia and many other Southeast Asian countries. In 2011, researcher­s from Hong Kong and China found high concentrat­ions of harmful pesticides in vegetables and meat in Cambodia.

Cambodia also imports several hundred tonnes of cheap produce from Vietnam and Thailand every day, often under lax regulation­s, according to a 2016 study by the Center for Policy Studies.

“There are no controls or checks to determine whether that produce has chemicals or not,” said Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries official Kean Sophea, who is heading a $20 million project to boost organic farming in Cambodia. According to a study released in March by the Switzerlan­d-based Research Institute of Organic Agricultur­e, just 0.2 percent of the total agricultur­al land in Cambodia is used to grow organic produce.

“We know that is difficult for people to avoid pesticides if they don’t have enough time,” Sophea said.

Claudius Bredehoeft, a Cambodia-based national project coordinato­r for German developmen­t agency GIZ, said the government needs to do more to educate Cambodian farmers about the health consequenc­es of pesticide use.

A 2015 study by officials from the Ministry of Agricultur­e found that virtually all pesticide retailers surveyed were unaware about bans on certain pesticides, and Cambodian farmers often used them liberally without instructio­n or training.

“Sometimes, the labels are written in Vietnamese or Chinese, so the farmer cannot read the instructio­ns even though Cambodian law requires full labelling in Khmer,” he said.

The premier’s comments drew scorn yesterday from some consumers, who said it isn’t easy to distinguis­h which vegetables are safe to eat.

“It’s not just me – other housewives are concerned about the same thing,” said 56-year-old Prak Somean, from Phnom Penh. “It’s not right that the government says it’s not their fault. It’s their responsibi­lity to make sure before they allow imports from other countries.”

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Prime Minister Hun Sen seen at an event yesterday in Siem Reap province.
FACEBOOK Prime Minister Hun Sen seen at an event yesterday in Siem Reap province.

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