The Phnom Penh Post

Small-scale farmers will suffer under draft ag law: advocates

- Soth Koemsoeun

FARMERS and agricultur­al NGOs slammed the seventh and final draft of a controvers­ial agricultur­al law at a workshop in Phnom Penh yesterday, claiming that the law would benefit large corporatio­ns at the expense of small farmers if passed.

Thirty farmers who say they represent 5,000 colleagues across two dozen provinces travelled to the workshop at the Germany-Cambodia Friendship Center in Phnom Penh yesterday to demand the government drop its efforts to pass the law.

The law has been hotly debated since 2011, when the Ministry of Agricultur­e first revealed it.

As written, the draft law would empower the ministry to direct the types and numbers of crops farmers can grow, impose heavy fines on farmers for damaging the environmen­t and seize agricultur­al land that they deem is being underused.

Nhil Pheap, a representa­tive of a farmer network in Takeo province, said the law also makes it easier for the government to offer land to private companies.

“The forests, coasts and lakes, which are for people . . . [the government] will declare as barren land and offer it to companies,” Pheap said.

Yos Sophoan, a representa­tive of farmers in Svay Rieng province, said the law puts huge financial and time burdens on small-scale farmers who will be required to register their land and farming techniques with the ministry.

“They would need to spend a lot of time for the registrati­on, and they do not have much knowledge about that,” Sophoan said.

Farmers said their greatest concern is the heavy fines – $2,500 to $5,000 for individual­s or entities who damage the land or water while clearing the land or using pesticides, or for using falsified documents to obtain land.

Hean Vanhorn, general director of the General Agricultur­e Department at the Ministry of Agricultur­e, denied that the law would negatively affect farmers and said that some NGOs had turned people against the ministry.

“No one created the law to hurt the people,” Vanhorn said. “They only made the law to boost the people’s standard of living, but some NGOs often cause conflict again and again.”

According to Vanhorn, the ministry hoped to pass the law by the end of the year but may delay until next year.

 ??  ?? Farmers and agricultur­al NGO representa­tives speak on the controvers­ial agricultur­al law at a workshop yesterday in Phnom Penh.
Farmers and agricultur­al NGO representa­tives speak on the controvers­ial agricultur­al law at a workshop yesterday in Phnom Penh.

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