The Phnom Penh Post

VN’s Kon Tum reduces poverty

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SA THAY district in the Vietnamese central highlands province of Kon Tum has achieved significan­t results in reducing poverty in recent years through support policies for agricultur­e and business.

The district borders Cambodia and 57 per cent of its population are ethnic groups.

In Sa Nghia commune’s Dak Tang village, for instance, which was establishe­d in 2014, local authoritie­s have helped many people escape poverty.

A Nhum received 500 coffee seedlings and a soft loan of 50 million dong ($2,130) when his seven-member family resettled in the village in 2014.

He bought fertiliser­s for the coffee plants and a calf for breeding cattle. He now has 1.9ha of coffee and four heads of cattle. He also intercrops soft bolly gum in his coffee farm.

His family has escaped poverty.

The district has many disadvanta­ges such as poor transport conditions and unfertile soil.

Nearly 84 per cent of the district area is forest, according to the district People’s Committee.

Rubber is one of its key agricultur­al products.

It has taught farming techniques to farmers to improve the latex yield and find outlets for it in the context of

declining prices in recent years.

A Thiuh of Sa Binh commune’s Khuc Na village said his family used to be poor and local authoritie­s helped his family grow 2ha of rubber under a provincial project to develop smallholde­r rubber farms.

“My family has had a steady income from rubber for the past four years.”

His family earns between 500,000 and 800,000 dong per day in the rubber latex harvest season, he said.

The district has provided more than two billion dong in loans under the project to more than 400 households since 2012.

The district Women’s Union has tried many models to help its members carry on production and business, helping many escape poverty.

One of them involves members saving money and using the savings to lend to poor members to carry on farming or do business to escape poverty.

‘Participat­ing in the model’

Le Thi Ngoc Giau of Sa Thay town’s Village 5 received a loan of 3.8 million dong under the model for breeding chickens last year.

She has paid back the loan and earned profits.

“Participat­ing in the model helped me improve my family’s life and alleviate poverty,” she said.

Nearly 6,000 members have taken part, mobilising savings of more than 2.6 billion dong, according

Union.

The union has 8,177 members and more than half of them are ethnic people.

To reduce poverty sustainabl­y, the district has taught agricultur­al workers vocational skills and techniques to grow crops and raise livestock, according to the district’s Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs Bureau.

The district has also prioritise­d providing soft loans to poor people and publicisin­g its support policies to improve public awareness of them.

Dang Ngoc Tho, head of the district’s Ethnic Minority Affairs Bureau, said the policies had helped significan­tly improve the lives of people, especially that of ethnic minorities.

“The greatest success in reducing poverty is that people have changed their mindset and no longer rely on nature for their agricultur­e.”

“People know how to apply modern farming and husbandry techniques to improve output, choose plants and animals with a high value,” he added.

The district’s poverty rate fell from 32.8 per cent in 2016 to 20.6 per cent at the end of last year when it had 2,636 poor households.

The district plans to reduce the rate to 10 per cent next year. to the Women’s

 ?? BAO DAU THAU ?? Kon Tum province’s Sa Thay district in Vietnam has achieved significan­t results in reducing poverty in recent years.
BAO DAU THAU Kon Tum province’s Sa Thay district in Vietnam has achieved significan­t results in reducing poverty in recent years.

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