For Laos, Chinese Banana Boom a Blessing and Curse

For Laos, Chinese Banana Boom a Blessing and Curse

Workers wash bananas in a packing line inside a banana plantation operated by a Chinese company.

Kongkaew Vonusak, who rents his land to a Chinese banana.

Co-owner of the Lei Lin banana plantation sits outside his house.

On Keo Wa, 25, carries her 9-month-old baby while working at a banana plantation.

Worker pauses while harvesting bananas at a banana plantation.

BOKEO, Laos — Kongkaew Vonusak smiles when he recalls the arrival of Chinese investors in his tranquil village in northern Laos in 2014. With them came easy money, he said.

The Chinese offered villagers up to US$720 per hectare to rent their land, much of it fallow for years, said Kongkaew, 59, the village chief. They wanted to grow bananas on it.

In impoverished Laos, the offer was generous. “They told us the price and asked us if we were happy. We said okay.”

Elsewhere, riverside land with good access roads fetched at least double that sum.

Three years later, the Chinese-driven banana boom has left few locals untouched, but not everyone is smiling.

Experts say the Chinese have brought jobs and higher wages to northern Laos, but have also drenched plantations with pesticides and other chemicals.

Last year, the Lao government banned the opening of new banana plantations after a state-backed institute reported that the intensive use of chemicals had sickened workers and polluted water sources.

China has extolled the benefits of its vision of a modern-day “Silk Road” linking it to the rest of the world—it held a major summit in Beijing on May 14-15 to promote it.

The banana boom pre-dated the concept, which was announced in 2013, although China now regards agricultural developments in Laos as among the initiative’s projects.

Under the “Belt and Road” plan, China has sought to persuade neighbors to open their markets to Chinese investors. For villagers like Kongkaew, that meant a trade-off.

“Chinese investment has given us a better quality of life. We eat better, we live better,” Kongkaew said.

But neither he nor his neighbors will work on the plantations, or venture near them during spraying. They have stopped fishing in the nearby river, fearing it is polluted by chemical run-off from the nearby banana plantation.

… / …

Chinese Frustration

Several Chinese plantation owners and managers expressed frustration at the government ban, which forbids them from growing bananas after their leases expire.

They said the use of chemicals was necessary, and disagreed that workers were falling ill because of them.

“If you want to farm, you have to use fertilizers and pesticides,” said Wu Yaqiang, a site manager at a plantation owned by Jiangong Agriculture, one of the largest Chinese banana growers in Laos.

“If we don’t come here to develop, this place would just be bare mountains,” he added, as he watched workers carrying 30-kilogram bunches of bananas up steep hillsides to a rudimentary packing station.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said he was not aware of the specific issues surrounding Chinese banana growers in Laos, and did not believe they should be linked directly to the Belt and Road initiative.

“In principle we always require Chinese companies, when investing and operating abroad, to comply with local laws and regulations, fulfill their social responsibility and protect the local environment,” he told a regular briefing on Thursday.

Laos’ Ministry of Agriculture did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment for this article.

China is the biggest foreign investor in Laos, a landlocked country of 6.5 million people, with over 760 projects valued at about $6.7 billion, according to Chinese state-run media.

This influence is not only keenly felt in the capital Vientiane, where Chinese build shopping complexes and run some of the city’s fanciest hotels. It also extends deep into rural areas that have remained largely unchanged for decades.

Banana Rush

Lao people say Chinese banana investors began streaming across the border around 2010, driven by land shortages at home. Many headed to Bokeo, the country’s smallest and least populous province.

In the ensuing years, Lao banana exports jumped ten-fold to become the country’s largest export earner. Nearly all of the fruit is sent to China.

For ethnic Lao like Kongkaew, Chinese planters paid them more for the land than they could earn from farming it.

For impoverished, hill-dwelling minorities such as the Hmong or Khmu, the banana rush meant better wages.

At harvest time, they can earn the equivalent of at least $10 a day and sometimes double that, a princely sum in a country where the average annual income was $1,740 in 2015, according to the World Bank. They are also most exposed to the chemicals.

Most Chinese planters grow the Cavendish variety of banana, which is favored by consumers but susceptible to disease.

Hmong and Khmu workers douse the growing plants with pesticides and kill weeds with herbicides such as paraquat. Paraquat is banned by the European Union and other countries including Laos, and it has been phased out in China.

The bananas are also dunked in fungicides to preserve them for their journey to China.

Switching Crops

Some banana workers grow weak and thin or develop rashes, said Phonesai Manivongxai, director of the Community Association for Mobilizing Knowledge in Development (CAMKID), a non-profit group based in northern Laos.

Part of CAMKID’s work includes educating workers about the dangers of chemical use. “All we can do is make them more aware,” she said.

This is an uphill struggle. Most pesticides come from China or Thailand and bear instructions and warnings in those countries’ languages, Reuters learned. Even if the labeling was Lao, some Hmong and Khmu are illiterate and can’t understand it.

Another problem, said Phonesai, was that workers lived in close proximity to the chemicals, which contaminated the water they wash in or drink.

In a Lao market, Reuters found Thai-made paraquat openly on sale.

However, some workers Reuters spoke to said they accepted the trade-off. While they were concerned about chemicals, higher wages allowed them to send children to school or afford better food.

There is no guarantee the government’s crackdown on pesticide use in banana production will lead to potentially harmful chemicals being phased out altogether.

As banana prices fell following a surge in output, some Chinese investors began to plant other crops on the land, including chemically intensive ones like watermelon.

Zhang Jianjun, 46, co-owner of the Lei Lin banana plantation, estimated that as much as 20 percent of Bokeo’s banana plantations had been cleared, and said some of his competitors had decamped to Burma and Cambodia.

But he has no plans to leave. The environmental impact on Laos was a “road that every underdeveloped country must walk” and local people should thank the Chinese, he said.

“They don’t think, ‘Why have our lives improved?’ They think it’s something that heaven has given them, that life just naturally gets better.”

By Reuters 16 May 2017 – Photos : Jorge Silva/ Reuters

 

For Laos, Chinese Banana Boom a Blessing and Curse

Arakan Communities Demand Support to Halt Mangrove Loss

KAN NGU VILLAGE, Arakan State – Until fairly recently, the residents of Kan Ngu, a coastal village in southern Arakan State, had considered the mangroves in their area simply as another source of firewood and paid little attention to the shrinking forest.

“The locals did not carry out mangrove conservation in the past and cut it down without permission,” recalled Kyaw Win, a 62-year-old former fisherman and village leader.

But then, a few years ago, international aid groups began to implement community projects that raised awareness of the mangroves’ important role in protecting the coastal environment and local attitudes quickly changed, he said.“The locals now understand the impacts of mangrove deforestation and they no longer destroy the forest,” Kyaw Win said. “These mangrove forests are our benefactor, they are the habitat of fish, prawns and crabs. And we can earn money from catching these animals.” He added the he and other villagers had set up a local committee to conserve the mangrove ecosystem.

Mangroves are not only an important habitat, but also help protect the coastal environment against land erosion and floods caused by storms and occasional cyclones that lash the Arakan coast during rainy season.

… / …

The Kan Ngu Village committee is one of dozens that have been created in communities in southern Arakan in recent years with the help of the Livelihoods and Food Security Trust Fund (LIFT). This poverty reduction donor fund supported by 12 governments launched the CLEARR project in the area in 2011 to help mangrove rehabilitation and provide agricultural and livelihood support.

Mangroves have been disappearing all along Burma’s coast, mostly due to human pressures, with an estimated loss of half of the 1.6 million acres of forest between 1980 and 2007, according to Maung Maung Kyi, a co-founder of the Arakan Coastal Region Conservation Association.

Community projects appear to have stemmed the loss of mangrove forests in southern Arakan State. (Htet Khaung Linn / Myanmar Now)

The densely populated Irrawaddy Delta suffered the biggest losses and only a fraction of the mangroves remain, but in southern Arakan, conservation and reforestation efforts by local communities are starting to take root.

Maung Maung Kyi said the local committees helped restore some 12,000 acres of mangrove in Gwa Township, 30,000 acres in Thandwe Township and 65,000 acres in Taungup Township in recent years.

“Compared to other areas, mangrove forests in Arakan remain strong. Some of the most diverse and rare species of mangrove forests in Southeast Asia are still found there,” he said.

Okkar, an officer at the Thandwe Township Forest Department, agreed that the tide could now be turning for mangrove ecosystems in southern Arakan State. “Mangrove reforestation has expanded thanks to the locals. It is a good trend,” he said.

In Kan Ngu, the Mangrove Conservation Group restored some 500 acres of forest. However, Kyaw Win and other local environmentalists said the mangroves continue to be threatened and warn that a lack of active government support is causing the community initiatives to lose steam.

Kyaw Win said the biggest threat to the mangroves comes from roving groups of migrating workers and loggers from the Irrawaddy Region. They have been cutting down southern Arakan’s mangroves since around 2009 to turn them into charcoal for sale in towns and cities.

“These commercial [charcoal] producers take out both small and big mangrove plants, and do illegal logging by motorboat,” he said. “They are still doing this business here as the authorities are turning a blind eye… We are angry about their actions as we have reforested these mangroves.”

Kyaw Win and another activist, Than Win from the Gwa Township Mangrove Conservation Committee, both recounted separate incidents in their villages during which residents apprehended loggers and handed them over to authorities, who then failed to act.

“We arrested the people who illegally cut the community mangroves last year and handed them over to the township forestry department and forest police. But they released them, as well as their tools, just after we left,” said Than Win.

Okkar, the Forest Department officer, claimed the authorities could take no legal action against the loggers as mangroves, including those being conserved by the communities, often lack official protected status.

“The authorities are preparing to turn these mangrove forests into protected areas as a measure to prevent deforestation,” he said, without offering details on how long it would take for the plans to be implemented.

Kyaw Win said villagers had contacted their state parliamentarians and appealed to Forest Department officials during public workshops, but there had been no reaction from authorities.

He said many locals had now “lost their enthusiasm” for protecting the mangroves because of a lack of government support, while villagers had increasingly come into conflict with the loggers, who continue to clear mangroves without government interference.

“The Forestry Department staff [approach] only fosters conflict between locals and loggers. We suggest that senior government officials end these practices,” Kyaw Win said.

Maung Maung Kyi, of the Arakan Coastal Region Conservation Association, agreed more should be done from the government side to ensure better mangrove conservation. “The government needs to protect these forests from commercial activities and it should promote fuel substitution technologies” to replace charcoal making, he said.

By Htet Khaung Lynn 13 May 2017

For Laos, Chinese Banana Boom a Blessing and Curse

Ten Things to do in Rangoon This Week

Film français programmé en mai 2017 à Rangoon

Myanmar Guitar Festival

Myanmar Guitar Festival

The second Myanmar Guitar Festival will feature more than a dozen guitarists, plus songs by J Maung Maung, R Zarni and Kaung Hset.

UnderDawg Festival

This festival will feature world famous artists such as CL (2NE1), Nelly, Soulja Boy and many more. Tickets run from US$25 to $240.

Virtual Reality Art Festival Yangon 2017

Kids Day of the Virtual Reality (VR) Art Festival will be held on Friday from 10:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. for youth interested in VR creative content, screenings, talks and a VR Hackathon.

Hip-Hop Music Show

Many third-generation hip-hop musicians will perform. Tickets are 7,000 kyats at The Corner Bar (Sanchaung), Dream Clothing (Junction Square and Hledan Centre) and RUNYGN Clothing (Aung San Stadium and Yuzana Plaza).

My French Film

A collaboration between the Institut Français de Birmanie and Mingalar Cinemas, My French Film is a monthly programming of the best of French movies in one of Rangoon’s cinemas. One film per month is screened every Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at Mingalar Cinema.

Exhibition and Fundraiser

StoreFront Yangon is organizing its first photography exhibition at Pansuriya Gallery, and features photos from Rangoon, New Delhi in India, and Mae Sot in Thailand. The project showcases the diversity of storefront designs, and also serves as a fundraiser to support street children in the commercial capital. All photographs on display are also for sale, with proceeds going to SONNE Social Organization.

Tuesday Snippets

Every Tuesday evening, Pansodan opens its gallery space for a gathering, where all sorts of people enjoy conversation and beverages until the wee hours of the morning. Guitars generally come out after midnight.

Infected Poison

Artist Ko Ye portrays his feelings about current political, economic and social issues in Burma in 21 acrylic paintings.

Wild Eye

A group exhibition of more than 30 artists will feature paintings, sculptures, an art installation, and performance and video acts.

A Fight to Control Chainsaws in Burma

A Fight to Control Chainsaws in Burma

SAGAING, Burma — Pyar Aung still remembers the first time he saw a chainsaw. It was a German-made number being used by one of the logging companies operating in the forest around his remote village in Burma’s northwest Sagaing Division in 2013.
“It was so powerful and fast!” recalls 50-year-old Aung, who lives in the tiny village of Mahu. It wasn’t until August 2016 that he got one himself, and today he owns three.
Each cost him around US$124, though cheaper versions can be purchased in urban centers for about 7 times less. In spite of the law, he said he was never asked to show paperwork to buy the chainsaws, nor were any of his fellow villagers.
The claim is surprising given the fact that logging is practically a cottage industry in his community. Among 37 households they own 70 chainsaws. On a recent visit there, they also said they weren’t aware of the fairly new regulation implemented in 2016 that requires them to register their chainsaws with Burma’s Forestry Department.

Altered to an inspection by the Forestry Department, villagers from Mahu take a chainsaw apart to hide parts in different locations in the forest.

A vendor shows a chainsaw hidden behind other commercial products in a hardware shop in Mandalay, Myanmar.

A villager from Mahu cuts down a tree using a midsize chainsaw. A chainsaw can cut down a tree four times faster than an axe and handsaw.

Transporting logs with cows that are usually for farming near Mahu. The porter can usually earn almost US$4 per pair haul with a pair of cows.

A villager from Mahu poses with his chainsaw in front of one other source of meager local income: a mat made of dry bamboo.

For Laos, Chinese Banana Boom a Blessing and Curse

A Brighter Future for Burma’s Juvenile Offenders?

Youth Rehabilitation Center in Kawhmu

RANGOON — As he waits impatiently for his time in custody to end, the first thing 16-year-old Zaw Thein Htike does every morning is count the days.
There are almost four hundred of them left.
“Aug. 1, 2018—that’s my release date,” he says, his words tumbling out all in a rush; there is no danger that he will forget the date fourteen months from now when he is due to leave the Hnget Aw San Youth Rehabilitation Center in Rangoon’s Kawhmu Township, commonly known as the “children’s prison.”
One impulsive mistake less than a year ago changed the boy’s life forever.
It was around 2 a.m. when his cousin came calling and asked him to come out. As the pair rambled the streets, the older boy revealed a plan to steal a motorbike. The pair would split the cash. “I was swayed by the idea of the pocket money he promised to share,” said Zaw Thein Htike.
The boys soon found a bike to take, but the police were quick too. As they approached, the older boy got away while Zaw Thein Htike was caught.
A court sentenced him to two years in a center that’s officially meant to equip him with the tools he needs to start a new life when he leaves.
But that’s going to be a challenge.

Aw san Youth Rehabilitation Center in Kawhmu Township outside Rangoon

Juveniles at the center stay inside their dormitory which houses about 80 boys

Youth come back to their dormitory after taking a bath and wash their clothes

Children wait to begin a meal at the rehabilitation center

A vocational training course teaches residents of the center hair dressing skills

Residents of the center attend woodwork classes

Children take a meal at the rehabilitation center

Children at the rehabilitation center play in their dormitory

Children at Risk.

Burma’s 1993 Child Law states that children under the age of 16 at the time of a conviction and those under 18 years old who need protection (including drug addicts, orphans, and those living on the streets) should be sent to one of 10 youth rehabilitation centers run by the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement.
Three centers are for girls, four are for youths who need protection, and only the remaining three accept young males convicted of crimes.
Hnget Aw San is the largest with around 460 juveniles, while a center in Mandalay has fewer than 300 young people and the smallest in Moulmein (Mawlamyine) has around 100, according to the Kawhmu center’s governor U Kyaw Oo, who is also assistant director at the department of social welfare under the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement
Around 360 youths at Hnget Aw San have been convicted of a crime, while the others are former street children.
All the youths are subject to the same stated broad goals.
“We educate the boys in morals, and we aim to train them to be ready for when they go back into the community,” said U Kyaw Oo.
Most of the young offenders were charged with theft, he said.  Others were convicted of violent behavior, while just a few were sentenced under murder or drug charges.
Snatching or pick-pocketing mobile phones on city streets accounted for the sentences of more than 100 boys, he said.
“At age 14 or 15, they want to own a phone. Their parents are poor and can’t afford one. So the boys steal.’’
Phone theft convictions typically result in sentences of between two months and two years.
“They just don’t have knowledge,” said U Kyaw Oo. “It’s clear when you look at the case load. Children who arrive here come from poor families, they’ve dropped out of school, and they’ve fallen into bad company.”

… / …

Life in an Institution

Juvenile centers were first opened in 1973 under the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement.
Prior to this, youth offenders were sent to prison-like correctional facilities under the Ministry of Home Affairs, where conditions were reportedly very harsh.
Conditions were once very tough at the Kawhmu center, too, according to Ko Chit Ko Lwin, the supervisor of a mental health support program run by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP). Hnget Aw San was “notorious” for pushing children into hard labor and for beatings, he said.

… / …

These days, the gates are open at the 36-acre complex. There are no high fences surrounding the dormitories that each house some 80-100 boys.
The boys are not permitted to leave, by law, but they are not under lock and key.
Until recently, the youths usually had fried rice for breakfast, dhal and fish paste for lunch, and some sort of meat for dinner.
In April, the official daily food allowance for each youth increased from 432 kyats to 1000 kyats as a result of a government increase, and the boys now eat meat twice a day.

… / …

It’s an improvement, but the more ambitious goal of achieving effective rehabilitation and a smooth reintegration into society for the young people is still some distance off.
Most of the boys suffer from anxiety about what the future will hold, said Ko Chit Ko Lwin.
“They worry about how the outside world will view them after they are released. How will they be treated? Will their families love them as before?”
The AAPP started a counseling program for 12 boys aged around 18 years in March, aimed at helping the boys achieve emotional stability and a positive outlook.
Burma’s youth rehabilitation centers are also meant to provide youth who were previously attending school with the option of continuing their educations.
Providing vocational training is the stated main priority for the centers. At the Kawhmu center, vocational training classes in carpentry, masonry, tailoring, electrics, and hair dressing are meant to be on the menu.

… / …

But lately only about two vocational training programs out of a hoped-for 10 have been running, as some have stalled due to a lack of resources for equipment, training tools and trainers, U Kyaw Oo admitted.
“We are still weak in vocational training. We can’t offer it all the time,” he said.
The current offerings are just not sufficient to meet the boys’ needs, Ko Chit Ko Lwin said.
“I really want them to learn more solid skills, so they’re not forced to reoffend when they leave.”
Similar concerns were expressed by Ko Zaw Zaw, a socially-conscious librarian who has opened free community libraries in Rangoon, Mandalay and Irrawaddy divisions and who visited the center last year to give the boys a motivational talk.
Reoffending is still an issue, he said. The boys are taught moral principles but what they really need are strong training programs that gave them solid skills to pursue a decent occupation.
That’s been difficult as a result of the decades-long chronic funding shortages.
Hnget Aw San has just 31 social workers while 47 are needed to take care of the almost 500 juveniles, U Kyaw Oo said. The social workers have also had to pitch in and try and do some of the vocational training, he added.
Despite the challenges, the center gave about 200 children some training last year, according to U Kyaw Oo.
Plans are in motion now for better provision through collaborations with the ministries of education and health and sports as well as other government and non-governmental institutions, the governor said.
Mobile teams supported by the education and industry ministries and others will teach the boys skills in carpentry, masonry, machine working and other trades this year, he said.
The promise was echoed by U Win Myat Aye, minister of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement on a visit to the center last Saturday.

… / …

Uncertain Futures

The new options can’t come too soon for Zaw Thein Htike.
He told The Irrawaddy that he had learnt a little bricklaying and motor cycle maintenance over his eight months at the center.
But the trainings so far didn’t seem to have made much of an impression.
“I think I will just become a motorcycle taxi driver after I’m released,” he said.
“I don’t dream of becoming a shop owner or a doctor—all that became impossible after I dropped out of school.”
But boys at the center can turn their lives around, U Kyaw Oo is keen to say. He tells the story of former center resident Thein Soe, who went on to become a traditional Burmese boxing champion and a member of the “White New Blood” Burmese boxing club.
Thein Soe visits the center every now and again to encourage the boys.
“We only know about the children who had close relationships with us, unfortunately. It is difficult to contact them after they are released as we don’t have follow-up monitoring programs. It would be great if we did,” he said.
Boys who return to troubled families and tough surroundings are more likely to return to a life of crime, he said. One possibly good thing, he added—only a very few boys have returned to the center after their release.

… / …

The issue of juveniles who lose their way is one that concerns everyone, says well-known writer and philanthropist Daw Than Myint Aung who also serves as a member of Yangon City Development Committee.
If children grow up in a good environment—in stable families, with good education and health care services and in a society with the rule of law—they won’t find themselves in contact with the juvenile justice system, she said.
“We need a society which will embrace these kids. If we neglect them, they will fall back into crime.”

By San Yamin Aung 4 May 2017