http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/KG31Ae04.html

Jul 31, 2009


Farmers forgotten in oil-for-food deals 
By Brian McCartan 

BANGKOK - Southeast Asian countries took big steps towards formalizing 
food-for-oil deals with Gulf states at a June meeting between the Association 
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). 

Proponents of the deals cite the benefits of more foreign investment for the 
region's often backward agricultural industries, but the lack of transparency 
surrounding the investments is raising concerns about their ultimate economic 
impact. 

A meeting in Bahrain on June 30 was notably the first between ASEAN and GCC 
foreign ministers, signaling growing trade ties between the regions. ASEAN 
secretary general and former Thai foreign minister Surin Pitsuwan summed up the 
commercial outlook of those attending at a press conference following the 
gathering. "You have what we don't have, and we have plenty of what you don't 
have, so we need each other." 

ASEAN is composed of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the 
Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Growing population and economic 
pressures on land and water contributed to the 2007-2008 global food crisis, 
which saw prices spiral and already impoverished global populations go hungry. 
That prompted several food-producing nations to restrict exports of certain 
staples and caused governments everywhere to rethink their food security 
policies. 

The food price scare, which has for now receded with falling commodity prices 
dragged down by the global economic crisis, has pushed many oil-rich and 
food-poor Gulf states to seek long-term lease rights to overseas farmlands. 

Gulf states, which last year imported 80% of their staple foods at a cost of 
US$20 billion, have shown an increasing interest in Southeast Asian farmland. 
China, which in recent years has leased large tracts of regional land to grow 
rubber and crops for biofuels, is also seeking land to feed its rapidly 
urbanizing population. South Korea, with one of the world's highest population 
densities, and India, the second-most populous country, are both challenged by 
shrinking agricultural areas and are also in the hunt. 

The deals brokered so far have been substantial. According to an October 2008 
briefing paper by GRAIN, a Spain-based grassroots organization that promotes 
sustainable agriculture, Cambodia had at that time as much as US$3 billion in 
agriculture-related foreign investment under negotiation, apparently involving 
millions of hectares of land. 

Agreements signed or under consideration included a $546 million loan from 
Kuwait for agricultural projects, a $200 million venture with Qatar, the lease 
of 1.6 million hectares to Saudi Arabia, a similar lease arrangement for 1.2 
million hectares to China and another for 20,000 hectares to South Korea. 

In the Philippines, Saudi Arabia announced it would allocate $238.6 million to 
establish fruit plantations and support aquaculture and halal food processing 
projects. Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo opened talks with Qatar 
in December to lease around 100,000 hectares of agricultural land. 

Bahrain agreed in March to set up a $500 million joint agri-business venture 
and around 10,000 hectares have already been allocated to grow rice, corn, 
sugarcane, pineapple and various vegetables. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has 
been granted 3,000 hectares for agriculture projects. A South Korean company 
was granted a 25-year lease in April for 94,000 hectares of farmland on Mindoro 
Island for growing feed corn. 

An additional 1.5 million hectares is to be made available to foreign and 
domestic investors for agricultural projects, the Philippine Department of 
Agriculture announced on May 7. 

In Indonesia, China has paid for the rights to 1.24 million hectares of land. 
That lags only Saudi Arabia's agricultural investments, which encompass 1.6 
million hectares across the country. A planned $4.3 billion investment in rice 
production on 500,000 hectares by the Bin Laden Group of Saudi Arabia was 
recently put on hold for undisclosed reasons. 

Even political pariah and agricultural laggard Myanmar is in on the Gulf 
action. Chinese companies are investing in contract farming of rice for export 
in the country's northern regions. In September 2008, Myanmar's ruling generals 
signed a deal with New Delhi to produce pulses exclusively for export to India. 
Kuwaiti officials visited Myanmar in September last year to finalize an 
agreement to produce rice and palm oil on a contract farming basis. 

Estimates of land leased to foreigners in Laos now runs as high as 15% of total 
viable agricultural land - although some non-governmental workers dispute that 
figure as excessively high. GRAIN's figures in 2009 indicate that China has 
leased some 70,000 hectares in Laos for food, rubber and biofuel crops. Kuwaiti 
firms were reported by the Vientiane Times earlier this year to be interested 
in investing in rice and agarwood production. 

Thailand and Vietnam, the world's two leading rice exporters, have also cut 
Gulf state deals. A big Thai exporter signed a memorandum of understanding in 
2008 with Bahrain to secure rice supplies for the next two years. Earlier this 
month, Thai ambassador Suphat Chitranukroh told the Bahrain-based Gulf Daily 
News that Bahrain had been selected as a hub for the distribution of Thai food 
across the Gulf, with plans to build a Thai food distribution center in the 
country. 

Meanwhile, Vietnam agreed in September 2008 to establish a $1 billion 
investment fund in cooperation with Qatar, funds from which will be earmarked 
for investment in food production for export. Talks held with Saudi Arabia in 
June were aimed at exchanging food for energy supplies. 

Capital-starved lands
Proponents of the deals say they could help capital-starved Southeast Asian 
countries faster develop their often backward agriculture industries and in the 
process bridge the yawning wealth gap between urban and rural areas. They say 
rural-focused investments will result in more jobs, better infrastructure and 
improvements in agricultural techniques and technology. Foreign funds could 
also provide much-needed capital for small farmers, particularly as they face 
funding difficulties amid the current global credit crunch. 

Cambodia has said it hopes foreign investment will improve its average rice 
yields from 2.5 tonnes per hectare to levels comparable to neighboring 
Thailand's 3.5 tonnes. The government is also eager to increase rice exports, 
which lag due to quality control problems caused by a shortage of storage and 
milling facilities. The Philippines says it expects an agreement with Bahrain 
will create 20,000 new jobs on the impoverished and insurgency-prone southern 
island of Mindanao. 

At the same time, activists and food-security experts express concerns about 
the lack of transparency surrounding deals cut between Southeast Asian 
governments and their Gulf area suitors. Details of land areas, locations, 
lengths of leases and amounts invested have been scant in government 
statements, and news reports on the deals often present contradictory 
information. That, they venture, could open the way for abuse and corruption. 

Jacques Diouf, the head of the United Nation's Food and Agriculture 
Organization (FAO), warned in August that a new kind of "neo-colonialism" could 
emerge from land deals where poor Southeast Asian countries produce food for 
export to rich Gulf states at the expense of their own underfed people. 

Figures for deals brokered between Cambodia, Kuwait and Qatar, which media 
reports indicate could involve hundreds of millions of dollars, have not been 
publicly disclosed. Despite a string of prime ministerial visits and the 
official announcement last year of a $546 million loan for an agricultural 
land-related deal between Cambodia and Kuwait, official statements have been 
devoid of exact financial details. 

In Laos, there is widespread suspicion that government officials are lining 
their own pockets from foreign-invested land deals. Many rural Lao are known to 
be upset by the ease with which foreign firms have been able to buy rights to 
farmland long worked by their families. There has been no public debate about 
Lao land deals in the state-dominated media. At least one Lao businessman who 
protested against China-invested rubber plantations mysteriously disappeared in 
2007. 

Loose laws
Land rights throughout the region are largely customary rather than secured 
through legal title deeds. Land entitlement and reform has been slow in coming 
in most Southeast Asian nations. In many villages across the region, land 
ownership is recognized by agrarians and village headmen, but formal legal 
titles provided by the central government are seldom granted. In Vietnam and 
Myanmar, land is formally owned by the state with farmers holding only land-use 
rights. 

Land ownership laws that do exist are often inadequate, with vague language and 
numerous loopholes that are frequently exploited by businessmen and corrupt 
politicians to justify land seizures. In other countries laws are simply 
ignored by local elites and corrupt government officials with links to 
influential agriculture corporations. 

Numerous reports have detailed heavy-handed expropriation in Cambodia and the 
Thai press regularly carries stories of land scandals involving politicians, 
businessmen and high-ranking army and police officers. Land-grabbing in 
Cambodian rural areas is rampant, human-rights groups allege, despite a land 
law that limits economic concessions to less than 10,000 hectares. LICADHO, a 
Cambodia-based rights group, estimated in a May report that over 250,000 people 
in 13 provinces had been adversely affected by land-grabbing and forced 
evictions since 2003. 

British-based rights group Amnesty International said last year that on top of 
those already evicted another 150,000 Cambodians across the country were at 
risk of forced relocation. The Cambodian government's recently brokered and 
opaque deal with Kuwait for farmland in Kampong Thom province has farmers 
concerned that their eviction may be part and parcel of the deal, according to 
rights activists. 

In the Philippines, which has a history of farmer demands for land 
redistribution and agrarian reforms, an agreement with China to lease 1.4 
million hectares of agricultural land worth an estimated $4 billion was 
suspended in 2007 after protests by local farmers' groups, politicians and the 
Roman Catholic Church. Fishing and agricultural groups last month came out in 
opposition to the government's recent deal with Bahrain, calling it "unlawful 
and immoral" at a time when millions of Filipinos are landless. 

In Myanmar, the government often uses the legal justification that the state 
owns all lands to forcibly remove peasants from their land for development 
projects. Human rights groups have for years documented forced relocations of 
whole villages and the seizure of farmland for commercial agriculture projects 
linked to the ruling military junta. Refugees arriving in Thailand have claimed 
that they were forcibly removed from their land to make way for rubber 
plantations, including deals cut with Chinese companies. 

In export-geared Thailand, agribusiness giant Charoen Pokphand Foods (CP) 
signed a deal on June 22 with the Bahrain-based Islamic Bank, al-Salam, to 
jointly invest in agricultural businesses. According to CP Group vice chairman 
Eam Ngamdamronk, "Investment in any project will be supplied by Bahrain, while 
the CP Group will provide knowledge and expertise to support them." The group 
is apparently looking at investment opportunities not only in Thailand but 
throughout the region. 

What troubles activists is that land seized and committed to growing food for 
export may drive up prices in domestic markets and crowd out small farmers. 
Several regional countries, including Myanmar and Laos, receive food aid from 
the World Food Program (WFP) due to chronic agricultural production shortfalls. 

Last year, Cambodia requested $35 million in food aid from the WFP at the same 
time as it was negotiating deals to lease large tracts of farmland to Kuwait 
and Qatar. The Cambodian Center for Study and Development in Agriculture said 
last October that as many as 100,000 Cambodian families suffered from 
insufficient food. 

Food security experts, including the UN's special rapporteur on the Right to 
Food, Olivier de Schutter, have called for a "code of conduct" over land-lease 
deals to better protect host countries and local farmers. At an April 6 forum 
in New York, de Schutter said, "States all too often are led to make such deals 
because they are attracted to immediate rewards. But they should look at the 
long-term consequences." 

The US-based International Food Policy Research Institute has similarly called 
for the creation of a code of conduct to govern commercial relations between 
foreign investors, whether corporate or governmental, and host countries which 
also protects the interests of small farmers and the environment. 

In an April 2009 policy brief, the institute said that such a code of conduct 
should include transparency in negotiations, respect for existing land rights, 
shared benefits, environmental sustainability, adherence to national trade 
policies and strong enforcement mechanisms. Brian McCartan is a Bangkok-based 
freelance journalist. He may be reached at bria...@comcast.net. 

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