Empowering Women in Cambodia’s Farming Sector
Some 75 percent of Cambodia’s women are employed in agriculture, according to the World Bank.
A
Cambodian woman harvests rice in Battambang province, about 325
kilometers (200 miles) northwest of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, file photo.
VOA Khmer | 12 March 2016
“We don’t want women to loiter around with nothing to do [sic!],”
PHNOM PENH—Cambodian women play an
important role in the agricultural sector, especially as the nation’s
economic conditions continue to force many men to seek work overseas,
according to experts.
Some 75 percent of Cambodia’s women are employed in agriculture, according to the World Bank. [And 100% employed in the markets. And another 80% in the garment industry. Where are the men????]
Ty Ratana, a program coordinator at nongovernmental organization Life With Dignity, said that when women engage more with agricultural sector, the need for migration is curbed, household debt is reduced and productivity increases.
“If we look closely, women contribute a lot in the agricultural sector,” Ratana said. “When their husbands go overseas to find work, the farming responsibility falls on them.”
In late 2015, the Cambodian government set out policies embedding gender in the agricultural sector, with the aim of improving the circumstances of women in rural areas, as well as pushing more women to engage in the sector.
Mom Thany, an undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, acknowledged women’s important role in the agricultural sector, from production to processing of produce, to its sale at market.
However, Thany said, while the government and NGOs would provide support, women farmers should try harder to improve themselves and be more courageous in raising issues in the community.
“Firstly, they need to learn new farming techniques, how to adapt to climate change, and so on,” Thany said. “They also need to be open to knowledge and help share knowledge with other women in their community. This means that women should help themselves first.”
The government, in cooperation with NGOs, has recently organized the first-ever National Champion Woman Farmer forum, an event in which 100 outstanding farmers were selected from 24 cities and provinces to participate in discussions about the issues affecting women in rural areas.
Dem Sreylim, 29, one of the champion farmers from Battambang province, said the agricultural sector could not function without women, who manage output, find markets for goods and conduct negotiations.
“They are important partners in farming,” she said. “They help provide income for the stability of their family’s livelihood. They can be a good model for the next generation as well as for other women in the community.”
Leang Sangeam, another farmer from Preah Vihear province, said that women’s participation in farming could improve a family’s earnings so that family members do not have to take the risks associated with traveling abroad for work.
“We don’t want women to loiter around with nothing to do [sic!],” Sangeam said. “We need to know clearly about agriculture. If they can farm and work together well, there’s no need to migrate to find work overseas. I don’t want to see people having to leave behind their children to be looked after while they migrate to work overseas.”
Ty Ratana, a program coordinator at nongovernmental organization Life With Dignity, said that when women engage more with agricultural sector, the need for migration is curbed, household debt is reduced and productivity increases.
“If we look closely, women contribute a lot in the agricultural sector,” Ratana said. “When their husbands go overseas to find work, the farming responsibility falls on them.”
In late 2015, the Cambodian government set out policies embedding gender in the agricultural sector, with the aim of improving the circumstances of women in rural areas, as well as pushing more women to engage in the sector.
Mom Thany, an undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, acknowledged women’s important role in the agricultural sector, from production to processing of produce, to its sale at market.
However, Thany said, while the government and NGOs would provide support, women farmers should try harder to improve themselves and be more courageous in raising issues in the community.
“Firstly, they need to learn new farming techniques, how to adapt to climate change, and so on,” Thany said. “They also need to be open to knowledge and help share knowledge with other women in their community. This means that women should help themselves first.”
The government, in cooperation with NGOs, has recently organized the first-ever National Champion Woman Farmer forum, an event in which 100 outstanding farmers were selected from 24 cities and provinces to participate in discussions about the issues affecting women in rural areas.
Dem Sreylim, 29, one of the champion farmers from Battambang province, said the agricultural sector could not function without women, who manage output, find markets for goods and conduct negotiations.
“They are important partners in farming,” she said. “They help provide income for the stability of their family’s livelihood. They can be a good model for the next generation as well as for other women in the community.”
Leang Sangeam, another farmer from Preah Vihear province, said that women’s participation in farming could improve a family’s earnings so that family members do not have to take the risks associated with traveling abroad for work.
“We don’t want women to loiter around with nothing to do [sic!],” Sangeam said. “We need to know clearly about agriculture. If they can farm and work together well, there’s no need to migrate to find work overseas. I don’t want to see people having to leave behind their children to be looked after while they migrate to work overseas.”
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