[Background / related]
The Vietnamization of Kampuchea: A New Model of Colonialism (Indochina Report, October 1984)
Part
II: Vietnamization of the Economic Framework (continued)
The
Unequal Exchange
...
Cambodia asks China to speed up $300 million rice loan
Reuters | 26 September 2016
PHNOM
PENH, Sept 26 (Reuters) - Cambodia asked China on Monday to speed up a $300
million loan to help Cambodia's rice sector that has been hurt by plummeting
prices amid fierce global competition.
Deputy
Prime Minister Hor Namhong told China's ambassador to Cambodia, Xiong Bo,
during a meeting on Monday that Cambodia urgently needed the funds which it
first asked for last year.
China
has drawn Cambodia into a closer military and diplomatic relationship in recent
years as part of its efforts to quell regional opposition to its sea
territorial claims in Asia, deepening China's already close ties to Cambodia
Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Rice farmers in Cambodia
have had a hard time competition with other Southeast Asian rice exporters such
as Thailand and Vietnam because of expensive transport and higher electricity
prices. The lack of overseas demand has pushed prices lower to around $193 per
tonne from around $250 in August.
"The
Cambodian people are facing a crisis of rice prices which fell rapidly,"
said Namhong, adding that he had also asked China to make good on its pledge to
buy 300,000 tonnes of Cambodian rice annually.
"I
asked the Chinese ambassador to report this to the Chinese government to hurry
up to buy rice as China had promised to help our farmers," he said.
China's
embassy in Phnom Penh did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for
comment.
Kann
Kunthy, chief executive of rice miller Battambang Rice Investment Co, said that
the falling rice prices were a global trend and that Cambodia faces fierce
international competition.
"There
have been no orders from abroad so millers couldn't buy rice from
farmers," he said. "Farmers are seriously affected."
Cambodia
exported 530,000 tonnes of rice last year, well below its target of 1 million
tonnes, partly because of drought but also due to a global supply glut.
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