Farmers sell
agricultural land en masse
VietNamNet Bridge
- For most farmers, land is considered property and the major means of
production. Yet recently, many farmers in the
A
farmer in Nhon Nghia commune, Chau Thanh A district, Hau Giang province,
offers land for sale. Photo: TN
In the rural areas in Can Tho City
and the provinces of Hau Giang, Dong Thap, Vinh Long ... occasionally one
will see fields, gardens and fish ponds with the offer-for-sale boards.
Mrs. Truong Thi Le, a resident of
Nhon Nghia A commune, Chau Thanh A district, Hau Giang province, said her
family has 5,000sq.m of land, located along Highway 61B. However, the field
yielded low productivity while the price of rice significantly reduced,
profit was not much. "My family planted rice for tens of years but we
were still poor. So my whole family agreed to sell off land to settle some
family issues and to transfer to other jobs," Le said.
Mr. Huynh Van Diep in Truong Long A
commune, Chau Thanh A district, Hau Giang province, said: "My family had
only 2,000sq.m of fields. We were needy all the year round. In the past
several years I was sick and had to go to
According to Truong Long A commune
authorities, the price for farmland has fell from VND90-100 million
($4,000-$4,500)/1,000sq.m to VND60-VND70 million but it is very difficult to
sell. The fall of land price is due to low profit from rice.
Many fish farmers also sold their
ponds. Some farmers in Soc Trang and Tra Vinh provinces said when the price
of shrimp was high, the price for land was also high and people struggled to
buy more land. However, from 2012, because of shrimp disease, many shrimp
breeders have become big debtors and some of them had to sell their pond.
The price for shrimp ponds has
dropped to VND40-50 million/1,000sq.m but many farmers cannot sell. The
catfish farmers also fall into the same tragic situation.
Mr. Vo Van De in Thuan An ward, Thot
Not district in Can Tho city, said bitterly: "Catfish prices have fallen
for more than two years, causing big debts for breeders. Nearly 80 percent of
catfish breeding households in Thot Not have quit this job and offered their
ponds for sale, at the price of only VND100 million ($5,000)/1,000sq.m, a
half reduction over the last six years," De said.
Urgent issue
The relevant bodies in the Mekong
Delta slowed their worry over the land selling movement in the Mekong Delta.
Mr. Vo Hoang Vu in Binh Thoi commune,
Binh Dai district, Ben Tre province said that shrimp breeding is highly risky
now. Besides diseases, the fluctuation of shrimp prices can push farmers into
a loss situation at any time. The challenge now is that banks restrict loans
to shrimp farmers while animal feed traders do not allow customers to short
charge. If shrimps die, farmers will immediately have to sell land to settle
debts.
According to the Department of
Agriculture and Rural Development of Soc Trang Province, at present the local
farmers have released breeding shrimps to nearly 18,000 hectares, equivalent
to 40 percent compared with the plan. More than 20,000 hectares of ponds are
left fallowed because of raging epidemics and lack of capital.
Mr. Le Chi Binh, vice president of
the Aquaculture and Seafood Processing Association of An Giang province, said:
"Farmers cannot continue breeding catfish because of being out of
capital and low price of fish. Meanwhile, fish ponds are very deep so it is
difficult to turn them into fields again. A lot of ponds are unused, causing
huge waste."
According to experts, to raise the
value of land again and reduce rampant trade of land, restoring production
efficiency is an imperative issue in the Mekong Delta.
Na Son
|
Thứ Hai, 8 tháng 7, 2013
Mekong Delta:
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