Chinese manipulate market in
Vietnam’s dragon fruit hub
A dragon fruit trading
facility that only ships the produce to China is seen in Binh Thuan Province,
located in south-central Vietnam..
The dragon fruit market in
the south-central province of Binh Thuan, home to Vietnam’s largest area of
the delicious tropical fruit, is now fully controlled by Chinese nationals,
who work behind local confidants to manipulate supply and prices.
Many
of the major wholesaling facilities that collect and trade dragon fruit in
Ham Thuan Nam and Ham Thuan Bac Districts are owned and operated by
Vietnamese residents, who follow decisions made by Chinese nationals behind
the scenes.
The
facilities are large enough for several trailer trucks to dock for loading at
one time, and hang big banners that contain both Vietnamese and Chinese
texts.
Binh
Thuan is home to Vietnam’s biggest crops of dragon fruit, a red-skinned fruit
having tasty white flesh, with some 22,000 hectares utilized for its
cultivation.
According
to the provincial police, 12 Chinese nationals have been caught entering the
province and conducting illegal activities, particularly trading dragon
fruit, in the first half of this year.
Police
have booked all twelve cases, levied administrative fines on and informed the
foreigners of their violations.
However,
many Chinese nationals are still manipulating the market. A local official
from the Ham Thuan Nam administration said it was hard to detect if a Chinese
national is behind a facility lawfully registered by a Vietnamese.
“Some
local traders, lured by profit, have leased their licensed facilities to the
Chinese,” he added.
Chinese-only business
On
June 9, a Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper reporter visited the Nga Minh dragon fruit trading facility in Ham
Thuan Nam, requesting shipment of the fruit to the central city of Da Nang.
However,
a Vietnamese manager rejected the order, saying that they only ship the
produce to China.
Two
nearby establishments, Tam Huong and Xuan Thinh, also asserted that they do
not trade the fruit domestically, but export exclusively to China.
The
three facilities are run by Vietnamese employees, but the real owners are a
Chinese father and son, with local names of Phu and Quy.
As
requested by the Chinese owners, the Vietnamese employees use tricks to
source the dragon fruit from local growers at cheap prices.
“They
come in the morning and offer to buy at one price, before returning later
with a much lower price,” said Nguyen Thi Phuoc, a dragon fruit grower who
recently fell victim to the Chinese-employed Vietnamese traders.
Phuoc
said she was forced to accept the lower price, with the fruit already
collected after the traders had made the first bid.
The
traders will normally say the fruit does not look good in order to force
farmers to accept the lower offer.
“If
we refuse to sell, they simply return the following day with an even lower
price, and so on,” she said.
On
June 13, one Tuoi Tre correspondent followed a local
grower to Kien Kien, a facility actually run by Chinese national Luo Zheng
Yun, to experience first-hand how farmers are forced to sell their produce at
a loss.
After
the farmer said he wanted to sell at VND7,000 a kg, the Vietnamese employee
of the facility made a counter-offer of VND6,000 per kg, saying that the
fruit was “of the lowest quality.”
Refusing
that would mean the growers had to take the fruit home and see them rot.
“You
can sell your dragon fruit to no one but the Chinese,” Thanh, a Vietnamese
fruit broker, revealed.
Thanh
used to source the fruit directly from local plantations, but has reluctantly
switched to working for the Chinese.
“Local
brokers could not compete with the Chinese-backed traders,” she said.
Like
Thanh, many other local traders and wholesalers have had to shut down their
own businesses and become employees for the Chinese nationals in their
homeland.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
|
Thứ Hai, 20 tháng 6, 2016
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