Five from China charged over illegal banana plantation in Myanmar protected forest

Radio Free Asia| 20 May 2019

Five from China charged over illegal banana plantation in Myanmar protected forest
 

Medium_myanmar_banana_labor
Myanmar laborers work at a banana market in the commercial city Yangon, Oct. 12, 2015. Photo: AFP

The forestry department of Myanmar’s Kachin state has filed charges against five Chinese nationals and their company manager for allegedly expanding a banana plantation into protected forests, village administrative and police officials said Monday.

The six people from Jinghphaw Nadi Company have been operating the plantations near Aung Myae Thar No. 1 and No. 2 village in Waingmaw township since 2018 and now have expanded their growing areas by more than 300 acres in the two communities.

“The Forestry Department has filed charges against the company for the illegal occupation of the forest reserve area,” said Zaw Bauk, administrator of Aung Myae Thar No. 2 village.

“These foreign nationals were reportedly living in the forest reserve area,” he said.

The company manager was released on bail for health reasons, while the others are being held in the township jail, Zaw Bauk said.

Township police commander Kyaw Soe said the case is under investigation.

“The prosecution process hasn’t started yet,” he told RFA’s Myanmar Service. “We are still checking out the evidence presented by the Waingmaw township Forestry Department.”

RFA could not reach the Jinghphaw Nadi Company for comment.

Area residents have long complained about banana cultivation resulting in losses of farmland, deforestation, the destruction of natural habitats, low wages for laborers, and damage to the social and economic well-being of local people.

Aung Myint, chief of Khauksint village, told RFA in March that residents were very concerned about the impact of pesticides from nearby banana plantations.

“When people passed by the plantations while [workers] were spraying chemicals, they suffered from bleeding and fainting, and some were hospitalized,” he said.

Aye Aye Aung, a farm worker from Dawt Pon Yang subtownship said that despite complaints, local officials had taken no action against plantation operators.

“When we complained to department officials, they said they would look into the matter, but later on we found out that they favored the companies, so they didn’t do anything,” he said.

Efforts to curb plantations

Kyaw Kyaw Win, Kachin state’s minister of agriculture, livestock, and irrigation, told RFA earlier this year that officials have not issued permits for banana plantations and that some companies have been planting the fruit on fallow land and on farmland where fruit trees are allowed to be grown.

At the time, he also said he would submit a proposal to the state government to set up a special committee whose subcommittees would look into illegal plantations and impacts on the environment and local labor.

Renowned for its heroin production, Kachin state has implemented crop-substitution programs in recent years to replace the poppy cultivation that produces opium.

Controversial China-backed tissue-culture plantations, banned in Laos and Thailand, began popping up in the state about 12 years ago and have quickly expanded in Waingmaw township near the state capital Myitkyina.

A research report issued earlier this year by the local NGO Land Security and Environmental Conservation Network indicated that that there are more than 100,000 acres of banana plantations in the Myitkyina and Bhamo districts of Kachin state.

Operators have been accused of taking over land previously leased from authorities by locals, many of whom have been displaced by armed conflict and are living in displacement camps in Myanmar’s northernmost state, the online journal The Irrawaddy said in a March report.

In June 2018, Kachin state’s Forestry Department said it would sue two other companies for allegedly planting banana by tissue-culture techniques in forest reserve areas in Waingmaw township, the Myanmar Times reported.

Forestry Department director Khin Maung Oo accused Chinese-owned U Aung Paing Company Ltd. and Generation Star Company Ltd. of planting bananas on two plots of 500 acres and 400 acres of land in the reserve, destroying government-run farms, and illegally logging teakwood in the reserve, the report said.

Reported by Elizabeth Jamar for RFA’s Myanmar Service. Translated by Ye Kaung Myint Maung and Khin Maung Nyane. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

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