[PHNOM PENH POST]
A draft law to improve agricultural farming practices by diminishing the
use of harmful pesticides, herbicides and fertilisers was approved by
the Council of Ministers late last week and will be submitted to the
National Assembly next month.
Council of Ministers spokesman
Phay Siphan said yesterday the law was vital to bolster food security,
reduce dangerous side effects from harmful agricultural chemicals and
raise Cambodian living standards.
“I am still unclear as to when
[exactly] this draft law will be sent to the National Assembly but I
strongly believe it will be transferred as soon as possible, based on
time and administrative procedures,” he said, adding this would happen
by next month at the latest.
The law has received strong support
from farmers and agricultural civil society organisations that have
welcomed regulation of chemicals that can harm both those using them and
consumers.
Yin Sobuuna, deputy director of the Neary Khmer
Association for Health and Vocational Training, which has trained about
20,000 Cambodian farmers how to use natural fertilisers and pesticides,
said yesterday many people simply weren’t aware of the risks
agricultural chemicals posed.
“The management of agriculture
fertilisers and pesticides is very important while most consumers are
still unclear with the risks [of using chemicals],” he said.
Ung
Daro, marketing president of Bio-one Inc Co Ltd which supplies imported
agri-chemicals, said the law would help farming companies which are
registered with the ministries of commerce and agriculture and want to
market healthy produce.
“This draft law is very crucial for both
our company and Cambodian farmers who take care with health,
environmental protection and want high income from their agriculture
production,” he said.
“Currently, consumers and the users express strong support for agricultural products that are grown using natural fertilisers”.
He
said brokers had been dumping agricultural chemicals that had passed
their expiry date on the Cambodian market, a practice that would be
curbed by the legislation. Many unlicensed companies were selling such
expired chemicals from countries such as Germany and Japan that had no
label and no use -by-date on them, he said.
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