INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Cotton farming is a dangerous job in Uzbekistan |
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by Maria Golovnina Reuters Entered into the database on Tuesday, May 31st, 2005 @ 18:41:17 MST |
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CHINAZ, Uzbekistan (Reuters) - For Buribek, like for many Uzbek farmers, growing
cotton is a dangerous affair.
"Being a cotton farmer here is like hanging between life and death,"
he said, resting his chin on the handle of his hoe and gazing at hectares of
cotton fields stretching towards a hazy horizon. "The government controls our lives very tightly. If we don't obey, we'll
end up in trouble," he said. "All we want is freedom, and the state
is punishing us for wanting freedom." The arid Central Asian country, one of the least open former Soviet states,
is the world's second-biggest cotton exporter. But half a century since Moscow's central planners launched cotton monoculture
in Uzbekistan -- with massive irrigation virtually draining the Aral Sea as
a result -- farmers are still subject to severe Soviet-style regulations and
penalties. They are banned from buying their own land and have to sell cotton to the government
at fixed, below-market prices. Planting and picking cotton, still done by hand, remain a nationwide struggle,
with children, students and women from all over the country being drafted in
to help every year. Farmers are allowed to lease plots from big Soviet-style collective farms,
but can be stripped of their allotments if they fail to fulfil state output
quotas. And with President Islam Karimov controlling agriculture and trade almost as
harshly as he does political dissent, most farmers are reluctant to discuss
their hardships. Some of those who resist get arrested, farmers say. "I've heard of many farmers who ended up in real trouble. I don't want
to talk about it. Of course we are afraid," said Buribek, squinting in
bright sunshine, his headscarved wife and daughter turning over the soil nearby.
"But we Uzbeks are settled and hardworking, and we love our land. We are
never going to abandon it, and the government knows that too. That's why it
feels it can do anything to us." UNREST Some farmers fear that this month's bloody suppression of a rebellion in the
eastern Ferghana Valley, where many big cotton farms are based, may herald further
curbs on economic liberties in the mainly Muslim country of 26 million. Witnesses say around 500 people were gunned down by troops at a protest in
the town of Andizhan. The Uzbek government has said only 169 people died, mostly
"terrorists". "Farmers, like any businessmen, like stability. Although we do want change,
we don't want bloodshed," said Akhmedulla, a farmer in his 50s who runs
an 8-hectare allotment near the fishing town of Chinaz on the Syr Daria river.
"I would much rather live in a scary but stable environment than in a
state of civil war," said Akhmedulla, who, like all farmers interviewed,
refused to give his last name. While other ex-Soviet states have pushed ahead with market reform, the Uzbek
government has imposed ambitious production targets while paying depressed prices.
Although Uzbekistan enjoyed a rich cotton harvest last year, thanks to favourable
weather conditions, the 2003 crop of 2.86 million tonnes was the nation's worst
in decades. This year it has set a higher target of 3.6 million tonnes. Farmers said large farms and agriculture officials, fearful of punishment for
not fulfilling quotas, often inflated numbers. John Wakeman-Linn, head of the International Monetary Fund's mission to Uzbekistan,
has called on the Uzbek government to allow farmers to grow and sell whatever
they felt was necessary under given market circumstances. "This would be key to improving living standards in the rural areas,"
Wakeman-Linn said this month. ROTTING Sanjar Umarov, a Tashkent-based cotton businessman, said obsolete cotton processing
meant the quality of Uzbek cotton was deteriorating and becoming unpopular on
the global market. "The industry is rotting," said Umarov, who has been in the cotton
business since 1992. "A lot of countries refuse to buy Uzbek cotton because it's badly processed.
We desperately need investment to upgrade the sector, but the government fears
that private investors would take the lucrative industry away from it."
Karimov's government has promised to gradually dismantle Soviet-style collective
farms and allow private land ownership. But farmers are sceptical about any
change. Karima, her weather-worn face wrapped in a bright headscarf, earns the equivalent
of $50 a month for weeding fields belonging to a local collective -- $20 above
the national average wage. "During the sowing campaign our backs hurt because we have to do so much
weeding. During harvesting, our hands are covered in blood because cotton buds
are spiky," she said, resting with her female co-workers on the edge of
a giant field. "We know that there is no end to this. Be it Karimov or anybody else,
our backs will still hurt and our hands will still be covered in our own blood."
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