[health-vn] Trade: Flu fears, rains buoy Cambodia rat exports to Vietnam]

Vern Weitzel vern.weitzel at gmail.com
Tue May 19 01:55:57 EST 2009



Subject: [vnnews-l] Trade: Flu fears,	rains buoy Cambodia rat exports to Vietnam
Date: Mon, 18 May 2009 01:15:00 -0700
From: Stephen Denney <srdenney at gmail.com>
To: vnnews-l at anu.edu.au

http://in.reuters.com/article/entertainmentNews/idINIndia-39692420090518


Flu fears, rains buoy Cambodia rat exports to Vietnam

Mon May 18, 2009 10:55am IST


By Ek Madra

CHREY THOM, Cambodia (Reuters Life!) - Stir-fried or grilled, Vietnamese
can't seem to get enough of Cambodian rat meat, and the global influenza
outbreak as well as recent heavy rains have proven a boon for both consumers
and exporters.

In Chrey Thom, a Cambodian town on the border with Vietnam, motorbike after
motorbike carries wooden cages full of hundreds of the plump, furry, brown
rats.

The rains in the Mekong Delta area have helped boost the Cambodian trappers'
catch, as more rats rush out from their flooded holes and into waiting
cages.

"There were so many rodents we just can't eat them all, so we need to export
lots more to Vietnam," Cambodian rat trader Kang Chanthan told Reuters.
"It's good business."

"If you prepare them well and fry the meat with garlic and put some mint on
it, they're tastier than chickens," he added.

Worries about swine flu, as the H1N1 influenza virus was first called, may
have also spurred demand. The spread of H1N1 flu was not caused by pigs and
pork, but many people and governments have reacted to the name.

"Rat meat substitutes well for pork these days," said Khe Le, adding that
her family exported up to a tonne of live rats across the border on good
days.

Rat meat was eaten in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge regime in the 1970s and
for some time afterwards when little else was available. The poor took to
rat meat last year when the price of other meat soared, but younger
Cambodians tend to avoid it.

In Vietnam, rat meat is something of a delicacy.

Online Vietnamese newspaper, VietNamNet Bridge, said more than 35 tonnes of
rat meat a day was imported from Cambodia.

Cambodian officials said they did not keep records of this aspect of
bilateral trade but reckoned the figure was realistic.

"The high season for catching rats has returned for the farmers in my
district, where I see several thousand kilos of live rats transported every
day to Vietnam," said Ly Marong, an agriculture official in Koh Thom
district on the border.

Live rats sold for $1 per kilo and dead ones -- used for feeding crocodiles
in Vietnam -- went for $0.37, officials said.

"Some rats are as big as piglets, 2 kilos, and that has intrigued the
Vietnamese. They see them as wild animals and they find them tasty," Marong
said.

Bun Tuon Simona, a Cambodian official in the southern province of Kandal,
said the Vietnamese appetite for rat meat has helped a government campaign
to get rid of the rodents that were destroying rice fields.

"Before, we rewarded farmers with milled rice in exchange for a rat's tail
after they killed one. Now it's not a problem. They catch the rat and can
sell it to make some money on top of what they get from farming," he said.

Cambodian farmer Chan Pakdeiratha, whose family has rather taken to the
meat, said the rats gave birth three times a month and had about 15 babies
each time.

"If we don't catch them this year, they'll destroy our crops next harvest,"
he said.

(Additional reporting by Lach Chantha and Chor Sokunthea)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved



More information about the health-vn mailing list