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09 20 st gu Au THE AGRICULTURE ISSUE What’s Old is New Again: ‘Alternative’ Farming in Laos Fair Trade and Farming • Bringing smiles back to Sri Lankan spice farmers • Five Fair Trade farming groups at Hong Kong Food Expo Talking with Two Farmers in Timor-Leste 12 Steps against Poverty with Cambodian rice farmers Change takes Courage for Sheep Farmers in China Climate Change means Poverty for Farmers and Fishers And more...

What's Old is New Again

By Ratsamy Souvannamethy

This is my first

cropping has resulted in substantial

but then implementing things contrary

the necessity of identifying drivers and

trip to Huaphan

income gains for many farmers, yet has

to what they had suggested. As such,

champions of change in the villages,

in northeastern Laos

also led to the forest being cleared,

Oxfam’s job has been to help people

where the community itself – not the

for seven years, and I see a lot of

a loss in soil fertility, serious erosion,

see that we do what we say we will,

‘project’ – takes the lead. I have also

improvement in the infrastructure in

more landslides, and rice paddies being

and that we are genuinely interested

learned that meaningful change takes

the major towns – better roads which

washed away in the floods. Reliance on

in them being able to improve their

time, and that new things in particular

save travel time from Vientiane to

a single cash crop – mostly maize – has

lives. For this, we have had to establish

take even more time. This can be the

the provincial capital of Semnua from

also made residents vulnerable to price

personal relationships and work closely

technical principles of ‘integrated

38 to 16 hours, better telephone and

fluctuations. In 2008, maize dropped by

with individual farmers; we have had

agriculture’ to methodological

internet access, better schools and

more than 50 per cent.

to understand their concerns and help

values such as ‘par ticipation’ and

health facilities, and more tourists. At

To address these concerns, Oxfam

them design sustainable initiatives

‘empowerment’ – all of which Oxfam

first, I thought that the lives of poorer

Hong Kong is working in these eight

based on what they think is the best

is trying to introduce. In Laos, people

people there have also improved, but

remote villages through a partnership

for them and their community. This

may see these methods and principles

looking again, I am not so sure.

with the Agriculture and Forestr y

approach is not usually done in Laos

as being innovative and maybe even

On this trip, I am visiting eight

Office of Huaphan Province. The pilot

where the centralised ‘one-size-fits-all’

‘revolutionary’ while people in other

villages in two districts, Xiengkhor and

project has been introducing alternative

methodology is common.

countries might see the concepts as

Viengxay, near the Vietnamese border.

farming practices, such as integrated

During my first year with Oxfam,

‘old’ and already in place in their

These villages are all remote, located

and diversified farming instead of

I participated in discussions among

societies. For me, I see the concepts as

alongside the small rivers - the Houy

mono-cropping, which is a relatively

agricultural experts and the villagers,

being appropriate tools. With these

Deau and Nam Nga – and surrounded by

new thing here.

and also joined farmers on an exposure

tools, farmers can fulfill their personal

mountains. It takes about five hours to

In the beginning, I thought that the

trip to meet with farmer-practitioners

potential and improve the way of life for

drive to Xiengkhor from the provincial

learning and application would be easy

for some hands-on training. I have

the entire community.

capital, and during the rainy season,

and straightforward, but it did not go as

learned a lot . I have learned the

getting to the communities can be

expected. This had a lot to do with the

importance of building up trust and

difficult. As we travel around, it is easy

time that it takes to build up trust and

genuinely understanding individual

to be overtaken by the richness and

confidence, as well as with the ‘new’

and community contexts before doing

beauty of the landscape and culture.

participatory way of working that Oxfam

any ‘development’ work. I have learned

For generations, the way of life

espouses. To be frank, we development

ha s b e en ‘simple’ here : villager s

workers can be seen as newcomers

traditionally plant upland rice and rely

and outsiders, and farmers are slow to

on forest products for their food and

trust us given painful experiences in

income. In the past few years, however,

the past with ‘development’ projects

agricultural practices have changed from

that have not really benefited them.

subsistence farming to growing larger-

Villagers can also be wary of people

scale commercial crops. This mono-

asking their opinions about projects,

COVER: Disomenica, a Fair Trade spice farmer in Sri Lanka, with her nutmeg / Photo: Au Sik Hung

Based in Vientiane, Ratsamy Souvannamethy joined Oxfam Hong Kong as a Programme Officer in 2008. The agency has been supporting projects in Laos since 1995, and began working in Huaphan in 2007. Ratsamy at work in the field, and posing for a photograph with villagers.


Sri Lanka

FAIR TRADE

– bringing smiles back to faces

By Charlotte Wan

A smiling Disomenica (right) and her husband – Fair Trade has improved their lives.

Disomenica Basanayake pours us

a remote part of central Sri Lanka.

to plough the land and separate the

her home-brewed red tea, topping it

For four generations of Basanayakes,

crop, as it is with some other plants.

with an extra serving of warmth and

including their son, the family has

There are more than 200,000 spice

would enable them to keep most or

hospitability. The spice farmer looks

depended on spice farming for a

farmers in the country, although

all of the profits. In the past, they

so radiant and cheerful, it is hard to

living. Isolugola is the husband’s

some only have few trees, typically

were left with no choice but to sell

imagine that in the past, she used to

hometown.

cloves, nutmeg and pepper.

their crops to the only purchasing

worry about her daily survival, about

Farming spices is popular among

The remote location of Isolugola

agent in the village, who would then

where the money would come from

small-scale farmers in Sri Lanka,

used to present a challenge for

export the spices in bulk. Since the

for her family’s needs.

mainly because the spice trees are

farmer s . T hey did not have the

village agent was the farmers’ only

Disomenica, 64, and her husband,

generally inexpensive and ‘simple’ to

means to travel to marketplaces to

outlet, farmers had little or no room

71, live in a village named Isolugola,

harvest – machinery is not necessary

sell their spices themselves, which

to bargain and were often subjected

Oxfam News E-magazine August 2009


Nutmeg

to unreasonable price squeezes and

now. The Basanayakes currently earn

help them improve their production

late payments.

about 120,000 rupees a year (about

and marketing capacity. It is not the

US$1,000).

first time that COSE has come to

“The village dealer would not adjust the amount he offered to us

“ F a i r Tr a d e h a s b r o u g h t

Hong Kong. During the World Trade

according to market prices,” says Mr.

tremendous change to our family,”

Organization meeting (formally called

Basanayake. “He would offer a fixed

says a happy Disomenica. “It has made

the Sixth Ministerial Conference) held

price at 60 rupees (approx. HK$4) per

our lives much more comfortable and

in Hong Kong in 2005, the group

kilogram, and he rarely paid on time.

brought smiles back to our faces. We

promoted their Fair Trade products

We once tried to store our spices, so

still have no savings, but we’re clear

in a conference centre kitty-corner

that we could sell them later at a

from debt. We have yet to paint the

to the conference centre where

better price when market conditions

walls in our home, but we’ve fixed the

world leaders debated agricultural

were more favourable, but it only

window, and even managed to marry

trade rules.

lasted six months – we were running

off our daughter.”

out of money.”

Established in 1997, COSE ensures

When Disomenica found out that

that the production and trade of its

Farmers like the Basanayakes were

Fair Trade is being promoted in other

agricultural products meets Fair Trade

forced to undercut their profits; they

places in the world, like Hong Kong,

standards. They also endorse organic

could not even cover their basic spice

she added, “We are proud of our Fair

farming, which lower farmers’ costs

farming costs. The family suffered

Trade products and are pleased to

and improves soil quality. A collective

from the financial strain. With no

know that they are in high demand

savings fund is in place to help

alternative, they turned to the village

from satisfied customers.”

farmers be able to pay for their

loanshark several times for quick cash:

Nowadays, the Basanayakes sell

children’s education or for other basic

this helped in the short term, but in

their spices to two Fair Trade groups.

or emergency expenses. A member of

the end, their debt accumulated.

One is Ceylon Organic Spice Export, a

the World Fair Trade Organization,

F o r t u n a t e l y , a F a i r Tr a d e

small Sri Lankan-based organisation

COSE currently markets about 15

organisation reached out to twenty

that pays its farmers 450 to 950

different spices, as well as cashew

Isolugola farmers, including the

rupees per kilogram, depending on

nuts and dried pineapple.

Basanayakes. The group of fered

the spice.

to purchase their spices for higher-

With Oxfam Hong Kong’s support,

than-market prices, and promised

COSE will be participating at Food

this arrangement over time. That

Expo 2009, one of the largest food

was about twenty years ago. The

fairs in Hong Kong. Oxfam is also

change was immediately positive

assisting the group in developing

way back then, and it continues until

their product catalogue, which can

Charlotte Wan is coordinating Oxfam’s activities at the Hong Kong Food Expo 2009. She met with Fair Trade groups in Sri Lanka in June 2009. TOP: Mureen, a packager in a Fair Trade factory BOTTOM: Sri Lanka is known for its high quality spices. All photos by Au Sik Hung

Fair Trade @ Food Expo 2009

FAIR TRADE EXPERIENCE FROM PALESTINE AND VIETNAM

Oxfam Hong Kong is bringing 5 Fair Trade groups to the Food Expo, including

Fair Trade representatives from Palestine (Occupied Palestinian Territories) and

Ceylon Organic Spice Export. Come and taste Fair Trade food from Pakistan,

Vietnam will share their experiences in implementing Fair Trade and working

Palestine (Occupied Palestinian Territories), Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand,

with farmers. Admission is free, but please register with Oxfam; Stephanie

Vietnam…

Cheung: (852) 3120 5273.

Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre • 1 Expo Drive, Wanchai, Hong Kong (Trade Hall) • 13 -14 August (10am – 6pm, for trade visitors only) • 15 August (10am – 6pm, open to public) • Booth 3c – 32, 34, 35

• 16 August, Sunday • 2:30 to 4:00pm • Oxfam Hong Kong 17/th Floor, China United Centre, 28 Marble Road, North Point, Hong Kong Enquiries: Stephanie Cheung: (852) 3120 5273

Oxfam News E-magazine August 2009


Timor Leste

TALKING WITH TWO FARMERS IN TIMOR-LESTE Jacinta and Gracinda are two farmers in the coastal village of Marmer, which means ‘marble’ for all the limestone in this northern part of Timor-Leste. Marmer is very small, with only 22 families and a population of about 130. Residents here used to farm maize up in the mountains, but they now farm it right in the village, down by the shore. Jacinta and Gracinda tell us, in their own words, how this change came about, and what it means to them.

We stopped growing maize up in

pen the livestock. Plus, we have a little

eat papaya and cassava leaves as

the hills about four years ago, due

bit of a problem with caterpillars, but

leafy vegetables. Nowadays, we also

to the lack of enough rainfall, and

we can handle it by using chilli and

have mustard and kankung (a kind

too many wild pigs and rats. We still

kerosene to keep them away.

of spinach). We frequently sell the

plant other crops up in the hills, but

We usually plant maize in

peanuts, velvet beans, watermelon,

we don't plant maize anymore. It’s

December when we usually get good

and taro – the other crops are mostly

just too much work! We would spend

rain, but if not, then we'll plant in

for our own food. With the new

too much energy guarding it from the

January and harvest in March.

vegetable garden right in the village,

pigs and rats.

When harvest time comes, we

we are happy because we are growing

Another reason that we stopped

tie the cobs together in bundles

– and eating – a more diverse range of

farming so much up there in the

and hang them on trees. This is our

leafy and green vegetables.

hills is the time involved. Now that

way of storing the maize. We count

While we eat more of the various

our children have started to go to

our harvests by the bundle, not by

vegetables we plant, we also sell

school, we don't have enough time

kilogram.

more. We earn about US$4.50 for

to walk up there, do the work, and then walk home.

When we get good rainfall, we

each harvest, which is good for us.

can get up to three or four bundles

We are happy, because in the

We now farm maize, pumpkin

of maize. Otherwise, it might be

past, we would typically only be able

and other crops nearer to our homes,

only one or two bundles. Before, in

to grow enough maize to last us for

where we have land. Each year, little

the nineties, when we still had many

five months of the year, from harvest

by little, we increase the land we use

trees and people didn't burn land so

time (usually March) until about

for this. We also have a new vegetable

much, we could harvest up to fifteen

August or so.

garden near the new community

or twenty bundles up in the hills. [In

It hasn’t been perfect. There are

centre [both of which Oxfam has

the 1990s, when Timor-Leste was

ten women in our vegetable farming

supported]. There are ten women

under Indonesian occupation, forest

group, but it is three of us who are

farmers who run this garden, which

rangers would guard the forests and

doing most of the work. At first, when

is functioning like a demonstration

people who burned any trees would

our friends didn't come to work in the

plot, trying to show everyone here

be fined.]

vegetable garden, we thought about

better ways of farming. We have our

We have three types of maize.

a system to divide the vegetable

meetings right there at the centre.

Madua can be harvested in just a

beds among the group members, so

Other groups meet there too, like

month. Malnamuk is ready in two

if someone didn’t work, they would

fishing groups, which are mostly

months. We also have Sele, a new

lose their own vegetables. In the

men.

variety introduced by government

end, we decided not to do this. We

When planting time approaches,

which, although it needs three months

have worked so hard to establish the

we burn the land. It is a quick way

to harvest, we like it the most. It can

garden, and we didn’t want to give up

to clear the land of weeds. We then

survive well in very hot weather, not

any of the possible harvest. We work

plant the maize, using no chemical or

like the first two.

well the way we are.

organic fertilisers. We know that we

We plant many crops, not just

In the future, we would like to

won't get as much as when we farmed

maize. Some are grown down here

have bigger vegetable gardens right

up in the hills, but at least the harvest

in the new vegetable garden, some

beside our homes! That would be

is safe from the pigs and rats. We

like snake beans, velvet beans, sweet

nice! The community is advocating

do have to fence the new vegetable

potato, pumpkin, peanuts, cassava,

for a better water supply with the

garden to protect the crops from

taro and watermelon still up in the

government right now to try to make

goats, as people here don't usually

hills. In the past, we would only

this happen.

The new garden near the new community centre provides mustard (middle photo), kankung (a type of spinach) and many other vegetables.

In Marmer, Oxfam is working together with the community organisation Hadia Desenvolvimento Rural, which means To Improve Rural Development. Farming is one component of Oxfam’s programme in the area; others are income generation, family literacy, and disaster risk management. This article is compiled by Maria de Araujo Dos Reis, a programme officer with Oxfam Hong Kong. She and her colleagues met with Jacinta and Gracinda in July 2009.

Oxfam News E-magazine August 2009


ia Cambod

12 STEPS AGAINST POVERTY By Tobias Jackson

Clockwise: Cambodian farmers using System of Rice Intensification (SRI). In the project area, fields yielded up to 150% more in the very first harvest. Traditional water wheel to irrigate the SRI crops.

In many ways, Thkol Toch is no

income. More and more often, people

different than other rural Cambodian

had to borrow from loan sharks, and

communities : people depend on

more and more people could not

more self-reliant, sustaining the

planting rice and catching fish for a

repay. In the worst cases, families had

rice produc tion as well as other

living. Yet, life has been changing in

to sell their farmland, their key asset.

sources of income. The pilot farmers in

this village along Tonle Sap Lake in

All in all, life was getting worse, and

PromVihearThor’s project, for instance,

the west of the country. People are

people did not see any possibility to

have had the confidence to diversify

breaking tradition through a 12-step

improve the situation in the future.

their livelihoods by converting parts of

technique known as the System of Rice

Then, in June 2008, PromVihearThor,

second crop. PromVihearThor further

their farmland to growing vegetables,

Intensification, or shortened to SRI by

a community organisation based in

helped the process along by supplying

farming fish, and raising livestock.

the farmers who use it.

Pursat Province, began working with

the initial participants with a water

SRI and their subsequent innovative

Before SRI, farmers like Chea

Thkol Toch and other communities.

pump to enable them to irrigate the

agricultural ventures have helped

Sareth and Boeurn Noeurn in this small

They assisted residents there to set

land. Once the farmers had carefully

them to work their way out of poverty

village were not able to grow enough

up village-level associations, and

followed through with the twelve

and to ensure that their food and

rice from their small plots of land to

through these groups, the NGO has

steps, the results were evident in the

income are secure.

earn any cash, let alone to feed their

been better able to implement a range

very first growing season: the harvest

O verall, SRI ha s also b een a

families. Every year, farmers would run

of projects – the most important of

was between 2.7 and 3 tonnes per

good model to assist impoverished

out of food before the next harvest:

which is introducing farmers to the

hectare, 50 to 150 per cent more

farmers around the world to change

the rice stock would dwindle, usually

twelve steps of SRI. PromVihearThor

than in the past, plus their normal

their mindsets from a negative and

in July or August. People would be

encouraged farmers like Sareth and

wet season harvest. This changed

seemingly powerless one to a more

left with no choice but to undertake

Noeurn to attend information sessions

their lives fundamentally – for the

positive, can-do spirit. Sareth and

destructive activities to make a living,

on SRI held right in the community

first time, Sareth and Noeurn and the

Noeurn, and other farmers, have

such as cutting down trees to sell as

and arranged for study tours so

other farmers had enough rice to eat

come to believe that they can effect

firewood, unsustainable harvesting

that villagers could observe how

for the whole year and a surplus large

change in their lives. In Oxfam jargon,

of various forest products, and illegal

other farmers elsewhere had been

enough to sell on the open market.

this can be called sustainable self-

fishing. This would bring necessary

benefiting from SRI. Their efforts

This enabled them to earn cash to

driven development. In their minds,

money for families, but the longer

worked. Some families in the village

pay for health care, education and the

it probably means a better life, for

term environmental impacts meant

decided to try SRI.

other essentials of life which had been

themselves, their families and their

out of reach for so long.

communities.

negative impacts for the community as

Farmers were cautious at the

a whole: stocks of fish and other ‘wild’

beginning. Sareth and Noeurn, for

The twelve steps of SRI have many

products would fall drastically, and as

instance, used only part of their land,

positive ramifications. The technique

years went by, families were less and

and only during the dry season, to see

has helped empower hundreds of

less able to generate this additional

if this would enable them to produce a

farmers in Cambodia to become

Tobias Jackson coordinates Oxfam Hong Kong’s projects in Cambodia, where the agency has been supporting projects since the 1980s. The project with PromVihearThor outlined in this article began in 2006 and is due to phase out at the end of 2009.

Oxfam News E-magazine August 2009


China

Change takes Courage By Xiao Sha

It is easy to be amazed by the

He and his student Chen Zhimei did

beautiful landscape of Lanquan, a

the project assessments with the

village in the northwestern province

villagers in Lanquan, discussing the

of Gansu in China: the pure blue

possible ways of improving the quality

sky, with clouds as white as snow,

of life. One option was building

feels close. And it’s true: Lanquan is

sturdy sheds, about 7 x 4 x 2 metres,

situated about high on a plateau, with

where the livestock could sleep. This

wide horizons. Yet, life here can be

would ensure better health for the

harsh. The high altitude, from 2,040

valued animals, especially during

to 4,884 metres high, means that the

bitterly cold and windy winters. The

temperatures are too low to plant

average temperature in Languan

made the decision to try it, with huge

It took a whole day to do that. I would

preferred crops like rice and wheat, so

is about six degrees Celsius, and in

encouragement. Thank God it is the

be exhausted. Now, the sheds keep the

farmers mostly eat barley and beans,

winter, as low was minus twenty.

wisest decision we have ever made. It

hay dry. It relieves me a lot.” She ended

and get by on raising livestock, mostly

Winters were feared: it was in those

profits us so much.”

her account with laughter. “I love the

sheep. The average annual income is

months that sheep often grew thinner,

The positive impact has many

only about 700 Yuan, which classifies

weaker, became ill, and many died.

levels. Village-wide, the mortality

the community as impoverished, by

It was winter, in January 2008, that

rate for sheep has been lowered

The winter of 2008-2009 was the

official national standards.

the proposal of shed-building was

from twenty-five per cent before

first winter Qian tried the experimental

approved by Ox fam Hong Kong,

the use of sheds, to ten per cent.

sheds. “Last winter, we kept the sheep

with financial support of 3,000 Yuan

Sheep has been growing better in the

inside from early October. We were

per shed.

warmth of the sheds: the fattening

very worried about that, because we

Change began, but slowly. Farmers

rate has increased by ten per cent.

had never done that before.” With a

felt unsure about the new methods

Having sheds has considerably reduced

huge, warm smile, she says, “The shed

of using a shed, as opposed to open

people’s workloads, especially for the

works. It really did!”

grazing, which traditionally, the

women. Qian says, “We woman do

The success of the experiment

herders had been doing for hundreds

all the work by ourselves. In the past,

has convinced other villagers to

of years, rain or shine, summer and

before the sheds, I kept the livestock

accept the project. As of now, 38

winter. Not everyone was aware that

outside, making sure there was always

farmers have built themselves new

too much open grazing was damaging

enough hay for them. When it rained,

sheds for their livestock. Qian and

the grassland, and causing water

everything got wet – the sheep and

the other villagers also planted 95

loss and soil erosion. Few farmers

the hay – and the livestock would

acres of triticale and improved 413

had training in para-veterinary skills,

often get sick, and some would die.

acres of highland barley with better

and did not always see the linkage

As soon as the rain stopped, I had to

agricultural techniques.

between disease and winter time

quickly clear out the hay, replace it

grazing.

with a fresh supply, and round up the

Qian Xiushan, pictured here with her young child, was one of the first people to join the new agriculture project in Gansu. She says, "it is the wisest decision we [my husband and I] have ever made."

D r. Ya n g a n d Yu H u a m e i , a

One of the new stables in the village – keeping valued livestock safe and warm during the long, bitter winters.

sheep again into the clean, dry area.

rain because the land needs it, but I hate it too!”

An Assistant Communications Officer with Oxfam Hong Kong, Xiao Sha is based in Chengdu, China.

development worker with Oxfam, spent extra time with villagers like

Table 1

Qian Xiushan, 37, and her husband

Qian to communicate how the sheds

Before and After the Sheds

provide for their family – their four-

could work to their benefit. A new

year-old son – by tending about sixty

hay, triticale, a cross of wheat of

sheep and three cows. Last year, she

rye which grows fast and needs less

decided to change the way they had

water, was also being introduced. In

been raising the animals. She was one

time, Qian decided to attend livestock

of only a handful of farmers in the

training offered by Gansu Agriculture

village to embark on the change – the

University and to try the new way of

majority hesitated.

grazing. She and her husband were

It was Dr. Yang Lian, an expert of

in the first group who joined. She

agriculture from Gansu Agriculture

says, “My husband and I discussed the

University, who initiated the project.

shed project for two days, and finally

Mortality Rate Fattening Rate Amount of Labour

Before

After

Oxfam News E-magazine August 2009


OXFAM IN THE NEWS

Stop Climate Change, Stop Poverty

Less hot water in bathtubs in Hong Kong will mean less flooding in Bangladesh

Less air conditioning in Hong Kong will mean less poverty from typhoons in the Philippines

Less use of a dryer in Hong Kong will mean less drought in northwest China

Around the world, Oxfam Hong Kong is making sure that impoverished farmers are being better prepared for and can adapt to the increase in t yphoons , monsoons , flood s , droughts and other changes caused or exacerbated by climate change. Locally

In Mainland China, through www.

and globally, we are also advocating

oxfam.org.cn/ido, we ask people to

better governmental policies about

say, and mean, I DO – I do fight against

carbon dioxide emissions.

climate change! I do love 0º of poverty!

Around the virtual world, the

A media event was held in Beijing in

World Wide Web, we are also making

the last week of July, when we lifted a

our voice heard.

red cloth (symbolising the heat of C02)

In Hong Kong, through www.

off of the planet. In attendance were

oxfam.org.hk /climatechange, we are saying Less is Less – Less C0 2 means Less Poverty. Hong Kong emits twice the global average of carbon dioxide emissions, and this has to stop! Better policies are needed, and better daily habits too. Please go to our website and make your pledge to push for a fair climate deal at the next major UN climate change meeting in Copenhagen. Meanwhile, look out

32 Chinese media representatives, 20 company executives, 10 repre-

Browse Oxfam’s campaign on the Net.

sentatives from embassies, and 9 NGO representatives.

www.oxfam.org.hk/climatechange (our Hong Kong-based campaign) www.oxfam.org.cn/ido (our Mainland China-based campaign) Twitter: www.twitter.com/oxfamhongkong

for these three new posters that have

Facebook: www.facebook.com/home.php?#/group.php?gid=34678733199

been up around Hong Kong since the

Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/oxfamchina/sets/72157621665879745

middle of July.

Oxfam News E-magazine August 2009


12

N e w PartnerOrganisations

Every day, Oxfam Hong Kong works alongside hundreds of groups around the world, from

Oxfam Books In thi s e ditio n of O. N . E , we highlight the Poverty Alleviation

Development Office, often shortened to PADO, has considerable experience with implementing rehabilitation

PADO, we sense that it truly understands

are 12 ‘partner organisations’ that

the needs of the communities it serves.

we are supporting for the first time,

PADO has cooperated with various

all in Mainland China.

international NGOs in the past, so they are also familiar with different

Office of Xihe County

• Qinzhou District Education Bureau, Tianshui City

• Zhen Yuan County Education

Bureau, Qing Yang Prefecture

working approaches and development concepts. T h e n e w j o i n t O x fa m - PA D O

• Ethnic Minority Bureau of Luocheng Muloazu Autonomous County, Ethnic Affairs Commission

• Ethnic Minority Bureau of Rongshui County, Ethnic Affairs Commission

• Poverty Alleviation Office

of Sanjiang Dong Minority Autonomous County, under Foreign Capital Poverty Alleviation Project Administration Center

Last month, this new book by Oxfam Hong Kong was profiled at the Hong Kong Book Fair 2009, one of Asia’s largest book fairs. The book covers the challenges that low-income countries face in providing basic health care and basic education. It also outlines the world's progress towards the Millennium Development Goals. Published in Chinese, an English translation of the title could be These are the Basics: Education, Health Care and Human Development. The 114-page illustrated book presents case studies from Angola, China, India, Laos, Kenya, Mozambique, Sierra Leone and Timor Leste, including programmes that promote bilingual education with ethnic minority populations, the equal right to an education for girls, and affordable and accessible treatment for people with HIV-AIDS, and more.

projec t being implemented is in Niuyao, where there was massive destruction: of the 688 houses in the village, 386 collapsed and 189 became too dangerous to be lived in any longer. The residents, already poor before the earthquake, were further impoverished.

GUANGXI

To purchase on-line: http://www.oxfam.org.hk/public/bookstore/list

T he Pove r t y Alleviatio n and

groups based in Hong Kong. Here

• Poverty Alleviation and Development

Price : HK$80

China on 12 May 2008.

planning. In Oxfam’s meetings with

GANSU

ISBN : 962-664-029-4

devastating earthquake in western

developing countries to community

China, Minzu University of China

(These are the Basics)

Editor : Tung Tsz-kwan

term rehabilitation efforts after the

clear direction for social development

• The Ethnic Minority Study Center of

Oxfam is partnering with on long-

projects in Xihe County and has a

Educational Research

基礎教育.基本醫療.人類發展

County of Gansu Province, which

from government departments of

• China National Institute for

Title : 基.不可失

and Development Office for Xihe

small NGOs to international bodies,

BEIJING

These are the BASICS

PADO has already carried out several rehabilitation and poverty relief efforts in Niuyao, which has been helping survivors to reconstruct their homes, and to restore their

MOKUNG Oxfam Hong Kong publishes this bi-monthly magazine in Traditional Chinese. Mokung, which means both "no poverty" and "infinity", highlights a different aspect of development in each issue. The Editor is Tung Tsz-kwan. The focus of the June 2009 edition was on the financial crisis. The next edition will focus on farming and alternative community planning and development in Hong Kong. There are already hundreds of farms in Hong Kong, and tens of them are organic.

normal ways of life. The new project

To subscribe: www.oxfam.org.hk/public/bookstore/?lang=big5

ex tends this work, covering new

Mokung is online at www.oxfam.org.hk/public/contents/category?cid=1017&lan g=big5

biogas infrastructure, construction of storage units for collecting rainwater,

GUIZHOU

• Civil Affairs Department of JingPing County

• Institute of Sociology, Huazhong Normal University

• Qibuzou Education Team for Migrant Workers’ Children

protection of slopes against erosion, introducing new plant varieties of high-quality potatoes and walnuts, and pig raising projects with some very poor families. Various training sessions

ONE O.N.E – Oxfam News E-magazine – is uploaded monthly at www.oxfam.org.hk/one. To receive a copy in your inbox, please subscribe

SICHUAN

will be held with the residents. The

• Anxian County Office of Qianfo

total budget from Oxfam Hong Kong

– it is FREE.

is 935,446 Yuan.

To subscribe: www.oxfam.org.hk/one/subscribe.html

Mountain Conservation Zone

Oxfam Hong Kong

www.oxfam.org.hk Hong Kong

17th Floor, 28 Marble Road, Northpoint, Hong Kong O. N . E is also on-line: www.oxfam.org.hk/one Editor: Madeleine Marie Slavick (emagazine@oxfam.org.hk)


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