Kuwait Times | August 06, 2008
PHNOM PENH: A bilateral agricultural venture between Cambodia and Kuwait proposed during an official visit by Kuwait's prime minister left Cambodia very positive about future cooperation, Agriculture Minister Chan Sarun said yesterday. Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah left Cambodia yesterday after a three-day official visit which covered a range of subjects, including technical assistance in oil exploration, proposed direct flights and even football friendlies.
But the most interesting topic for Cambodia was a proposal to exchange agricultural technology for a large area of land to grow food - probably rice - for export to the Gulf state, Chan Sarun said. "Foreign Minister Hor Namhong has asked me to join in discussions Wednesday to review the results of meetings with Kuwait regarding agriculture and examine the options," Chan Sarun said by telephone. "It is very interesting but I will know more after the meeting." Kuwait has leased rice fields in Cambodia and plans to import food from the Asian country, a government official said in remarks published yesterday .
Daily Awan quoted Foreign Minister Undersecretary Khaled Al-Jarallah, who is with Sheikh Nasser, as saying the rice fields would meet the state's food demand. "Kuwait has rented many rice fields which will secure the country's needs, and will export the surplus to the international markets," the paper quoted Jarallah as saying.
Kuwait is oil-rich but largely covered in desert, making it difficult to grow enough food for its 2 million-plus residents. Another Gulf state, Qatar, also made overtures along the same lines when its Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem bin Jabor Al-Thani visited in March, and there are rumours that others in that region may follow suit. Cambodia recently announced that drastic overhauls of its rice production techniques and improvements in infrastructure such as better irrigation and mills could boost it to become one of the biggest rice exporters in the region.
PHNOM PENH: A bilateral agricultural venture between Cambodia and Kuwait proposed during an official visit by Kuwait's prime minister left Cambodia very positive about future cooperation, Agriculture Minister Chan Sarun said yesterday. Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah left Cambodia yesterday after a three-day official visit which covered a range of subjects, including technical assistance in oil exploration, proposed direct flights and even football friendlies.
But the most interesting topic for Cambodia was a proposal to exchange agricultural technology for a large area of land to grow food - probably rice - for export to the Gulf state, Chan Sarun said. "Foreign Minister Hor Namhong has asked me to join in discussions Wednesday to review the results of meetings with Kuwait regarding agriculture and examine the options," Chan Sarun said by telephone. "It is very interesting but I will know more after the meeting." Kuwait has leased rice fields in Cambodia and plans to import food from the Asian country, a government official said in remarks published yesterday .
Daily Awan quoted Foreign Minister Undersecretary Khaled Al-Jarallah, who is with Sheikh Nasser, as saying the rice fields would meet the state's food demand. "Kuwait has rented many rice fields which will secure the country's needs, and will export the surplus to the international markets," the paper quoted Jarallah as saying.
Kuwait is oil-rich but largely covered in desert, making it difficult to grow enough food for its 2 million-plus residents. Another Gulf state, Qatar, also made overtures along the same lines when its Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem bin Jabor Al-Thani visited in March, and there are rumours that others in that region may follow suit. Cambodia recently announced that drastic overhauls of its rice production techniques and improvements in infrastructure such as better irrigation and mills could boost it to become one of the biggest rice exporters in the region.