Government-sector employees reportedly involved in cotton picking in Tajikistan

Eurasianet says Tajik authorities use various tactics, ranging from threats to pleading, to get its government-sector employees to abandon their classrooms and clinics for the cotton field.  Farmers are forced to grow it. Teachers are forced to pick it. And though everyone loses, the government still thinks cotton will fix its lopsided balance of trade. […]

Asia-Plus

Eurasianet says Tajik authorities use various tactics, ranging from threats to pleading, to get its government-sector employees to abandon their classrooms and clinics for the cotton field.  Farmers are forced to grow it. Teachers are forced to pick it. And though everyone loses, the government still thinks cotton will fix its lopsided balance of trade.

Authorities in Tajikistan use a battery of tactics, ranging from threats to pleading, to get its government-sector employees to abandon their classrooms and clinics for the cotton field.

Teachers, involved in cotton picking in the Bobojon-Ghafourov district in the northern Sughd province, reportedly stand to earn 60 diram (0.06 USD) for each kilogram of cotton picked.   

A sack typically weighs around 14 kilograms.  One person reportedly can usually gather anywhere between 50 and 150 kilograms in day, depending on their energy and proficiency.

Tajik pop stars have been enlisted to popularize the cotton harvesting campaign. Nigina Amonqulova, a well-known singer, recently posted a photo of herself in a cotton field.

The idea is to promote the mass involvement of the community in hashar (a Central Asian tradition of voluntary work to help the community). 

The governor of Sughd province Rajabboy Ahmadzoda and the mayor of Khujand Marouf Muhammadzoda have boasted about the cotton picked by their own staff as part of their hashar outings. In total, they collected nine tons, the officials said.

Qurbon Hakimzoda, the governor of the southern Khatlon province, also made a show of working in the fields and claimed to have personally picked 44 kilograms of raw cotton. 

Meanwhile, one farmer in the Bobojon-Ghafourov district told Eurasianet on condition of anonymity that local residents tend to abandon the area in numbers just to find any job alternative to cotton-picking.  It is this fact that makes coercive enlistment a necessity.

“There are no people to hire for the cotton-picking. If we do not summon teachers and doctors for hashar, the collective farm will just go broke,” the farmer told Eurasianet.

According to him, growing the crop entails considerable costs and losses. Growers estimate that cultivating one hectare can costs around 13,000 somoni (more than $1,300). But that hectare will yield a cash sum less than half of that in returns.

Raw cotton is sold to buyers, either from abroad or from local middlemen, at 4.80 somoni (equivalent to 0.50 USD) per kilogram.  Prices should be almost 20 percent higher for farmers to break even, the farmer said.  .

“On the international commodities market, the price of cotton is usually about 62 cents per pound,” he said, talking in terms of the weight measurement used on global trading floors. One pound is equivalent to 450 grams.

“Nobody is going to buy from us for any more than 50 cents. That is why we cannot afford to pay the pickers more than six cents.  And people will not come for such a small amount of money,” the farmer said.

Other crops would be preferable and more profitable, but farmers working on leased land are given no choice in what they cultivate.

The Agriculture Ministry forecast that this year’s harvest would total 400,000 tons of raw cotton. The material is sold to businesses in countries like Turkey, China and Russia. By late October, pickers had gathered around 330,000 tons, a 95,000 ton increase on the same period last year. 

 

Join us on social media!

Article translations:

Related Article

Оби зулол
Оби зулол

Most Read

Акика Алиф

Recent Articles

In Tajikistan, the workforce has increased, but not everyone is employed

Statistics show a significant gap between men and women in the labor market.

Amin Qobilov and Marvori Nasriddinzoda become chess champions of Tajikistan

The national chess tournament, which brought together the strongest players, has concluded in Dushanbe.

How to tame snow avalanches: how many houses and roads in Tajikistan are at risk?

Large avalanches can occur on average once every 40 years, causing residents to eventually consider dangerous areas safe and build houses on them.

Emomali Nourali and Muhiddin Asadulloyev became No. 1: Tajik judokas in the world ranking

After the "Grand Slam" in Dushanbe, the IJF ranking was updated, recording a historic result.

Media: the US struck Iranian ports but denies resuming war

Iran's military opened fire on forces that attempted to attack a pier on Qeshm Island.

Uzbekistan implements digital residency registration system

It will be possible to process it online through Face-ID.