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China’s insatiable appetite for durian swallows Malaysian tribal lands

HONG KONG — Is durian the ‘king of fruit’, or is it a curse? Rising demand – especially from Chinese consumers – for its supremely pungent and sticky flesh is driving up prices across Southeast Asia.

Durian hybrid Musang King is also known as 'mao shan wang' (sleeping cat) due to the shape of the freshly opened fruit.

Durian hybrid Musang King is also known as 'mao shan wang' (sleeping cat) due to the shape of the freshly opened fruit.

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HONG KONG — Is durian the ‘king of fruit’, or is it a curse? Rising demand – especially from Chinese consumers – for its supremely pungent and sticky flesh is driving up prices across Southeast Asia.

Between 2013 and 2017, the price of the popular durian hybrid Musang King almost tripled from US$9 (S$12.12) to U$22 per kg.

Exports of this valuable fruit have boomed. In 2016, Thailand was leading the way with US$495 million in durian exports while Malaysia trailed with a mere US$18 million. By early 2017, however, the latter had secured a deal to export whole fresh durians to China.

Durian can also be extremely profitable – earning growers more than nine times the modest US$4,200 per hectare that palm oil cultivation brings in each year. This fact has sparked off an unseemly land-grab as corporate giants muscle in on the cultivation of the fruit.

Whilst there are almost 200 known durian hybrids in Malaysia alone, Musang King – primarily grown in Kelantan’s isolated Gua Musang district – is the most sought-after. Indeed, durian aficionados (much like wine-lovers) treasure the district’s distinctive terroir – its potassium-rich soil and abundance of insect life.

Still, the state of Kelantan is one of Malaysia’s most backward and poorly administered. Ruled by the Islamist party PAS for the past 29 years, its human development indices lag both Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

Given decades of grinding poverty and lacklustre economic growth, the recent durian boom has engendered immense changes – producing both winners and losers.

Members of the isolated Temiar tribe in Gua Musang, for example, have become victims of an environmental blowback as their ancestral forests have been cleared to make way for vast durian orchards.

Malaysia’s 178,000 Orang Asli (indigenous people) make up less than one per cent of the country’s total population and are predominantly non-Muslim. An embattled minority, they live across the peninsula in numerous tribes, of which the Temiar are one of the larger.

Temiar leaders are adamant in their claims. Mr Mustafa Along has been at the forefront of a move to halt land-clearings linked to durian cultivation.

“This is our land, customary land that belonged to our forefathers since before independence,” said the 31-year-old.

“We started a blockade in Gua Musang back in February 2018, to prevent the companies from coming into our land to clear the trees for their durian plants.”

The father of three is now facing a legal challenge for leading the blockade.

“That land is ours. While it’s not written into law, it was verbally agreed upon between the Malaysian government and our forefathers. We’ve been connected to it for thousands of years. The saying is true: if you give an Orang Asli a parang knife and a match and throw him in a forest, he will thrive. But throw him into a city and he will surely die.”

Team Ceritalah visited the blockade in December. The local rivers were as opaque and turbid as milky coffee. Sedimentation built up from logging has made the water undrinkable.

In the past, medicinal plants used to grow in the forest, many of which the Orang Asli would harvest and sell. Now, all the roots have been pulled and the soil is dry. Hundred-year-old trees, which towered like skyscrapers protecting the native wildlife, have been cut down to make way for the durian trees which will be planted in grids, 10 metres apart. The sight is depressing, to say the least.

Ms Shariffa Sabrina Syed Akil, a leading environmentalist, has tried to step in and solve the dispute.

“My primary aim is to protect the country’s forests from destruction – particularly from indiscriminate logging. If you protect the forest, you protect the Orang Asli,” she said.

There have been some positive developments. Three months after the game-changing elections in May, Ms Sabrina Shariffa and Mr Mustafa presented Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad with a memorandum, requesting the federal government to intervene.

Thankfully, their lobbying and activism has garnered some results and on January 18, Mr Mahathir’s administration filed a lawsuit against the Kelantan state government for failing to protect Orang Asli land in Gua Musang.

For Mr Mustafa Along, this is progress. “This is an important development. It shows that the government cares about the welfare and well-being of the Orang Asli. But this should have happened years ago. The damage to our forests is irreversible,” he said.

Ms Shariffa Sabrina adds that environmental conservation has to be a holistic effort.

“I applaud the government – this is unprecedented. Ultimately however, it’s up to ordinary Malaysians to educate themselves and preserve the nature we have been blessed with,” she said. “We can’t just rely on the government. The forests belong to all of us”.

Chinese demand has the capacity to distort and upend smaller Southeast Asian communities. We need to be mindful of the negative impact – environmental, social and cultural – before we rush to supply the potential giant to the north. SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

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