Rice heist sows panic among Thai farmers

25 Mar, 2008

Thai rice farmers are guarding paddy fields and hurrying to bring in their crops after a granary theft last week fuelled rumours of bandits lured by surging rice prices, officials said on Monday.
Reports of widespread paddy theft, although unsubstantiated by police, spread quickly after the theft of 100-kg (220 lb) of premium quality fragrant rice from a farmer's granary in the province of Kalasin, 500 km (310 miles) north-east of Bangkok.
"Villagers have set up teams and are patrolling the community," Urit Poo-aob, a district chief in Kalasin, told Reuters by telephone. The north-east is the key-producing region for premium grade fragrant rice in Thailand, the world's biggest rice exporter.
Thai rice prices have been rising since late last year when India banned exports of non-basmati rice to ensure it had enough for its own people. Vietnam, the number two-rice exporter, halted exports during March and April in order to meet Filipino contracts.
As a result, the price of Thai premium fragrant price has soared 30 percent to nearly $900 a tonne. Thai 100 percent B grade white rice has also risen 30 percent, to $600 a tonne, fuelling rumours of rice bandits swooping on unguarded paddy fields after midnight in search of an easy score.
Some farmers in the white rice-growing province of Sing Buri have slept in their paddy fields after rumour spread of a 1,000-kg heist.
However, police have received no formal complaint.
"There are many rumours, but no one has come forward to tell police that they were robbed," an Ang Thong police official, who declined to be named, told Reuters.
Nevertheless, the rumours have been strong enough to prompt many farmers to harvest their crops as quickly as possible. "Most of the rice grown in Suphan Buri has already been harvested. It's around 10-20 days than expected," said an agricultural official in the mostly white rice producing province 100 km north of Bangkok.
Thailand, the world's biggest rice exporter, is expected to produce around 6 million tonnes of paddy in its second smaller crop usually harvested in April.

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