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Vietnam to freeze new golf courses to protect rice farms

Tuesday, 29 July 2008


HANOI, July 28 (AFP): Communist Vietnam plans to restrict the growth of new golf courses encroaching on rice farms to ensure national food security and protect thousands of poor farmers, state media reported today.

More than 140 golf courses, either operating or in the planning stages, would take up almost 50,000 hectares (more than 120,000 acres) of land, said the Vietnam News daily quoting a Ministry of Planning and Investment report.

New golf courses had been licensed at a rate of more than one per week since early 2006, when foreign investor interest surged in the "emerging tiger" economy, which saw growth of 8.5 per cent last year.

But now, as food prices are sky-rocketing amid double-digit inflation, the government is planning to freeze new courses that do not meet land- use criteria and environmental protection requirements, reports said.

"Local governments should cease issuing new golf licenses if the projects are built on land which is currently used to cultivate two rice crops a year," the ministry report said according to the Vietnam Investment Review.