Logistical costs a challenge for betel nut trade in Bougainville
Betel
nut can be a lucrative business for most west coast Bougainvilleans from the
Kunua district.
But
logistical challenges are costing them a lot and the little they could earn
selling betel nut in Buka has been able to just keep them a float.
Evelyn
Sinat,39, and Martin Sibo,53, are two
among hundreds of betel nut traders who travel into Buka daily and they are suppliers
of the famous huge betel nuts from Bougainville.
Martin Sibo,53, and Evelyn Sinat, 39. |
Sibo
is married with four children and he traded betel nut in the last 18 years just
to make ends meet for his immediate and extended family.
The
whole trade has been somewhat little rewarding but he had been content, this
was able to sustain him day by day.
He
said he sells a bag at K80 and his return boat transport cost was K60 apart
from the cost of each bag at K10.
Sinat
does betel nut trade occasionally and said if demand was high and supply was
low, she could sell a bag for K100 or worst K50.
When
we spoke to her, she had seven bags.
She
said the retailers at Buka bargain with them often and most times they lose,
going back to their remote Kunua disappointed.
Married
to Kavieng, Sinat said there were betel nut plantations high in the mountains
of Kunua, in the middle lowlands and on the coast.
Transport
to Buka though is really a pain.
She
accounted they also pay carriers K10 to carry a bag of betel nut from the
inland about 2 hours walk to the coast before catching a boat to Buka.
From
betel but she was able to pay for school fees.
Her
plight is for the government to afford them reliable and less expensive
transport to markets and really develop her region.
They
needed apart from road and good sea transport, mobile communication, health and
education services.
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