Guangdong: Pigs, Pollution, and Politics
September 3, 2009 9:37am
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Pig farmer Mr. Liang stops to talk with our crew
The crew travelled to Guangdong from Ji’an by road (Jian Yi, with the equipment, by car) and the rest of the crew by rail (a 10-hour journey). Here’s director Jian Yi on the crew’s first day in Guangdong. “We visited Mr. and Mrs. Chen, who own a factory that produces sweaters for export, and had interesting conversations. Mrs. Chen, however we tried, simply refused to believe that the meat industry had any impact on climate change.”
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In 2008, the government, concerned by manure pollution in the Pearl River, decided that no more pig farms could be established in the delta—although such facilities will be allowed (and encouraged, in some cases) in other parts of Guangdong. This builds on a 2003 ban on pig factory farms along the river in Dongguang City—an event raised by a spry old farmer the team encountered next, in the city of Huizhou. It’s a region of Guangdong where small-scale pig farms are still common.
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Pollution does, though, remain a political issue. “We also got a chance to film a little river polluted by both industrial waste and farm waste,” Jian Yi continues. Some of the local villagers agreed to talk to the crew about their anger and concern. “Most, however, hid away from our camera,” fearful of government officials’ reactions if they saw the footage. Previously, some have experienced “bad lessons” (retaliation) when they’ve answered interviewers’ questions. No officials have seen the footage, nor did any interfere with the crew’s work.
As the shoot nears its end, an animated dinner takes place with the crew hotly, loudly and unexpectedly, debating two final interviewees, and each other, about the ethical and ecological complexities unearthed by the filming. To capture it, the camera was, for a few minutes, turned in the opposite direction. That story and a few more from the shoot in Guangdong, coming up next.



