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The Coffee Trail with Simon Reeve

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'In Britain we drink almost 500 million cups of coffee every week.'

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But how much do we really know about where our coffee comes from?

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'I'm on a journey from the fields...'

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Flippin' 'eck!

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'..to the factories...'

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Coffee!

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'..to uncover the surprising stories behind our morning pick-me-up.'

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Chairman Vu, you've got a Bentley!

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'Coffee shops now sell lattes and cappuccinos

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'on almost every British high street,

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'but we've loved cheaper instant coffee for decades.'

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If you want the best coffee taste

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you need the best blend of the best beans.

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'Producing instant coffee to fill our cups is having a huge impact.'

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There were up to 2,000 wild elephants in Vietnam.

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There's now just a few dozen left.

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'On my journey I discover how our humble cup of coffee

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'has helped transform the fortunes of a nation.'

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Thank you very much!

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I worked hard for this!

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I'm following The Coffee Trail.

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MUSIC: "Toxygene" by the Orb

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I bet if you asked most Brits where their coffee comes from,

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they wouldn't say here.

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I'm in Vietnam.

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'When you think of coffee, you usually think of Brazil,

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'Jamaica or Colombia.'

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Oh, goodness me.

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'The first stop on my coffee trail is Hanoi,

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'the capital city in the north of Vietnam.'

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I've got to go left here, I think. Aagh!

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The streets here, the roads anyway, they're clogged with...

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mad motorcyclists,

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psychopathic scooter drivers

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and suicidal cyclists!

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'There are more than 90 million people in Vietnam,

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'and they all seem to be in my way.'

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Aagh!

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Aagh!

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What are you doing, madam? What are you doing?!

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'Vietnam is the number one supplier of coffee to the UK

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'and one of the largest coffee producers in the world.'

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Oof! Time, I think, for a quick coffee.

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Coffee shop, another coffee shop.

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There's another one ahead. There's coffee shops everywhere here.

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'The Vietnamese grow huge quantities of coffee

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'and now drink it by the gallon.

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'But they like a very particular brew.'

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-Ca phe trung.

-Ah, ca phe trung.

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-Ca phe trung?

-Ah, ca phe trung.

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Thank you.

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'The Vietnamese version of a cappuccino

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'wasn't quite what I was expecting.'

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I think the joke is on me.

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"Go and order a ca phe trung", they said.

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"What is a ca phe trung?" is the question I did not ask.

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Are there eggs in this coffee?

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Egg coffee.

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Ca phe trung is an egg coffee?

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Egg coffee.

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That's just not right!

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'At least it wasn't another speciality here,

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'coffee beans extracted from weasel droppings.'

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Eggy coffee.

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Mmm.

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Ooh!

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-That's delicious.

-Thank you.

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Really good.

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I think we need to get on a journey

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and find out where this Vietnamese coffee's being made.

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'30 years ago, less than 0.1% of

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'global coffee production came from Vietnam,

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'but in just a few decades this country has transformed itself

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'into one of the world's leading coffee producers.'

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Hi. Can I get a ticket to Dong Ha, please?

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They drink coffee in the capital, but they don't grow it here.

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And to see that, I need to head south.

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Thank you.

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Oh.

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It's here. OK.

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Oh, it's all right.

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Oh, it's got a bit of air conditioning, which,

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well, to be honest, I'm quite relieved about.

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Oh, and a lovely...

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..floral display.

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I can feel the train powering up underneath me,

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so we're just about to leave.

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It's exciting!

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I tell you what, they're dead on time.

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11 o'clock.

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'The story of coffee in Vietnam goes back more than 100 years.

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'Coffee was first introduced by the French in the 19th century.

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'Vietnam was part of a colony known as French Indochina,

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'which also included Cambodia and Laos.'

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'The French ruled Vietnam for almost 70 years from the late 1800s.

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'They milked the country for anything they could extract,

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'earning vast fortunes.

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'Colonial rule could be brutal. Vietnamese workers toiled in

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'the fields to produce rubber, tea, rice and coffee.

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'French rule finally came to an end in the 1950s,

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'after a Communist uprising in the north drove them from the country.

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'The conflict claimed tens of thousands of lives.'

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'In 1954, a peace conference

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'resulted in the country being partitioned,

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'with a Communist government in North Vietnam

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'and an American-backed regime in the South.

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'But a new and even more bloody war loomed.'

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'I'd travelled 400 miles south from the capital.

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'It was time to head up into the hills.

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'Coffee is grown here on a vast scale.'

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Look there! Coffee!

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We've arrived in coffee country.

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This is one of the areas of Vietnam where they grow our coffee,

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coffee for us and a few other countries.

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BULL MOOS

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The cow is spooked, it's off.

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I think you'll find the cow is a bull, Simon.

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'I was visiting the village of Huong Son.'

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We've arrived.

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'The coffee industry in Vietnam

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'now provides a livelihood for millions of people,

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'mostly around small farms like this of just a few acres.

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'Across the country, farmers like Ho Bon

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'produce a staggering million and a half tonnes of coffee.

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'It's a key export for the country,

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'and our number one source of coffee in Britain.'

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These are all the coffee on the plant here, look at this.

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This is ready to pick!

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Let's go, OK! Let's go pick some coffee!

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Do you take everything off or just the...?

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OK, so just the red, all right, OK.

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What's wrong with that? Oh, he's shaking his head.

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That specifically is what you're after. None of this.

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'Coffee is one of the most valuable traded goods on Earth.

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'Globally the industry's worth more than £40 billion.

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'It's the single most important tropical commodity traded worldwide,

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'accounting for nearly half of total exports of tropical products.'

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Why do you choose coffee as the crop that you grow?

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Why not something else?

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So, coffee is more work, it's harder work

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but you can make more money from it.

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So leave those on. That's done! That one is done.

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So we move in.

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This is the coffee fruit, I suppose,

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and inside is the rather crucial coffee bean.

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Tastes like, um, like a sour grape.

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But from it you get this.

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You can see the line through it, which indicates the coffee.

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And you get two, obviously, in one...

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in one fruit.

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Bon, do you think I might have a future

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as one of your coffee pickers?

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Because I've gone some uses, you know,

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I'm quite lanky so I can get to the very top of the plant

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and pick off the cherries, the fruits from there.

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That could be a problem, I must admit.

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'The villagers here wear uniforms

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'left over from what we call the Vietnam War.

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'It was the conflict that still defines Vietnam today.

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'In 1965, American combat troops were deployed

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'to support the South Vietnamese government,

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'which was facing a guerrilla campaign by Communist forces.'

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'Their duty will be strictly defensive,

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'but they will shoot back if attacked.

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'Marines usually do.'

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'Within a few years, America had more than half a million troops

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'on the ground, engaged in a full-scale war.'

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'An hour away from the village is Khe Sanh,

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'once a key American airbase,

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'and the site of one of the most important battles of the Vietnam war.'

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'Van Ngoc Vu is a guide

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'who's been showing visitors around the battlefield

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'for more than ten years.'

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The US dropped in total about 100,000 tonnes of bombs

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on the surrounding hills of Khe Sanh,

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on the North Vietnamese army position,

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suspected North Vietnamese army position.

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That's the most concentrated bombing in the history of warfare.

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-The most concentrated period of bombing ever?

-Yeah.

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So, well, in this valley effectively and on the hills around here?

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Yeah.

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'In 1968, Communist North Vietnamese forces

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'attacked the American airbase.

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'US Marines were cut off,

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'and the US Air Force responded with overwhelming force.'

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IMMENSE EXPLOSIONS

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'Thousands of Vietnamese soldiers and civilians died,

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'along with hundreds of Americans.'

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Look at the size of this.

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Is this the biggest type of bomb

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that the Americans dropped on the positions around here?

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No, not really.

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The biggest one is, er,

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ten times bigger, heavier than this one.

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15,000lbs.

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Ten times heavier?!

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Yeah, this one is 1,500lbs.

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This was what was pouring out the skies, then,

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onto the North Vietnamese positions.

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Yeah, it was raining.

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Raining from the sky, yes.

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Coffee planters still have lots of problems

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from the unexploded bombs around Khe Sanh.

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So there are still bombs like this buried in the ground,

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not quite tick-ticking, but just waiting for a farmer or a tractor

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with a plough to go over the top of them and potentially set them off.

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Yeah, exactly.

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Is it safe to walk around here?

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Are there any unexploded bombs in the ground?

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It is safe inside the Khe Sanh combat base.

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Now, actually, it's a tourist attraction so it was cleared,

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this is safe.

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But if you wander around outside the perimeter of Khe Sanh,

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it's still dangerous, there's still

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lots of unexploded land mines, ordnance up there.

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-Really?

-Yeah. In Quang Tri Province alone,

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it's estimated between 80, 83% of land

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is still being affected with unexploded ordnance.

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'The war ended nearly 40 years ago,

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'but this area is still desperately poor.

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'Growing coffee is a major source of income here.

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'The need to put food on the table drives people to take chances,

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'and working the fields, despite the risks posed by unexploded bombs.'

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Hello!

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Hello! Hello!

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'Like most Vietnamese,

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'18-year-old Ho Ver Nee was born long after the war ended.'

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TRANSLATION: Growing coffee is the only thing we do around here.

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We grow coffee.

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I don't plant other crops like rubber trees.

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All of my friends, they grow coffee, so I grow coffee as well.

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'But for the past year he has been unable to work on his farm.'

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Can you tell us what happened to you?

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TRANSLATION: I was digging in the ground to plant coffee.

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I'd gone to work very early

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and I was clearing away grass and digging holes.

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As I was digging a hole there was an explosion.

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I was knocked unconscious and I can't remember anything else.

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When I came around I realised I was in the hospital.

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I kept thinking of my parents. I was scared I was going to die.

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Did you have any idea that there might be

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explosives or bombs or mines still in the ground in that field?

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TRANSLATION: Yes, one person had already been killed.

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Why are there people still working there?

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TRANSLATION: We're very poor and we don't have enough rice to eat.

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I find it astonishing, but more than 100,000 Vietnamese have been killed

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or injured by unexploded bombs since the END of the conflict.

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For rural populations like this,

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wars rarely end when peace treaties are signed.

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Modern weaponry lives long in the soil,

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claiming thousands of lives globally every year.

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Since we left, Y has at last been fitted for a prosthetic leg.

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But thousands of other maimed villagers and farmers across Vietnam

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have yet to receive help.

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Following America's defeat and the end of the Vietnam War in 1975,

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North and South Vietnam were unified under a Communist government.

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After years of devastating conflict, the country was in economic ruin.

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Coffee was to play a key role in its eventual recovery.

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I headed south towards the main coffee growing region.

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A few hours into our journey, the weather began to turn.

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We'd driven straight into a huge tropical cyclone.

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Just stopped by the side of the road because now we really see

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the power, the destructive force of the cyclone.

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The sea is flooding in, inundating people's homes down here.

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'Cyclone Nari was causing widespread damage in central Vietnam.'

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'16 people had been killed or were missing.'

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Look at this!

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'50,000 homes had been destroyed or flooded.

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'It was the worst cyclone in years.'

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Look at the tree here!

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'Scientists report the weather here is becoming more extreme and unpredictable.

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'It's a consequence of global climate change.'

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The cyclones that are hitting Vietnam

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are becoming stronger and more powerful.

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If you're a coffee farmer, say,

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this is devastating.

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As the storm subsided, I continued south.

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My journey had taken me through some of Vietnam's remoter regions,

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which tourists and TV crews rarely enter,

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and foreigners who do require extra permits to turn off main roads.

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When we'd strayed off our route,

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we'd been stopped by the police and had to beat a hasty retreat.

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OK, so it looked like the police were going to

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stop us or even arrest us there, but I think

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we've just driven off away from them, they're not following.

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They might have decided we're just more problems than we're worth.

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Vietnam is still an authoritarian, one-party, Communist state.

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Political opposition is suppressed

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and there's little freedom of speech.

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Our filming here is being controlled

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and restricted to a degree and we also have

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a government-approved minder who's travelling with us.

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We're going to have to be careful about what we film,

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who we talk to and what we ask.

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I'd arrived in the central highlands.

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The history of coffee production is one of the most sensitive issues here

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because it involved blanketing this region with coffee farms,

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human rights abuses

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and the mass movement of millions of people.

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I visited Nguyen Hu Phuong, one of the newcomers.

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He has a smallholding of three hectares.

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Xin chao.

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Phuong? Phuong?

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Hello, mate, I'm Simon, very nice to meet you.

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Is this all your coffee around us?

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Let's go and have a look.

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Thank you.

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Goodness me!

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So you're collecting up the beans now? It's harvest time?

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-Do you want me to hold it?

-Yes! Yes!

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Come on then.

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Oh, goodness, no, you haven't finished.

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You're going to pull all those berries off.

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So, how long have you been here and why did you come?

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So you're not from this area then?

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What was this land like when you first arrived here?

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Was it a coffee farm already?

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What was the hardest part for you of establishing a life and a farm here?

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What does your wife think was the toughest part?

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I want to see the hands, let me see the hands here.

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All right, these have done some hard work, haven't they?

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But look at these!

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You're doing the hard work, really, aren't you?

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After the end of the Vietnam War,

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the Communist government started huge collective farms here.

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They weren't a great success.

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Nobody on the collective farms had much of an incentive to work hard

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and corruption was rampant. People were going hungry

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and the country wasn't making much money from its crops.

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Eventually the government realised they had to do something.

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The crucial year is 1986.

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That's when the Vietnamese Communist Party had a major meeting.

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They realised the economy was in a terrible state

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and they decided to relax the rules and, among other things,

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start growing and exporting coffee on a massive scale.

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The state-planned collective farms were swept away.

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Half a million smallholdings emerged in their place,

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and in the 1990s, coffee production grew at a staggering 30% per year.

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Like that?

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Oh, I am, I'm so strong! So strong!

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'Phuong and his family are part of the massive migration...'

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Flippin' 'eck!

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'..of more than three million people who've come here

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'from other parts of the country to farm coffee and other crops.'

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The equipment here is still low tech and often creaking.

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But small farms like this have been crucial to this country's rapid economic growth.

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This is what it's all about.

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The next stage from here is to sell this on to a wholesaler.

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Coffee, coffee, it's everywhere here.

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You look at the communities around here as well

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and, where they're poor, you've got...

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Look here for example, electricity,

0:25:140:25:16

satellite dishes on both houses here.

0:25:160:25:19

This is a very poor country still,

0:25:190:25:22

but it was a lot poorer 20, 30 years ago.

0:25:220:25:27

Things are changing, things are improving.

0:25:280:25:30

In 1994, 60% of Vietnamese lived below the poverty line,

0:25:300:25:34

now it's less than 10%.

0:25:340:25:36

Here we are, I think,

0:25:360:25:38

judging by the way they're crossing this dual carriageway.

0:25:380:25:42

But Vietnam's coffee industry has its problems.

0:25:560:25:59

Coffee grown on the small farms is often poor quality,

0:25:590:26:02

farmers occasionally even bulk up the weight of their coffee sacks

0:26:020:26:06

by chucking in stones and bolts.

0:26:060:26:08

And the deal has been done.

0:26:250:26:27

Is that my pay for the day?

0:26:270:26:29

-Thank you very much!

-THEY LAUGH

0:26:290:26:31

I worked hard for this!

0:26:310:26:33

So you've got about £650 here.

0:26:340:26:37

It's yours, after all.

0:26:520:26:53

And thank you for letting me see this part of the process.

0:26:530:26:56

You might be drinking some of farmer Phuong's coffee by now.

0:26:570:27:00

Like most Vietnamese farmers, he grows

0:27:000:27:03

one specific type of bean to make a specific type of coffee.

0:27:030:27:08

All of this coffee, in fact almost all of the coffee

0:27:080:27:10

that's produced in Vietnam is a type of coffee called Robusta.

0:27:100:27:15

Robusta coffee, it's quite a hardy plant,

0:27:150:27:18

but it's quite a low quality one as well

0:27:180:27:20

and it goes into making instant coffee.

0:27:200:27:22

A lot of other countries that produce coffee churn out

0:27:220:27:26

Arabica coffee, which is a more valuable coffee,

0:27:260:27:29

it goes to make the more expensive stuff, things like espressos,

0:27:290:27:31

which you can be charged a fortune for in a high street coffee shop.

0:27:310:27:35

But here in Vietnam, they make the cheap stuff.

0:27:360:27:38

Instant coffee made largely from Robusta beans

0:27:400:27:43

accounts for nearly 80% of the coffee we drink in Britain.

0:27:430:27:46

Our love affair with the instant stuff really took off

0:27:460:27:50

in the 1970s and '80s.

0:27:500:27:52

Now that's what I call a cup of coffee.

0:27:540:27:56

Of course. It's new Maxwell House.

0:27:560:27:58

Ah.

0:27:580:27:59

That's why Nescafe is made from a blend of

0:27:590:28:01

three types of the finest coffee beans in the world

0:28:010:28:04

and there are about this many beans in every cup.

0:28:040:28:06

Red Mountain is freeze dried...

0:28:060:28:08

Communist Vietnam's coffee boom was partly fed by

0:28:080:28:11

the middle-class aspirations of 1980s Britain.

0:28:110:28:14

Mmm, lovely coffee. Anyway...

0:28:170:28:19

Red Mountain, it's like ground coffee taste without the grind.

0:28:190:28:24

When instant coffee landed on supermarket shelves,

0:28:250:28:28

consumption of coffee rocketed around the world.

0:28:280:28:31

In Britain we now drink twice as much of the stuff as we did in the '70s.

0:28:330:28:37

One of the best places to see the impact of our coffee boom

0:28:390:28:42

is the city of Buon Ma Thuot, Vietnam's coffee capital.

0:28:420:28:46

Coffee's made some people here very rich.

0:28:490:28:52

Chairman Vu, you've got a Bentley!

0:28:590:29:02

HE CHUCKLES

0:29:020:29:04

Of course you have a Bentley, you're a rich chap.

0:29:040:29:07

You like your cars, Chairman Vu.

0:29:090:29:12

So, come on, what cars have you got then? Tell us.

0:29:150:29:18

Ten Ferraris?!

0:29:220:29:23

So, you had many good years when you look at the finances then?

0:29:230:29:27

You have five Bentleys?

0:29:320:29:34

Oh, flippin' 'eck!

0:29:400:29:42

Dang Le Nguyen Vu is known as Vietnam's Coffee King.

0:30:000:30:05

He was one of the first to see the potential of the business.

0:30:050:30:07

He's made a fortune from exporting beans to countries like Britain,

0:30:070:30:12

as well as founding his own international chain of coffee shops.

0:30:120:30:15

Accompanied by an escort of Jeeps, Chairman Vu, as he's known,

0:30:170:30:21

showed me around some of his empire.

0:30:210:30:24

Goodness me, it's quite the entourage, isn't it?

0:30:300:30:33

He's even built a multimillion-pound coffee village,

0:30:340:30:37

a shrine to his beloved bean.

0:30:370:30:40

'At the centre of the complex are some exhibits

0:30:570:31:00

'highlighting Vu's own very personal philosophy.'

0:31:000:31:03

What?

0:31:060:31:07

Who have you got here, Chairman Vu, and why have you got them here?

0:31:070:31:11

TRANSLATION: These statues are of my top 100 people.

0:31:130:31:16

People who've shaped the history of the world.

0:31:160:31:19

Are they people you personally identify with

0:31:190:31:22

or you would like to be like?

0:31:220:31:25

TRANSLATION: Both.

0:31:250:31:28

I'd like to be one of the people who changes the world,

0:31:280:31:31

but also I learn from their core values.

0:31:310:31:34

For instance, Napoleon.

0:31:370:31:40

His talent in military strategy is the best in the world,

0:31:430:31:46

no-one can rival him.

0:31:460:31:48

If you take coffee, it's a stimulant for the brain.

0:31:520:31:56

The rich countries of the world all drink a lot of coffee.

0:32:000:32:04

Take your own country - the moment you shift

0:32:040:32:07

from drinking coffee to drinking tea, the country slows down.

0:32:070:32:11

This is a shocking thing to say!

0:32:140:32:16

We drink both in Britain.

0:32:160:32:19

We love our tea and we drink quite a lot of coffee as well.

0:32:190:32:23

Are you suggesting that if we only drank coffee,

0:32:230:32:25

we would be a more creative country?

0:32:250:32:28

For me, coffee's a treasure.

0:32:300:32:33

Coffee is the heritage of mankind, it's the solution for the future

0:32:330:32:37

and I don't think that's an exaggeration.

0:32:370:32:40

Chairman Vu has big plans.

0:32:430:32:46

He wants to take Vietnam's coffee,

0:32:460:32:48

which we in Britain just use for cheaper, instant coffee,

0:32:480:32:50

and sell it internationally as a proper, expensive drink

0:32:500:32:53

in its own right.

0:32:530:32:54

It's an acquired taste, but I liked it.

0:32:560:32:58

It's really good.

0:32:590:33:01

You want us to drink more of this, don't you?

0:33:010:33:04

You want to try and sell this around the world.

0:33:040:33:07

Yes. We want to bring Vietnamese coffee culture to the world.

0:33:070:33:11

So is your plan to try and expand into Europe, into North America,

0:33:110:33:17

are we going to see Chairman Vu's coffee shops opening in the UK?

0:33:170:33:21

It isn't going to be easy, but in the next year

0:33:230:33:26

we want to compete with the big brands like Starbucks.

0:33:260:33:30

If we can take on and win over the US market,

0:33:370:33:40

we can conquer the whole world.

0:33:400:33:42

Is that the plan? Conquer the whole world?

0:33:440:33:47

That's my goal.

0:33:480:33:50

Two and a half million people in Vietnam

0:34:220:34:25

are employed in the coffee industry.

0:34:250:34:27

They grow it, they pack it, they ship it.

0:34:270:34:29

Selling you coffee feeds their families and helps educate their children.

0:34:320:34:35

In many parts of the country, growing coffee is the only industry,

0:34:360:34:40

but problems are looming.

0:34:400:34:42

Dave D'haeze is a Belgian soil and water conservation scientist

0:34:460:34:50

living in Vietnam, who's an expert on the coffee industry.

0:34:500:34:54

Dave, is the way that the Vietnamese

0:34:540:34:56

are farming coffee at the moment sustainable?

0:34:560:34:59

I don't think so.

0:34:590:35:01

It's a very interesting question because, actually,

0:35:010:35:04

different to any other project we do in the world,

0:35:040:35:07

where we are trying to help farmers to increase productivity,

0:35:070:35:13

here we have to tell farmers,

0:35:130:35:14

"Please, reduce water amounts, reduce fertiliser amounts

0:35:140:35:19

"and still your production will be one of the highest in the world."

0:35:190:35:22

So they're over-using fertiliser

0:35:220:35:25

and they're over-using scarce water resources?

0:35:250:35:27

Absolutely, yes.

0:35:270:35:29

Why?

0:35:290:35:30

Well, there is this traditional belief that you need to do that

0:35:300:35:35

and nobody has really been trained on how to produce coffee.

0:35:350:35:39

Sometimes I'm saying,

0:35:390:35:40

"Look, every farmer in Vietnam is the researcher of his own plot."

0:35:400:35:45

Oh, really, so there's not enough shared information, almost?

0:35:450:35:49

They're making it up as they go along and they think, "We want more

0:35:490:35:52

"beans, let's just put kilograms more of fertiliser on them."

0:35:520:35:56

Absolutely, that's how it's going.

0:35:560:35:58

'Farmers are over-using fertiliser and water

0:35:580:36:01

'and now half of their coffee plants are reaching the end of their life

0:36:010:36:05

'and there's no coordinated plan to replant them.'

0:36:050:36:07

Wow!

0:36:090:36:11

Now that is a magnificent sight!

0:36:110:36:14

That is really spectacular!

0:36:160:36:19

'And those aren't the only threats to the coffee industry here.'

0:36:220:36:25

We've just been hit by a cyclone,

0:36:250:36:29

along with a large chunk of the middle of the country,

0:36:290:36:32

that Vietnam wasn't really expecting.

0:36:320:36:34

How is climate change going to affect Vietnam and how is it

0:36:340:36:38

going to affect the Vietnamese coffee industry, do you think, Dave?

0:36:380:36:42

I recently spoke to a farmer and he was saying,

0:36:420:36:45

"Actually, the climate doesn't meet my expectations any more."

0:36:450:36:48

So the climate is becoming really, really more erratic.

0:36:480:36:51

So more extreme weather -

0:36:510:36:54

hotter hot weather, drier dry weather,

0:36:540:36:57

wetter wet season?

0:36:570:36:59

Absolutely, yeah.

0:36:590:37:01

We're actually facing the risk that coffee farming will become

0:37:010:37:05

less viable in economic terms,

0:37:050:37:07

so farmers will get less income,

0:37:070:37:09

and will it still be necessary or valuable to grow coffee?

0:37:090:37:13

That's the big question we are facing over here.

0:37:130:37:16

Much of this area was once covered by forest.

0:37:260:37:29

The Vietnamese strategy of producing vast quantities

0:37:290:37:32

of cheap, low quality beans for instant coffee

0:37:320:37:35

has contributed to its wholesale destruction.

0:37:350:37:38

So much of the forest has already been cleared around here,

0:37:420:37:46

but we're heading to one of the last areas that still gets some form of protection.

0:37:460:37:49

Yok Don is Vietnam's biggest national park

0:37:540:37:57

and is one of the largest protected wildlife areas in southeast Asia.

0:37:570:38:01

Primary forest has virtually disappeared in Vietnam.

0:38:010:38:04

According to data from global conservation organisation WWF,

0:38:050:38:09

Vietnam has lost nearly 40,000 square miles of total forest cover

0:38:090:38:13

since 1973. The battle to preserve what's left

0:38:130:38:17

is being fought by a small band of park rangers.

0:38:170:38:19

Only just realised the guy there has got an assault rifle.

0:38:250:38:27

This is Mr Tan here.

0:38:290:38:31

-Mr Tan?

-Yeah?

0:38:310:38:32

He's the deputy director of the park.

0:38:320:38:36

As well as the clearing of forests for agriculture and coffee farming,

0:38:370:38:40

there's also a major problem here with illegal logging.

0:38:400:38:43

Really? All park?

0:38:530:38:55

And they're poor.

0:39:210:39:22

Yeah, they're poor.

0:39:220:39:23

Yeah, you can see this boat. We can check.

0:39:250:39:27

HE SPEAKS VIETNAMESE

0:39:270:39:29

I think they're going to check this boat.

0:39:290:39:31

Uh-huh? OK.

0:39:370:39:38

Let's look at this!

0:39:590:40:02

This is such a rare sight now.

0:40:040:40:05

Forest!

0:40:060:40:08

Let's go.

0:40:080:40:10

'The Vietnamese government has a plan for rapid economic development.

0:40:110:40:15

'They're expanding agriculture and investing heavily in mining

0:40:160:40:19

'and hydroelectric power,

0:40:190:40:21

'which put the environment under incredible pressure.'

0:40:210:40:24

These guys really are doing an incredible job.

0:40:280:40:31

The rest of the country is trying to devour its natural resources

0:40:310:40:35

and they're holding the line and trying to protect what's left.

0:40:350:40:38

This place is under siege.

0:40:390:40:41

On the edge of the forest, we came across evidence

0:40:480:40:50

of the ongoing threat from coffee farming.

0:40:500:40:53

So he needs to do a bit of weeding.

0:40:560:40:58

Is this your land, or are you in the park here?

0:40:590:41:03

And why grow coffee here?

0:41:090:41:11

Why coffee, rather than any other crop?

0:41:110:41:13

Goodness me.

0:41:200:41:22

This is a complicated situation, you know.

0:41:220:41:24

It's a little bit unclear whether

0:41:240:41:27

this chap is inside the national park or not,

0:41:270:41:31

but the national park is that-a-way and that-a-way and that-a-way.

0:41:310:41:35

He might be.

0:41:350:41:37

The rangers have told us that elsewhere around here,

0:41:370:41:40

farms are nibbling away at the edges of the park.

0:41:400:41:44

It's very hard for them to stop,

0:41:460:41:48

and a couple of times when we've talked about it, they've said,

0:41:480:41:51

"Well, you know, these people are really poor,"

0:41:510:41:53

and obviously they feel a huge amount of sympathy for them.

0:41:530:41:57

I mean, look at this guy saying, "Yeah, I make more money from coffee

0:41:580:42:02

"than I do from anything else." But look where he lives.

0:42:020:42:05

He's not some wealthy coffee baron.

0:42:050:42:06

He's just surviving.

0:42:090:42:11

We often imagine that large companies and industry is

0:42:130:42:16

primarily responsible for damaging or destroying the natural world.

0:42:160:42:20

But national parks and wilderness areas around the globe

0:42:210:42:24

are also under attack like this from hundreds of millions

0:42:240:42:26

of poor villagers and farmers, who clear a small area of land,

0:42:260:42:30

grow a few crops and raise a few cattle.

0:42:300:42:33

They want to raise their living standards,

0:42:340:42:37

or often are just trying to feed their families.

0:42:370:42:39

The destruction of Vietnam's forests,

0:42:460:42:48

often to grow our coffee,

0:42:480:42:50

threatens the survival of countless animal species,

0:42:500:42:54

including some of the most iconic creatures on earth.

0:42:540:42:56

Xin chao.

0:43:020:43:03

Bunh Cam.

0:43:070:43:08

And you?

0:43:080:43:09

Muk.

0:43:100:43:11

'These elephants are domesticated,

0:43:110:43:14

'cared for by their trainers, known as mahouts.

0:43:140:43:17

'Their wild cousins have almost completely disappeared here.'

0:43:170:43:21

Muk, why has the number of elephants fallen so dramatically then?

0:43:260:43:29

At the end of the Vietnam War there were up to 2,000 wild elephants

0:44:030:44:08

in Vietnam. There's now just a few dozen left.

0:44:080:44:11

Loss of their habitat, including for coffee farms,

0:44:110:44:14

is one of the biggest problems facing them,

0:44:140:44:16

which means it's incredibly important that it's protected.

0:44:160:44:21

Elephants are just one victim of the environmental catastrophe

0:44:250:44:28

caused by the clearance of Vietnam's forests.

0:44:280:44:30

The Javan rhinoceros was declared extinct here recently

0:44:330:44:36

and there are no more than 30 tigers left in the entire country.

0:44:360:44:40

The Vietnamese government's not doing much

0:44:430:44:46

and some conservation groups are actually giving up hope

0:44:460:44:49

of protecting Vietnam's remaining endangered wildlife.

0:44:490:44:52

Now here's a sight.

0:44:590:45:01

'Muk and his family now survive on the money they earn

0:45:030:45:05

'from providing elephant rides to tourists.'

0:45:050:45:09

Do you normally bring your ellie home with you?

0:45:090:45:11

Bless her health?

0:45:140:45:16

Oh, fantastic. Can we watch? Can we see it?

0:45:160:45:19

It's not only the environment and wildlife that suffered

0:45:480:45:51

during Vietnam's great rush for coffee.

0:45:510:45:53

Muk and his family are part of an ethnic grouping called the Ede people,

0:45:550:46:00

one of around 50 minority groups in Vietnam who make up almost 15% of the population.

0:46:000:46:04

They're distinguished from the majority Kinh people by religion and heritage.

0:46:090:46:13

Some are Christians and some sided with the US during the Vietnam war.

0:46:130:46:17

Ever since, they've been treated with suspicion and hostility

0:46:190:46:22

by the Vietnamese government.

0:46:220:46:24

Many hill tribes were forced off their farmland when

0:46:250:46:28

the majority Kinh people arrived in their millions to grow coffee.

0:46:280:46:32

There have been violent protests against what many tribal people have seen as a land grab.

0:46:360:46:40

This unverified footage is thought to show protests

0:46:430:46:46

and a government crackdown.

0:46:460:46:47

We know that hundreds of ethnic minority activists have been arrested

0:46:510:46:55

and imprisoned for campaigning for rights for their people.

0:46:550:46:59

Ethnic minorities here have really had a tough time of it.

0:47:010:47:04

Any discussion of ethnic minority rights

0:47:050:47:09

is extremely controversial here.

0:47:090:47:12

If I was to start asking people questions about

0:47:120:47:15

the ethnic minority situation, I would be putting them in danger.

0:47:150:47:18

So, to find out more, I need to leave the country.

0:47:200:47:22

I flew to Bangkok,

0:47:310:47:32

the capital of Thailand, several hundred miles away.

0:47:320:47:35

Thousands of people from Vietnam's ethnic minorities

0:47:420:47:45

have fled the country to live in exile abroad.

0:47:450:47:47

We managed to arrange a meeting with two men who say they've escaped persecution in Vietnam.

0:47:490:47:54

Their identities have been concealed to protect them.

0:47:560:47:59

Can you describe to us what happened in ethnic minority areas in Vietnam

0:48:000:48:04

as millions of farmers from other regions started moving in there?

0:48:040:48:09

TRANSLATION: They took our lands away

0:48:120:48:14

to build a huge state development.

0:48:140:48:16

Without land, we had no way to earn a living.

0:48:160:48:19

-TRANSLATION:

-Last October I saw it with my own eyes, hundreds of police

0:48:260:48:31

and soldiers came and they uprooted all our coffee plants.

0:48:310:48:34

They said the land now belonged to the authorities.

0:48:360:48:38

Not even the whole village could stop them.

0:48:380:48:41

They beat us.

0:48:410:48:43

My nephew was beaten unconscious, it was impossible to stop them.

0:48:430:48:47

The government confiscated the land.

0:48:500:48:53

When they came and uprooted our coffee, we had to fight back.

0:48:560:48:59

For that they beat and tortured our people.

0:48:590:49:02

It was unfair because that land was passed down to us by our ancestors.

0:49:020:49:06

The regime has clamped down hard on signs of dissent.

0:49:090:49:12

TRANSLATION: They arrested me for handing out leaflets.

0:49:160:49:19

Leaflets asking young people to come and defend human rights

0:49:220:49:25

and freedom in Vietnam.

0:49:250:49:27

They said, "How dare you?"

0:49:300:49:32

and six of them started beating me around the head.

0:49:320:49:34

They beat me unconscious and I can't remember anything else.

0:49:370:49:40

There are still marks on my head.

0:49:420:49:43

After that, they threw me into a morgue.

0:49:470:49:49

When I came round, they carried on interrogating me.

0:49:510:49:54

This man says he was held in prison for six months.

0:49:580:50:01

When he was released, he fled the country.

0:50:020:50:05

Are you frightened of the Vietnamese government?

0:50:070:50:10

Do you think you'll ever be able to go home?

0:50:100:50:13

We can't return.

0:50:140:50:16

We're afraid because they have arrested us,

0:50:160:50:19

interrogated and tortured us.

0:50:190:50:21

How can we go back to Vietnam?

0:50:210:50:23

What would happen to you if you returned home?

0:50:240:50:27

I would be put in prison until I die.

0:50:270:50:29

You're certain of that?

0:50:290:50:30

Yes, I am.

0:50:320:50:33

We're scared because the Vietnamese government is different from other governments.

0:50:350:50:39

Once someone is charged with a crime they are imprisoned, locked up.

0:50:430:50:47

The government uses any means to make sure they stay in jail for ever.

0:50:480:50:51

And why would they imprison you?

0:50:550:50:56

On what grounds and for what crimes?

0:50:560:51:00

Opposing them is an offence, that's why they arrest us.

0:51:010:51:05

The international group Human Rights Watch

0:51:100:51:13

has described Vietnam's human rights record as atrocious

0:51:130:51:16

and says conditions there are getting worse.

0:51:160:51:18

There is widespread press censorship

0:51:180:51:21

and across the country people who question or challenge the regime

0:51:210:51:25

face harassment, jail and torture.

0:51:250:51:28

It seems clear to me that Vietnam does not get

0:51:280:51:32

the attention that it deserves and would be warranted, frankly,

0:51:320:51:36

for the scale of human rights issues and abuses that are happening there.

0:51:360:51:40

I have a view, or at least I had a view before starting this journey,

0:51:410:51:45

of Vietnam as being a poor but fairly friendly and

0:51:450:51:49

welcoming country which was an ideal place for a backpacker holiday.

0:51:490:51:53

I'm not suggesting it's not,

0:51:540:51:56

but I think you've got to see the political aspect as well

0:51:560:51:59

and the scale of the abuses that are happening there and that are

0:51:590:52:03

largely hidden from international view and international attention.

0:52:030:52:11

The end of the coffee trail took me to the south of Vietnam.

0:52:270:52:31

Ho Chi Minh City, which used to be called Saigon,

0:52:340:52:37

is Vietnam's biggest and most modern city.

0:52:370:52:39

Nearby is the destination for many of Vietnam's coffee beans,

0:52:490:52:53

a Nestle factory and warehouse.

0:52:530:52:55

Wow, this place is huge.

0:52:570:52:59

Nestle's the world's largest food company.

0:53:010:53:04

It supplies the UK with more than half our instant coffee.

0:53:040:53:08

Their manager here is Nakle Kattan.

0:53:100:53:12

This coffee is coming from what we call upcountry.

0:53:170:53:22

A large proportion of Vietnam's coffee bean harvest

0:53:220:53:25

ends up in Nestle's warehouses.

0:53:250:53:28

In fact, just a few giant multinational companies

0:53:310:53:34

dominate the global instant coffee industry.

0:53:340:53:36

Here it's Nestle that makes big profits by turning the beans into Nescafe.

0:53:400:53:44

The process begins by filtering out the impurities.

0:53:470:53:50

Wow.

0:53:560:53:57

It's a mass of piping that to me, of course, means absolutely nothing,

0:53:590:54:04

but to the guv'nor here, there's a purpose to everything, of course.

0:54:040:54:09

'After that, the beans are then roasted in a huge drum.'

0:54:090:54:13

Yeah, this is the coffee that you've just seen before,

0:54:130:54:17

it came through the roaster

0:54:170:54:18

and now it is roasted and going to the extraction.

0:54:180:54:22

Right, and the extraction bit is the secret bit?

0:54:220:54:26

Yeah. In the extractions, we extract first the solid,

0:54:260:54:30

but also this aroma, you know, of Nescafe, when you open your jar.

0:54:300:54:35

But that's the secret bit of your process that we can't see, isn't it?

0:54:350:54:40

'The Nescafe formula is a closely guarded secret

0:54:400:54:43

'and it's hugely lucrative.

0:54:430:54:45

'The instant coffee industry is worth billions every year,

0:54:450:54:48

'but very little of that profit stays in the country,

0:54:480:54:51

'which isn't great for Vietnam.'

0:54:510:54:53

Although Vietnam is one of the world's biggest coffee producers,

0:55:030:55:07

nobody seems to know about it.

0:55:070:55:09

When you think about it, whoever asks for a cup of Vietnamese coffee?

0:55:090:55:12

Starbucks, even Starbucks here in Vietnam,

0:55:140:55:18

doesn't actually promote and market coffee from Vietnam

0:55:180:55:22

the way it does coffee from other coffee-producing countries.

0:55:220:55:26

Again, not great for Vietnam.

0:55:270:55:29

Will Frith is a Vietnamese-American coffee consultant

0:55:290:55:32

who's moved here to get involved in the national coffee industry.

0:55:320:55:35

The big global coffee chains don't seem to promote

0:55:370:55:41

and market Vietnamese coffee the way they do

0:55:410:55:44

coffee from other coffee-producing countries.

0:55:440:55:47

-Right.

-What's going on?

0:55:470:55:49

In terms of the coffee industry here,

0:55:490:55:51

they're aiming for quantity, which necessarily drives the quality down.

0:55:510:55:57

Will wants to encourage Vietnamese farmers to switch from growing

0:55:580:56:01

low quality instant coffee to planting the more valuable beans

0:56:010:56:04

that go into expensive cappuccinos and espressos.

0:56:040:56:08

He thinks the country has no choice.

0:56:080:56:10

If they don't, I'm afraid that

0:56:100:56:12

a lot of the signs are pointing towards complete failure.

0:56:120:56:15

Is complete failure of the industry actually a possibility?

0:56:150:56:18

Yes.

0:56:180:56:20

We're entering sort of a perfect storm of conditions right now

0:56:200:56:22

where the soil is being sucked dry by monoculture.

0:56:220:56:26

So, the soil is basically becoming exhausted, knackered almost,

0:56:260:56:30

it's having the goodness sucked out of it.

0:56:300:56:32

Absolutely, and to compound the problem

0:56:320:56:35

there's climate change to think about.

0:56:350:56:37

And I've actually seen some models that essentially wipes out

0:56:370:56:41

more than half of the growing regions here.

0:56:410:56:44

And that would just be horrific for farmers here.

0:56:440:56:47

It would be devastating. It would be devastating for

0:56:470:56:49

more than just farmers, you've got processors and traders

0:56:490:56:52

and people whose livelihoods depend directly on the coffee industry.

0:56:520:56:56

The next day, I headed to the country's biggest port.

0:57:120:57:15

Thousands of tonnes of coffee leave Vietnam from here

0:57:160:57:19

and heads off across the sea to Europe and America.

0:57:190:57:22

I've come to the end of the coffee trail.

0:57:230:57:26

Clearly, this country has come a long way economically

0:57:260:57:28

in the last few decades, but they have got a lot further to go.

0:57:280:57:31

They've got to diversify their economy,

0:57:310:57:34

they've got to move on from producing massive quantities

0:57:340:57:37

of one type of low quality, low value coffee.

0:57:370:57:41

At the moment, the situation's quite good for us because

0:57:410:57:44

we get a cheap cup of coffee, but

0:57:440:57:46

it's not so good for the environment here in Vietnam, and actually

0:57:460:57:50

in the long term it's not that great for Vietnam's farmers either.

0:57:500:57:53

Our humble cup of instant coffee is linked to some of Vietnam's

0:57:570:58:00

greatest political problems and human rights abuses.

0:58:000:58:03

But it's also helped to create modern Vietnam,

0:58:060:58:09

providing jobs for huge numbers of people

0:58:090:58:11

and helping to lift this country from the ashes of war.

0:58:110:58:15

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