
He said this matter was decided last week during the cabinet meeting, chaired by Prime Minister Najib Razak.
“If we import trade products from any country, and if that country makes the decision to boycott palm oil, then our government will also stop buying from that country.
“They carried out various marketing efforts so that we buy their products, but (they) don’t want to buy our products.
“Malaysia is not a country that can be manipulated,” he said during his speech at the launch of the Hello Commodity Bagan Datuk programme here yesterday.
Zahid said if approved by the EU, the proposal would affect the income of some 500,000 smallholders across the country.
In fact, he said, the decision could be considered as a discrimination which would affect the demand for palm oil, which is one of the biggest commodity-based export contributors with a value of RM71.5 billion in 2017.
The deputy prime minister also gave the assurance that the government would take appropriate measures to ensure that the future of Malaysia’s palm oil was safeguarded.
“The palm oil sector is the main backbone where the sector not only contributes in terms of increasing the country’s revenue, but is also one of the people’s economic activities.
“The government has given a special focus on the development of oil palm smallholders so that the production and quality of palm oil produced can be improved, and subsequently increase the income of the smallholders,” he said.
He was commenting on the resolution by the EU Parliament on Jan 17, through the Renewable Energy Directive, which requires that only sustainably-produced palm oil can imported into the EU after 2020.
‘European ban on palm oil can cripple Malaysia’s oil palm industry’