Feeding the World or the
Corporations?
Food agencies are feeding corporate greed
while an estimated 880 million people in the
world go hungry. Sam Burcher
reports
Sources
for this report are available in the ISIS members
site. Full details here
FAO report condemned, GM food aid rejected
The United Nations Food and Agricultural
Organisation (FAO) has upset a broad coalition of
consumers, farmers, environment groups, peasant
organisations and social movements by producing a
report overtly biased towards promoting the
interests of multinational corporations like
Monsanto and Syngenta. The report omits to
mention that Monsanto control over 90% of total
world area sown to transgenic seeds.
The FAO report, Agricultural
biotechnology: meeting the needs of the poor?
states that GMOs could be key to solving world
hunger, and pushes for more funding. The report
was denounced by 650 worldwide civil society
organisations in an open letter to the Director
of the FAO in Rome. The letter, signed by 800
individuals from more than 80 countries, demanded
structural changes in access to land, food and
political power, to be combined with support for
sustainable technologies in farmer-led research.
It was also rejected by five international NGOs
at a Hunger, Food Aid and GMOs meeting at Maputo,
Mozambique in July 2004.
Via Campesina, an organisation representing
the interests of peasant-farmers worldwide said
that promoting a technological solution to the
problem of hunger in the form of GM crops is
"a slap in the face for those who defend
food sovereignty." The development of
industrial agriculture has already caused
millions of rural people to be displaced from
their lands and condemned them to lives of
misery. GM crops, the latest offering in
industrial agriculture, will only intensify that
trend.
Consumers International Regional Office for
Africa, União Nacional de Camponeses (UNAC)
Mozambique (Via Campesina), Environmental Rights
Action (Friends of the Earth Nigeria), the
Oakland Institute and the Third World Network
(TWN) said that the FAOs report has
betrayed rural people and consumers by
recommending GMOs. Their consensus is that the
donation of GM food developed from untested and
unreliable technologies can only complicate
hunger issues. It is unacceptable at least until
the safety of GM food and feed has been proven
beyond any reasonable doubt.
ISIS was the first to call for GM- free food
aid in 2002 on grounds that the malnourished with
compromised immune systems would be especially
susceptible to the potential hazards of GM food
("GM-free food aid!" www.i-
sis.org.uk/GM-freefoodaid.php).
Consumers International (CI), which has 250
member organisations in 115 countries worldwide,
became concerned about GM food aid in 2000 when a
shipment of US GM maize arrived in Africa without
any labelling or any indication as to the nature
of the cargo. A petition was immediately sent to
the then Clinton Administration and the UN,
requesting that food donations be positively and
explicitly labelled so recipient countries could
give informed consent to donations after
having been made aware of their contents.
The petition served to attract marginalized
groups of farmers, NGOs and environmentalists who
together decided that GM food aid raised the
broader issue of the denial of fundamental
consumer rights.
In May 2004, 65 groups representing farmer,
consumer, environmental and development
organisations from 15 African countries sent an
open letter to the World Food Programme (WFP),
protesting against the pressure exerted on Sudan
and Angola over their respective decisions to
impose restrictions on GM food aid.
They demanded that the WFP and USAID (US
Agency for International Development) immediately
desist from misleading the governments of Angola
and Sudan with a scenario of no choice, and from
forcing them to accept GM food aid. The called on
the WFP to respect the decisions of recipients of
food aid, and to actively seek alternative food -
or cash donations to purchase food
available at the local and regional level.
Corporate propaganda misleading the public
Polls conducted in Europe have firmly rejected
GM crops across the board except on the issue of
feeding Third World hunger. Some 55% of people
believe that GM can solve Third World hunger,
mainly because they were misled by corporate
propaganda. Many African nations reject handouts
or dependence on corporate owned seeds. Instead,
they want self-sufficient sustainable
agricultural production methods to enable them to
feed themselves. (See Public Say No to GMOs
SiS
19, 2003)
Africa fights for self-sufficiency against GM
crops
In 2002 Zambia, under intense pressure from
the UN, nevertheless refused GM food aid (see
"Africa unites against GM to opt for
self-sufficiency" SiS
16) and went on to double their own maize
yield and successfully fed themselves and
neighbouring countries for the following year.
The African country of Benin has placed a
moratorium on the import and cultivation of GMOs.
As consumer demand for genetic engineering
shrinks and more countries adopt biosafety laws
and labelling regulations, so the volume of
surplus GM crops increases. Rejected by Europe,
GM giants Monsanto and Syngenta have turned their
attention to Asia, and in particular, Africa, to
profit from dumping GM food as aid, and to
support agricultural research and
biosafety initiatives designed to
facilitate acceptance of their untested products.
The US based aid agency USAID, which funds the
African Agricultural Technology Foundation, is in
turn funded by Monsanto, Syngenta and the
Rockerfeller Foundation. USAID clearly states its
intention to "integrate biotechnology into
local food systems and spread technology
throughout regions in Africa."
The huge sums invested in the biotech industry
supposed to alleviate world hunger have failed to
deliver thus far. The USAID-funded Consultative
Group for International Agricultural Research
(CGIAR) has recently received $100 million
towards its "Harvest Plus Plan" to
produce "second generation" GM crops -
maize, cassava and sweet potato in Africa. But
there is already evidence that organic farmers
are achieving record yields with their crops in
Africa without the need for GM varieties (see
"Greening Ethiopia" series, SiS
23).
At the World Food Summit in 2002, the FAO
engaged with the NGO Forum on Food Sovereignty to
make a commitment to strengthen the principle of
patent-free seeds and local food production by
rural people. But they have clearly reneged on
their commitment in saying that hunger can be
solved by genetic engineering.
With this change of mind, the FAO now appears
to be open to supporting terminator technology
(sterile seed lines), which would be another
radical departure from their stance only four
years ago. And this has called their independence
and integrity into question. This effective
support of corporate bio-piracy is responsible
for threatening the collective work of farmers
over countless millennia in creating new breeds
of agricultural crops.
Ten years of GM failures
The first decade of commercial GM crops have
failed even the biotech companies. Promises have
been broken and benefits from GM have not
materialised. Moratoriums and bans against GM
crops have been put into place in many countries
mainly because of concerns over health and
transgenic contamination. Citizen opposition in
Europe has ensured that GM products are kept off
the shelf and consumer and retailer rejection has
forced Monsanto to delay commercialisation of GM
wheat planned for 2004. The biotech vision of
predominant GM monocultures will fuel mounting
concerns over the ecological impacts of
industrial agriculture. Fortunately, there are
many sustainable low input alternatives that are
safe and more cost effective. (See The
Case for a GM-Free Sustainable World, ISP
Report.).
How civil society can safeguard their civil
rights
Aside from the UN Guidelines for Consumer
Protection, Consumers International has
identified four crucial tools that civil society
can use to safeguard their civil rights:
- The African Model Law on Safety in
Biotechnology, which provides for clear
labelling on GM foods and advocates
participation in decision making to
protect Africas biodiversity,
environment and health from risks
associated with GM. The Model Laws
provisions are also very comprehensive
and provide for strict regulation, taking
into account the importance of Africa as
a centre of origin and diversity of many
food crops.
- The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety,
which puts into operation the
Precautionary Principle. It also
establishes the principle of prior
informed consent with regard to the
import of GMOs and preserves the right of
a country to reject applications for the
import of GMOs. So far only 27 African
countries have ratified this protocol and
more must be persuaded to do so.
- The Food Aid Convention Articles
iii, viii and xiii, which state that GM
food aid should only be accepted after
recipient countries have discarded
alternatives and non-GM food aid as
non-options.
- The Rio Declaration, in which
Principle 15 endorses the Precautionary
Approach to
be applied by States where scientific
certainty of safety is lacking.
Steps must be taken to improve citizens
rights to redress, so that farmers are adequately
compensated for damages and losses incurred when
GM crops fail in harvest, or GM seeds and pollen
contaminate local crop varieties. CI also
supports consumer education rights whereby
critical information on the development of
biotechnology is accessible and wholly in the
public domain. It cautions against measures that
destroy existing healthy food production systems,
exclude the majority of small-scale farmers (1 in
6 people in developing countries are food
producers) and reduce the diversity of food bases
for the future.
Historically, hunger is a political problem
that requires political will to create stable
markets for small food producers and to encourage
land use by rural families. This would enable the
production of larger amounts of quality
foodstuffs in rural areas through investing in
truly sustainable alternatives such as
agroecology and biodiversity management (see
"Corporate
hijack of sustainable agriculture", ISIS
report 17 Nov 2004).
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