Biotech Wars: Food Freedom Vs Food Slavery
22/06/2003
- Opinión
Monsanto through the U.S. government, is trying desperately to
reverse its failing fortunes by creating markets for its genetically
engineered crops (GMOs) through coercion and corruption.
The E.U. has not yet cleared GM crops for commercial planting or GM
food for imports. Brazil has had a ban on GM crops. And India has
not cleared GM food crops and has stopped the spread of genetically
engineered Bt. Cotton to Northern India after its dismal performance
in Southern India in the first season of commercial planting in
2002.
E.U., Brazil and India are all under attack overtly and covertly,
for not rushing into adopting genetically engineered crops without
caution and ensuring biosafety.
The U.S. has threatened to initiate a dispute against the E.U. in
the W.T.O. for not importing genetically modified foods. The U.S.
trade representative, Mr. Zoellick was in Brazil at the end of May
to force Brazil to remove the ban on GM crops. The U.S. Secretary of
State tried to bully Southern African countries to the Earth Summit
in Johannesburg to accept GM food and, but Zambia refused to be
bullied. In India, the U.S.
Embassy tried to pressurize the Ministry of Environment through the
Prime Minister's office to clear imports of GM corn, but a major
mobilisation of women's groups organized as the National Alliance of
Women for Food Rights under the movement of Diverse Women for
Diversity, was successful in sending back two ship loads of 10,000
tons of GM corn. Since then the Chairman of the Genetic Engineering
Approval Committee which rejected GM crops and imports has been
removed and the Agricultural Ministry has been changed.
Free people with free information are saying no to genetically
engineered food for both ecological and health reasons. However,
genetic engineering is being imposed on the world by a handful of
global corporations with the backing of one powerful government.
Commercial crops produced through genetic engineering are not
producing more food nor are they reducing the use of chemicals.
While the hunger argument is the most frequently used argument to
promote and push genetic engineering, GMOs have more to do with
corporate hunger for profits than poor people's hunger for food. As
a news item in the international Herald Tribune of May 29, 2003
titled, "Biotech war recast as hunger issue" reported,
President George W. Bush is framing his attack on European
resistance to genetically modified crops as part of a campaign
against world hunger.
Bush and his aides are making an emotional plea, saying the
administration's stance is part of the fight against world hunger.
In a speech last week be accused Europe of hindering the "great
cause of ending hunger in Africa" with its ban genetically modified
corps." (IHT, May 29, 2003)
The technology of genetic engineering is not about overcoming food
scarcity but about creating monopolies over food and seed, the first
link in the chain and over life itself.
After having pressurized Lula's government in Brazil to temporarily
remove the ban on GMOs, Monsanto is now claiming royalties for genes
in the Round up Resistance Soya crops, showing once again that
profits through royalty collection are the real objective of
spreading GM crops.
India has been forced to change its patent laws under TRIPS and the
main beneficiary of the Second Amendment to India's Patent Act of
1970 are biotech corporations like Monsanto, seeking patents on
genetically engineered crops.
Patents also criminalise and make illegal the human work of life's
reproduction. When seeds are patented, farmers exercising their
freedom and performing their duty of saving and exchanging seeds are
treated as "intellectual property thieves". This can reach absurd
limits as in the case of Percy Schmieser whose canola field was
polluted by Monsanto's Round up Resistant Canola, and instead of
Monsanto compensating Percy for pollution on the "polluter pays
principle", Monsanto sued him for $200,000 for theft of their genes.
Monsanto uses detective agencies and police to track farmers and
their crops. Patents imply police states.
Genetic engineering is not merely causing genetic pollution of
biodiversity and creating bio-imperialism, monopolies over life
itself. It is also causing knowledge pollution -- by undermining
independent science, and promoting pseudo science. It is leading to
monopolies over knowledge and information.
The victimisation of Dr. Arpad Putzai who showed the health risks of
GM potatoes and Dr. Ignacio Chapela who showed that corn had been
contaminated in its centre of diversity in Mexico are examples of
the intolerance of a corporate controlled scientific system for real
science.
The fabrication of the data by Monsanto on Bt. Cotton India is an
example of the promotion of an unnecessary, untested, hazardous
technology through pseudo science. While yields of GM cotton fell by
80% and farmers had losses of nearly Rs. 6,000/acre. Monsanto used
Martn Qaim (University of Bonn) and David Zilberman) University of
California, Berkeley) to publish an article in Science to claim that
yields of Bt. Cotton increased by 80%. Qaim and Zilberman published
the paper on the basis of data provided by Monsanto from Monsanto's
trials not on the basis of the harvest from farmers fields in the
first year of commercial planting.
The fabricated data that presents a failure of Bt. Cotton as a
miracle hides the fact that non-target insects and diseases
increased 250-300%, costs of seed were 300% more and quantity and
quality of cotton was low. This is why on April 25, 2003, the
Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC) of the Government of
India did not give clearance to Monsanto to sell Bt. Cotton seeds in
Northern India.
The false claims of Monsanto were also proved with a total failure
of Hybrid maize in the state of Bihar and a black listing of the
company by the government.
In Rajasthan, Monsanto gave itself an award for miracle yields.
While the brochures claimed 50-90 Q/acre, farmers harvested only 7
Q/acre, 90% lower than the promise. Farmers of the Udaipur district
of Rajasthan have started a campaign to boycott Monsanto seeds.
Reports of these failures do not reach the international level
because Monsanto controls the media with its public relations spin,
just as it is attempting to control governments and science.
Our crops are being polluted, our food contaminated, our scientific
research and regulatory agencies threatened and corrupted.
This is the context in which the Biotech Conference for Agriculture
Ministers in Sacremento, California, hosted by Ann Vanneman, the
U.S. Secretary for Agriculture is taking place. Ann Vanneman used to
head Agracetus, a subsidiary of Monsanto. The Brazilian Agriculture
Ministry is held captive by Monsanto. The removal of India's
Agriculture Minister,
Ajit Singh, a few months before general elections is to ensure that
the threat to peasant survival under corporate control of
agriculture is not put high on the agenda and India's Agriculture
Ministry also comes under Monsanto/Cargill control. The first
activity in which the new Agriculture Minister Rajnath Singh
participated was a Global Seed Conference organised by the Biotech
industry.
Sustainability and science are being sacrificed for a reckless
experiment with our biodiversity and food systems which is pushing
species and peasants to extinction. We need to re-imbed technology
in ecology and ethics to ensure that the full ecological and social
costs are taken into account.
What is at stake is the evolution of nature and survival of people,
our food sovereignty and food freedom, integrity of creation and our
food systems based on the evolutionary freedom of nature and
democratic freedoms of farmers and consumers. The choice before us
is bio-imperialism or bio-democracy. Will a few corporations have a
dictatorship over our governments, our knowledge and information,
our lives and all life on the planet or will we as members of the
Earth family liberate ourselves and all species from the prison of
patents and genetic engineering?
We need to reclaim our food freedom and food sovereignty.
Our movement in India seeks to defend our seed freedom (Bija Swaraj)
and food freedom (Anna Swaraj) by defending our rights, and refusing
to cooperate with immoral and unjust laws (Bija Satyagraha). We save
and share our seeds, we boycott corporate seeds, we are creating
patent free, chemical free, genetic engineering free zones of
agriculture to ensure our agriculture is free of corporate
monopolies and chemical and genetic pollution.
Our bread is our freedom. Our freedom will ensure our bread. And
each of us has a duty to exercise bread freedm (Anna Swaraj) -- for
the sake of the earth, for all species, and for ourselves and the
generations to come.
Source ZNet (http://www.zmag.org).
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/107775?language=en
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