June 14-19, Itaici, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Declaration of the Via Campesina
18/06/2004
- Opinión
We, members of Via Campesina, a world-wide organization of
rural women, peasants, small farmers, rural workers,
indigenous people and afro-descendants, from Asia, Europe,
America and Africa, met in Itaici, Brazil, from 14-19 June
2004, for our 4th International Conference. We were
welcomed warmly, fraternally and in a combative spirit by
our hosts, the member organizations of Via Campesina in
Brazil.
We gathered to confirm our determination to defend our
cultures and our right to continue living as peasants and
peoples with our own identity. We had the participation
of 210 delegates from 76 countries, representing
millions of peasant families. We also had the joy of
convening the Second Via Campesina Women's World Assembly
and the First Via Campesina Youth World Assembly, which
emphasized our commitment to continue our struggle in
future generations. We had the participation of more than
40 peasant organizations that joined Via Campesina
during this conference as well as members of more than 80
civil society organizations which the Via Campesina
recognizes as friends.
The Fourth International Conference reviewed our history,
from our initial intention to organize ourselves, up to
the present. From the beginning it was clear that we
positioned ourselves in radical opposition to the neo-
liberal model that kills and destroys cultures, peoples,
and peasant families throughout the world. We have
witnessed the growth and strengthening of our
organizations and movements which successfully put the
peasant movement at the core of peoples´ struggles. In
Cancun, the Vía Campesina was a key protagonist in the
peoples' mobilizations. A week of continuous protests and
the sacrifice of Comrade Lee Kyoung –Hae -- who offered
his life to the peasants of the world to keep alive the
struggle and the absolute rejection of the WTO -- provoked
the greatest defeat on the WTO to date.
Through our struggles and the strengthening of our
movement, we have seen how the economic model under which
we are suffering continues to be unscrupulously imposed.
Since our last conference, we note that:
– The number of peasant families continues to decline at
an alarming rate. With each minute that passes,
agricultural policies and the agro-industrial model cause
the disappearance of one family farm in the newly
expanded European Union. The situation is equally
dramatic in Canada and the United States. Massive and
forced displacements of people, and overt and covert
wars, are also causes of the disappearance of peasants in
Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and Latin America. In some
regions the increase in peasants' suicides is a growing
tragedy.
– The number of forced migrations has increased
dramatically as a result of war, misery, the
concentration of land ownership and the destruction of
peasant families.
– United Nations agencies, such as UNCTAD and FAO, have
joined the IMF, the World Bank, and the WTO, in their
role as guardians of capital.
– The number of Free Trade Agreements has increased.
Together with other international agreements, these have
imposed legal changes that have destroyed basic
principles used to protect human and social rights and
which serve to create the conditions in which
transnational companies can maximize their profits.
– It is extremely alarming that the systematic violations
of human rights have increased, that the war against the
peoples of the world has been legalized, and that protest
and social mobilization have been criminalized and how
attempts are made to criminalize the lives of peasants
and indigenous peoples. We have also seen the increasing
use of preemptive repression.
– Women and youth continue to be the most marginalized of
all, and they are increasingly subjected to criminal
violence. They are also the main victims of the
privatization of basic services, the concentration of
land ownership, and the destruction of local markets and
local forms of food and agriculture as well as the
exploitation and slave labour imposed by the
transnationals.
We reaffirm that the permanent existence of peasant
agriculture is fundamental for the elimination of poverty,
hunger, unemployment and marginalisation. We believe that
peasant agriculture is the cornerstone of food
sovereignty, and that food sovereignty is essential for
peasant agriculture to exist. There will be no autonomy
nor peasant agriculture if we do not posses our own seeds.
We will give special priority to the right of peasants
throughout the world to demand government policies that
promote sustainable peasant agriculture. We will continue
our struggle for genuine Agrarian Reform, the defence of
our seeds, and food sovereignty.
We totally oppose GMOs and we will fight it everywhere.
We once again express our total opposition to genetically
modified crops. We denounce and reject the recent FAO
report "Biotechnology, addressing the needs of the poor?".
This report only seeks to legitimize the imposition of
genetically modified crops and the use of the technology
of death -- "terminator" or sterile seeds -- with the
single goal of ensuring the profits of transnational
companies in the agricultural sector.
We reaffirm our complete opposition of neoliberalism and
the policies of the WTO, IMF and World Bank. We totally
reject their most important recent instrument – bilateral
free trade agreements. We reject the use of embargoes as a
political and economic tool, and we are committed to
building peace in all countries.
We are equally committed to the struggle against the
patriarchal system that only accentuates the aberrations
of capitalism. Within Via Campesina, we will work hard to
ensure that the numerical gender parity that we have
reached is translated into real changes in the power
relations between by men and women in our movement. In
addition, we are now committed to advance the struggle for
the Human Rights of Peasants. Together with our peasant
organisations, we will draft an International Peasants'
Rights Charter.
Another new commitment is to fight against the causes of
migration and their destructive effects. We will demand an
improvement in and strict compliance with the ILO
conventions on agricultural workers. We will continue our
efforts in the area of political education at all levels.
We call on social movements to join us in the immediate
actions decided by the Conference. We will carry out a
Week of Struggle Against the WTO and Transnationals
between 19-24 July. We have declared September 10th as the
International Day of Struggle Against the WTO. This year
we are committed to mobilize in the streets, especially in
Seoul, to pay homage to Comrade Lee in a day of
mobilization for food sovereignty. We will organize a
series of coordinated actions on November 25th, the
international day against violence against women. We will
hold our conference on Agrarian Reform from the 4-8
December, 2004. We call on the social organizations to
remain mobilized to impede the ministerial meeting of the
WTO in Hong Kong in June of 2005.
All of the participants of the Fourth International
Conference of the Vía Campesina are committed to continue
struggling for the well-being and the dignity of our
peoples. We will link all the struggles and movements from
the global to the local, and create new forms of alliances
that will strengthen us to demand the respect and
protection of our rights and our cultures.
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/110113