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Today's Top News
South African Small Farmers Pushed to Plant GM Seed
DURBAN, South Africa - Baphethile Mntambo has been farming organically for the past five years because she knows that avoiding chemicals will in the long-term benefit her yield. She decided not to plant genetically modified seeds because she has heard that they cannot be saved for the next season and will eventually deplete her soil. But she is not entirely sure how and why.
"I have heard about GMO, but I don't understand what it is exactly," she says. "The only thing I know is that it will cost a lot of money to buy the seeds, the fertiliser and the pesticides."
Mntambo is one of 50 small-scale farmers in the Valley of a Thousand Hills in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province who have been taught how to farm organically by non-governmental organisation Valley Trust. The farmers learn to plant seasonal crops that will provide their families both with food security and an opportunity to generate income by selling their produce at local markets.
"We decided to promote organic farming to create sustainability for small-scale farmers. We believe it is the only way to give them food sovereignty and stability," explains Valley Trust food security facilitator Nhlanhla Vezi.
The Valley Trust used to cooperate with the Department of Agriculture, according to Vezi, but the collaboration ceased when the department started to put pressure on small-scale farmers to form cooperatives if they wanted its support. "The Department makes very attractive offers to provide farming equipment, water piping and seeds, but then uses this as a strategy to push GMO because of agreements they have signed with multinational GM seed patent holders," says Vezi.
Rural farmers are often lured into planting GM seeds by the Department of Agriculture by promises of substantial bank loans and the prospect of huge earnings, agrees Lesley Liddell, director of Biowatch, an NGO promoting alternatives to GMO farming by encouraging farmers to inter-crop, use natural fertilisers and non-chemical crops. "But in the end, most farmers end up in huge debt, because they can't save seeds and are obliged to buy the matching GM fertilisers and pesticides."
Yet, small-scale farmers are often so desperate for financial support that they consider planting GMO crops against better knowledge if they are offered the seeds for free. "I know that GMO is not good in the long run, but if someone gave me these seeds I would still plant them," says Tholani Bhengu, another small-scale farmer who works with the Valley Trust. "For me, the most important thing is to bring food on the table every week. I can't afford to think now about what will happen next year."
Because small-scale farmers in rural Africa often have little or no formal education, they are generally unable to make informed choices around GMO farming. "We encourage them to attend portfolio committees that discuss GMO regulations, but the farmers' knowledge is very limited, so it's difficult for them to contribute. They understand the issues but not the legislation," says Liddell.
South Africa is the only country within the Southern African Development Community (SADC) to grow GM crops -- maize, cotton and soya -- commercially. Since 1997, GMO farming is regulated by the Genetically Modified Organisms Act.
"The adoption of GM crops in SA has increased over the last ten years and this has also filtered down to small-scale farmers," confirms Priscilla Sehoole, chief communications officer of the national Department of Agriculture.
"As with any other technology, there are potential risks associated with GMO technology and these include those related to human and animal health and also the environment," she admits. "Therefore, the regulation of all activities involving GMOs is subjected to a scientific safety assessment process that evaluates the potential risks."
Seehole says the South African Department of Agriculture would like to harmonise GMO policies across SADC to "eliminate some of the technical barriers that (currently) hinder trade in the region."
But anti-GMO activists, such as the African Centre for Biosafety, are opposed to this approach. "The GM industry is pushing for harmonised legislation because it will make it easier to commercialise varieties of GM crops across countries. But those concerned with biosafety very much doubt if regional harmonisation (of biosafety legislation) would be of advantage," says African Centre of Biosafety director Mariam Mayet.
"At the moment, each SADC country has its own policies and all these laws are very different from each other. This means that each GMO application has to go through the approval system and public consultation of each country, which is good for transparency and accountability " she explains.
"When South Africa passed GMO legislation in 1997, most people weren't aware of how highly contentious the technology would become. But now there is no way back. Once you're in it, you're in it," says Mayet.
South Africa's food industry is already saturated with GM, she says: "Everything is contaminated, and to make matters worse, labelling of GM content is not mandatory. We need serious policy reform and to implement a testing system that traces which foods contain GMO and which do not."
Over the past decade, South Africa has entered trade agreements with large, multi-national agricultural biotechnology corporations, such as Monsanto, which -- in an attempt to control the world's agricultural production -- promote the subsidisation of patented GM seeds. Through an incentive system supporting monocultures, small-scale farmers are systematically integrated into commercial agriculture, mainly for export, and encouraged to put together their land.
"It all looks very nice on paper, but it is actually a clever ploy to get access to people's land. Small-scale farmers who sign up for GM deals quickly lose control over seed management, production and eventually their land. This means they lose their food sovereignty," says Mayet. "GMO marginalises poor, small-scale farmers. We are in for hard times and need to fight for people's right to land and resources. But we won't give up."
© 2008 Inter Press Service
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17 Comments so far
Show AllHooking small farmers and businesses to financial materialism is what the big monied interests rely on time and again. Farmers and small businesses need to snap out of financial materialism and realize that both the economy and the environment must be taken seriously as one cannot do without the other at least for mankind anyway. Instead of getting desperate on the money, just grow local and learn to share with one another. How hard is that? And if the corporate interests want to slap frivolous lawsuits for that, then stand up and make it clear that you won't let those corporate bullies get in your ways of growing local and sharing with one another. Problem solved.
This world would be better, in a lot of ways, if somebody simply took Monsanto out. They've done far too much damage, in the name of profits, already.
Finis.
It should be a crime against humanity that these corporations are giving out free seed to hook peasants. The seed is protected by an "intellectual property" apparatus pioneered in the USA of course. The Contract of Evil ought to be familiar to everyone now. The capitalist evil offers a stream of technological innovations that steadily boost crop yields in exchange for monopoly rents. A small fee in perpetuity from millions of small powerless "customers" really adds up. Patriarchy anyone? No thanks. Well, have it anyway. No thanks. Shut up and take it. No thanks. If you don't, you will starve. No thanks. Your neighbors will get ahead, YOU will fall behind. No thanks.
DEMAND THE CRIMINALIZATION OF EXPLOITATION
DEMAND THE CRIMINALIZATION OF EXPLOITATION
DEMAND THE CRIMINALIZATION OF EXPLOITATION
"he gives the kids free samples
because he knows full well
that todays' young innocent faces
will be tomorrow's clientelle..."
---"the old dope peddler," by tom lehrer
The member states of the Southern African Development Community seem to be part of a worldwide circle of social democracies and socialist states, while South Africa remains in a relatively isolated circle of capitalist extremists along with the USA and a handful of others. It seems the South African people are culturally split, with natives in the socialist camp and colonizers in the capitalist camp. The capitalist/socialist culture clash should be part of the public discussion. The capitalists wish to suppress the discussion to suppress greater public benefit through socialism.
The optimum benefit for the people is in a mix of cooperative and competitive marketplace incentives with cooperation in the public space. The capitalist has no business influencing public policy. This is the charge of the people. This idea was well-accepted in the Enlightenment, Progressive and New Deal eras in the US. How about the rest of the world? We also need to limit wealth accumulation. We actually need very few if any elites because the class hierarchy intimidates the people and suppresses their productivity, thereby creating a huge net liability.
The people's potential remains largely untapped, and we prefer self-determination. The people of the Valley of a Thousand Hills in KwaZulu-Natal illustrate the possibilities with their embrace of independent farming practices. So the ideal is probably to limit wealth accumulation and arenas of competition. Freedom for people, restrictions on elites. Watch the people flourish.
Poverty IS violence when the rich have put in place systems that make it inevitable. Only a fool believes that the poor will continue to eat dirt while, next door, he is expanding his portfolio.
That's why they are never next door. Gated communities, offshore headquarters, wages for Chinese workers that nobody could live on----Everybody has the right of self defense.
Edwin Markham wrote a poem called THE MAN WITH THE HOE. It is worth looking up if you have missed it. It has been called "The battle cry of the next thousand years".
That lady in the picture probably has a backache. It's hard to think when your back hurts. It's probably hard to think after an eighteen hour shift at Burger King too.
Planting marijuana would solve their problems.
We started out talking about GM seeds. Wha' happened?
Meanwhile, It's ConAgra, I believe who is forcing it's seeds onto Iraqi farmers
And you can't save seeds from the current crop to plant next year. The company who owns the seeds doesn't allow it.
"Twelve reasons for Africa to reject GM crops"
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=294
I'm reminded here of Lewis Mumford's arguments about megtechnics in The Myth of the Machine: v. II: The Pentagon of Power. He described the megatechnic bribe. That's what's happening here and also out in U.S. farm country. Hugh Grant, "chairman, and chief executive officer of Monsanto Co." had an op-ed in Iowa Farmer Today (5/31/08). It probably went out to U.S. farm papers everywhere. He promised us that Monsanto was investing two million dollars per day so we can "produce more with less." See, we get more, but we have to do less! Such a deal. Yes, it was all about the megatechnic bribe.
That's what GMO is, an example of megatechnics. The $2 million per day is a level only a megatechnic power complex can do. Basically, Monsanto can do it's own "Manhattan Project," like when they developed the atom bomb, but this time it's GMO.
Iowa too has bought into the megatechnic bribe. Our Iowa 2010 report (with help from former Governor and Presidential candidate David Vilsack) has a goal of making Iowa the "life sciences capital of the world" by 2010, with wages all the way up to, well, "average." So in a year and a half--California, Texas, Japan, Brazil, Germany, France, England--look out, we plan to be number 1! (Well, probably every other midwestern state has a similar, "copycat" plan, stimulated by the very same consultants.)
Why reassure Iowa farmers? Does "the lady protest too much," wethinks? Well, we've surely started selling corn on the market for above our full costs, which we did NOT do 1981-2005 (except 1996) according to USDA-ERS. But Monsanto has jumped right in to jack up prices and take away our gains. So while commodity prices have risen so high that they're above our full costs of production for the first time in a quarter of a century, Monsanto is right there to drive our net from the marketplace right back down.
(Note: according to the National Farmers Union newsletter, as of September 2005 "Parity Ratios," were corn 25%; wheat 32%; cotton 25%; rice 26%; soybeans 32%. That is, commodity prices were in need of quadrupling or tripling. Basically 100% of Parity is the percent for "fair trade" or full "living wage" prices vs. costs, with no subsidies needed and Cargill/ADM/Tyson/Smithfield paying instead, not just in the U.S. but worldwide, to not only end dumping on LDC farmers but stimulate their economies with economic multipliers to make them, in time, prosperous, with $2 per day wages long gone from the scene and everyone able to afford a balanced meal.)
According to Iowa State University projections (which use a low $2.75 for diesel fuel), from 2007 to 2008 the cost of seed corn went up 15.6%. GMO soybean seeds went up 16.2%. At these rates costs double in less than 5 years. Already the input sector gets more than twice what farmers get out of the so-called "farm share" of your "food dollar."
Why is Monsanto jacking up our costs? Because they can? Because megatechnics is authoritarian? (See Mumford, "Authoritarian and Democratic Technics"). But in the article we see that they must want to overcharge U.S. farmers so they can give away GMO seeds to LDCs as a megatechnic bribe, to help them become "modern," well, post modern. No, it's to join the megamodern age, toward total megatechnic authoritarianism.
(No, please, no more thanking of U.S. farmers for paying higher and higher prices to Monsanto to do our part to subsidize the struggling farmers of the LDC world with GMO seeds!)
Yes, the "megatechnic bribe" is a devil's bargain.
This put's new meaning to the phrase "The devil made me do it" (I smell evil brewing here) They want the water, the food, the air. Then they have you by the balls... I plant only heirloom seeds, save them every year. Diversity is the key to life. I grow 34 different varities of tomatoes every year. If one or two get blight, all is not lost. Look up the famous potato famine of Ireland, this is what happens when you only plant one or two varities of the same food....please learn from others mistakes and never, Never forget!!!!
p/s I have seeds hidden, in the earth, for when the trib is all over, we will feast again! (see! someone is smarter then you monsanto! You will NEVER find the magic seeds, but my grandchildren will! ;)
organicfrm
The diversity of our agricultural heritage is beautiful and life affirming: thousands of rice varieties in China, thousands of wheat varieties in India, on and on around the world. So many many varieties of all kinds of livestock. I've been to Seed Savers and the Institute for Agricultural Biodiversity. I love their colorful photos of the varieties of seeds and produce.
When you see this you're looking at a powerful symbol of historic family farm/rural community culture, which dates back more than 10,000 years. Lewis Mumford gives powerful insight into this culture, this agricultural revolution (not just a way of life, a pattern of history) in The Transformations of Man (1950s) and The Myth of the Machine: Technics and Human Development (1967). For one thing, their gods were organic. Their ideal human type was the fertile mother.
He also examines another pattern of history: civilizations, urbanization, the power complex, the megamachine. Gods changed to inorganic (sky gods) under the mechanical world picture. The ideal human type became the hero (or the warrior-hero).
Today a key argument against biotechnology is that it's anti-science. Largely, even hugely, it violates the science of ecology.
So organicfrm, keep up your scientific farming. It's deeply rooted!
It is high time to rid our planet of the Monsantos of our world. A hazard to our common well-being.
SHUT DOWN THE WORLD BANK AND IMF!!
April 24-26 2009 Washington DC
www.gloabljusticeaction.org