Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Monsanto’s 475-ton Seed Donation Challenged by Haitian Peasants
WASHINGTON - Advocates for Haitian peasants said a U.S.-based company’s donation of up to 475 tons of hybrid vegetable seeds to aid Haitian farmers will harm the island-nation’s agriculture.
Thanks but no thanks. Advocates for Haitian peasants said the donation by U.S.-based company Monsanto of up to 475 tons of hybrid vegetable seeds to aid Haitian farmers will harm the island-nation’s agriculture. (Image: Elizabeth Vancil/Monsanto)
The advocates contend the donation is being made in an effort to shift
farmer dependence from local seed to more expensive hybrid varieties
shipped from overseas.
Haitian farmers and small growers traditionally save seed from season to season or buy the seed they desire from traditional seed markets.
However, an official from the St. Louis-based Monsanto Co. told Catholic
News Service that the seed is simply a donation to the Haitian
government. The first two shipments - 135 tons - of hybrid varieties of
corn, cabbage, carrot, eggplant, melon, onion, spinach, tomato and
watermelon arrived in Haiti during the first two weeks of May.
Bazelais Jean-Baptiste of the Peasant Movement of Papay, the primary
group opposed to the donation, told CNS June 1 from his office in
Brooklyn, N.Y., that farmers usually are skeptical of unknown seed
varieties.
“From my experience, the peasant (farmer) is very careful in using the
seeds, particularly corn,” Jean-Baptiste said. “They would not plant a
seed they did not know because they invested time to prepare the land
and the seed.”
In a widely distributed e-mail in mid-May, Jean-Baptiste’s brother,
Chavannes, executive director of the peasant group, excoriated the seed
donation as “a new earthquake.”
He said the entry of Monsanto seed into Haiti was “a very strong attack
on small agriculture, on farmers, on biodiversity, on Creole seeds ...
and on what is left of our environment in Haiti.”
The Haitian Ministry of Agriculture welcomed the gift in April, but only
after Monsanto assured officials that the seeds were not genetically
modified varieties. Ministry officials refused an earlier gift of
herbicide-treated seed.
The seed is being distributed to farmer stores for sale at significantly
reduced prices. News reports said the seed has been sent to Leogane,
Arcahaie, and Mirebalais.
Monsanto plans to send up to an additional 345 tons of hybrid corn seed
by May 2011. The company valued the seed at $4 million.
Some of the seed is being distributed by a U.S. Agency for International
Development program designed to increase farmer productivity. The
five-year-long Watershed Initiative for National Natural Environmental
Resources program, or WINNER, provides in-country expertise, technical
advice, fertilizer and other services to farmers.
The program recently distributed 60 tons of the donated seed to seed
stores.
“If hybrids are introduced with proper technical assistance, which
WINNER is providing, the farmers can get the most out of these seeds,”
said Adam Reinhart, agriculture officer for USAID’s Haiti Task Team.
In a statement June 1, the company denied it was using the donation to
open doors to the Haitian market.
“We have a small vegetable business in Haiti today, sold through a
distributor,” said Monsanto spokesman Darren Wallis. “We do not have a
commercial corn business in Haiti. Our goal is to help build a
sustainable agriculture system to benefit the people of Haiti.”
He said the hybrid seed varieties would produce higher yields of crops
than the open-pollinated varieties traditionally used by the Haitians.
Wallis also expressed concern that anyone would encourage farmers to
burn the donated seed because “the ones hurt by the action will be
Haitian farmers and the Haitian people, not those watching on the
sidelines.”
A report published March 10 by Catholic Relief Services said Haitian
farmers traditionally prefer local seed because it is adapted to local
growing conditions.
The finding came during a 10-day assessment of seed needs in Haiti’s Sud
department - southwest of Port-au-Prince - six weeks after the
magnitude 7 earthquake destroyed a significant part of the country. The
study looked at the supply and demand for the five most common food
security crops: bean, corn, sorghum, pigeon pea and peanut.
Co-authored by Dina Brick, technical adviser for food security at CRS,
the report found that the major concern among farmers after the
earthquake was their inability to pay for seed. To compensate,
cash-strapped farmers told the researchers they planned to buy
less-expensive seed and reduce the amount of seed planted.
The cash shortage among farmers is fueled by the relocation of people
who fled earthquake-ravaged regions and moved in with family or friends
in rural communities, Brick told CNS May 30.
Brick, who was in Haiti undertaking a countrywide seed assessment study
with several other nongovernment organizations, said that, during the
first study, seed suppliers and farmers told her that seed supplies were
sufficient. Growing seasons vary depending on the crop.
“There needs to be clear evidence that distributed seed is well-adapted
to Haitian soils and conditions,” she added. “Haiti has many
agro-ecological zones and many microclimates, and local varieties are
adapted to these. We need to make sure that distributed varieties are
tested in real life conditions that are consistent with Haiti’s
latitude, soils, etc.”
CRS also is concerned that seed donations from outside of Haiti may
undermine local markets while limiting the types of seed available,
Brick said.
“We need to make sure that farmers have a choice on what seed they can
access,” she said. “Seed vouchers and fairs enable farmers to choose the
crops and varieties they want and need. Seed aid doesn’t always do
that; it makes assumptions sometimes.”
- Posted in

33 Comments so far
Show AllHybrid or GMO, it is destructive against both people's health and Mother Nature herself. Those "hybrid" seeds are no different from partially privatizing Social Security.
What good is a terminator seed? It' made to NOT produce more seed; you have to buy more seed from Monsanto every season.
The article lacks insight!
It' NOT a seed; It's a TROJAN HORSE!
I do not know of any 'terminator' seeds being marketed, and I'm quite certain that none were sent to Haiti. Let's try to stick to facts.
Feeling confidant that the seed is appropriate for Haiti's climate is of utmost importance. I suspect that Haiti's farmers, like others around the world, will discover that hybrid seed is usually preferable to open pollinated types. In some cases it is vastly superior. Goodness knows that Haiti has been a basket case for a long time, for a great many reasons. If they could become self sufficient in food production, they might finally begin to turn the corner. Perhaps the time will come when small Haitian enterprises will produce quality hybridized seed for their own nation. My personal view of Monsanto is that they are generally another greedy company with quality products. Of course in our system, if your not greedy, you may get sued by your shareholders.
Haiti WAS self-sufficient a long time ago before Western intervention into their affairs and created the 'basket case' we see today.
Corporations don't do charity for the sake of charity and they're not expected to.
This entire endeavor, that Monsanto is undertaking, IS clearly a Trojan horse that will leave this country more dependent and worse off in the future.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetically_modified_food_controversies
"...a 2009 thirteen year study (1996-2008) found that the use of genetically engineered corn, soybean, and cotton actually increased the use of herbicides by 383 million pounds, and pesticide use by 318.4 million pounds..."
Haiti is a perfect climate for crop production and doesn't need the false promises of GMO or Monsanto.
I understand some people's concern with gm seed. None was sent to Haiti.
No, I think you're probably right and there was no GM seed in the shipment to Haiti.
But that doesn't mean that this 'act of charity' isn't a TROJAN HORSE.
(You may have seen that term thrown around a few times on this blog.)
"hybrid seed is usually preferable to open pollinated types."
May be to you? But a poor farmer in the third world probably prefers seeds that will produce plants that further seed can be collected. With a hybrid plant you don't really know what kind of plant the seed from the hybrid will produce. And considering if these are monsanto's terminator seeds you get nothing viable without further purchases in the future.
I've given up on hybrids completely. If they actually produce more, in my garden it's such a little difference that it's basically not observable. Collecting seed from the best fruits from the best plants seems to do more for production than anything I've seen from hybrids. Each year my seeds get better. They acclimate to my garden resulting in stronger and more vibrant plants. I'm getting germination rates close to 100% on a lot of my collected seeds.
The Haitians would be better off with cash or quality tools than monsanto's seed.
I repeat, no 'terminator' seeds were sent to Haiti, I am quite certain. You are correct that hybridization is not a guarantee of better seed. With many plants it's quite unimportant. However with others, disease resistance and other good traits can be enhanced. With a plant like corn, hybridization increases yields tremendously.
Several things are wrong here:
* "Monsanto spokesman: 'Our goal is to help build a sustainable agriculture system to benefit the people of Haiti.'” People have been living in Haiti for a long time, and I'd assume they figured out 'sustainable agriculture' long since.
* The "simply a donation" is "being distributed to farmer stores for sale." Huh?
* While "seed suppliers and farmers [said] that seed supplies were sufficient", the farmers are "cash-strapped". How about Monsanto just sending money?
NMBill is right. This is a TROJAN HORSE. This is what Monsanto is doing in India -- forcing seeds upon them that have no ability to ever germinate. This means that they are forced to buy new seed from Monsanto every year. This is why Monsanto made this sterile seed. It will prove to be poison and toxic to all species (including human) who eat it because of the way they have altered nature. This will cut down the populations of these poor dark-skinned peoples -- if not from starvation than from these toxi-crops.
Don't ever take a 'gift' from the Devil. There's no such thing as a gift when it comes to devils like Monsanto.
Monsanto has successfully intimidated the american farmer with the fear of losing their farms and lively hood. If and when monsanto tries their mafia tactics on the haitians, they had better bone up on their voodoo. I do not think that the same style of intimidation will work there, as the haitians have nothing to lose and the monsanto hit squads may go missing. At least that is what i would hope.
It makes you feel warm all over when after a population has been devastated and sitting in ruins, giant capitalist corporations will step in to screw them one more time. The problem with capital punishment is that, in the west, we never use it on white collar criminals.
Well, we all have seen far to much capitalist evil. However, if anyone cares to look, they will discover that some rich people and corporations actually do nice things once in a while. Certainly we're all pretty much cynics around here, but always jumping to conclusions sometimes makes us look a bit ignorant.
"However, if anyone cares to look, they will discover that some rich people and corporations actually do nice things once in a while."
Behold, the average American who believes such follies. In reality, rich people very rarely do anything truly nice. Let us say that all of a sudden, Monsanto goes to Greg R's city and plays the "philanthropy" card to fool enough people into believing "See, Monsanto is very nice."
"Certainly we're all pretty much cynics around here, but always jumping to conclusions sometimes makes us look a bit ignorant."
And what if we are jumping to the correct conclusions but being ignored by the wholly ignorants?
Jennifer, as much as i enjoyed your lambasting, we must be honest, there are a few rich people who are beneficiaries. not many, but a few.
Don't you mean benefactors?
oops, yes, thanks.
Sirios, I hope that those few benefactors you are referring to are not the type who engage in robbing Peter to pay Paul type or just the type to get their money from dirty white collar sources. Then there is the system itself which rewards rich people for being selfish while persecuting rich people for trying to be helpful.
There may be a few rich who are genuinely kind. But Monsanto is not one of them. Monsanto is the corporation that successfully pushed for the Bremer laws that prevent Iraqi farmers from re-planting their own seed.
Under Saddam, Iraqi farmers not only had the right to re-plant their own seeds, but the government ran a seed bank, to collect and preserve useful varieties of seeds. Clearly they valued seed varieties enough to take them serously.
With the US occupation, Order 81, states that the Iraqis do not own the intellectual property rights to their own seeds, forcing them to purchase from seed corporations, like Monsanto.
http://farmwars.info/?p=2296
http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_7152.cfm
braithwa842, thank you for bringing this up and connecting Monsanto to Iraq. How long will it be before Monsanto and the likes come up with a "be nice to the US" formula to force and poison the Iraqis into obedience with the US?
Thank you very MUCH for bringing that up. I was unaware of Order 81. Despicable.
Even if the seed is not GM, if the hybrid varieties require extra fertilizer inputs to achieve their "full"potential, or are susceptible to native pests that require certain pesticides, Monsanto has them by the netherparts.
If it requires extra water input, the IMF has them for the "loans" needed for irrigation systems.
This is what happened during the previous "Green Revolution", before GM came along.
No, the Haitian farmers are wise, indeed, to reject this foreign seed in favor of their own. The next few years may be leaner than they might be if they had the seed, but they will be much better off in the long run ....
It's too bad American farmers bought the Monsanto BS here at home ....
Certainly more production requires more nutrients and water. The individual farmer needs to know his soil types and climate in order to better access the seed to plant and the population per acre. Most people and farmers like the idea of more choice.
"The individual farmer needs to know his soil types and climate in order to better access the seed to plant and the population per acre."
If more farmers would take the time to know both their soil and the actual tradeoffs with hybrid/GMO seeds like most farmers in most other nations do, we wouldn't be having this mess in the first place. I hear that hemp is supposed to repair the soil but can't imagine farmers lining up to fight the ban on that crop that would help farmers at large.
"Most people and farmers like the idea of more choice."
I can't argue with that but it is ironic that the same Big Agri and supercenter giants who lie about "choice" go out on a limb to pull it from under people's noses.
Any harvested crop removes nutrients from the soil. Some crops do certain good things to the soil such as alfalfa, which adds nitrogen and with its deep roots, adds organic matter deep into the soil. And I can't argue that irony abounds in the world.
I am no farmer but when I look up which crops deplete the soil the most, I am angered that corn, despite it being tops on the list, gets overused all for the want of profit madness. It would be nice if Democrats would give Ron Paul's "Hemp Farming Act" which would actually be a big boon to small independent farmers not tied to Big Agri.
As I recall, a couple of years ago there were stories of Haitians eating mud pies made of dirt and a bit of sugar. Personally I would prefer hybridized vegetables and corn.
Burn that poison seed!
As i recall indeed. Who dreams up that stuff?
Is there anything to stop the Haitians from selling those seeds to USA farmers at a discount price?
there's a massive seed drive now underway. please send your non-hybrid, preferably organic, heat-tolerant seeds such as:
okra
sweet pepper
carrots
beets
string beans
eggplant
tomatoes
cucumber
leeks
zucchini
melons (watermelon, cantaloupe etc)
celery
herbs: parsley, chives, thyme, tarragon, sage, rosemary, basil
onions
hot pepper
seeds can be homegrown, but they MUST be labeled with approximate retail value and expiration date.
SEND TO:
Hope for Haiti http://www.hopeforhaiti.org/
1021 5th Ave. North
Naples, FL. 34102
attn: Jennifer Lopez
OR
Friends of Paradis des Indiens, Inc. http://www.friendsofpdi.org/
PO Box 292234
Davie, FL 33329
attn: Chantal Bazelais
MORE INFO:
http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/USE-HALF-NOW-CAMPAIGN/31647317649
Another pure case of disaster capitalism!
MONSANTO?
USA?
CORPORATION?
USA?
EQUALS
TROJAN HORSE. FOR NEW COLONIALISM