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Food Security in Africa: Will Obama Let USAID’s Genetically Modified Trojan Horse Ride Again?
Yesterday Secretary Clinton was in Kenya with a delegation that included Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, as well as Representatives Donald M. Payne (D-NJ) and Nita M. Lowey (D-NY). While the group was there on a broad platform to discuss economic development in Africa, including food security issues, the delegation took the opportunity yesterday afternoon to visit the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) lab, which is best known for unsuccessfully trying to produce a genetically modified, virus-resistant sweet potato under a US-led program. The trip to KARI highlights the poor vision the United States currently holds on furthering food security in Africa.
Historically, the introduction of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) in the US and other countries has primarily profited patent-holding companies, while creating farmer dependence on the chemical fertilizers and pesticides produced by a few US corporations, used to the detriment of human health, soil quality and the environment. The failed sweet potato project at the KARI lab was a product of a public-private partnership between Monsanto, KARI and United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the federal organization responsible for most US non-military foreign aid. USAID is not shy about their desire to promote biotechnology, and have been working towards furthering a GMO agenda abroad since 1991, when it launched the Agricultural Biotechnology Support Project (ABSP). According to this in-depth research article by the organization GRAIN, the ABSP sought to “identify suitable crops in various countries and use them as Trojan Horses to provide a solid platform for the introduction of other GM crops.”
In Kenya, that crop was the sweet potato — the focus of the USAID-funded Kenya Agricultural Biotechnology Support Program, which sought for fourteen years at KARI, at a cost of $6 million dollars, to create and bring it to market before the partnering groups abandoned the project.
ABSP shifted its operations in 1998 (four years after GMOs became legal to plant and sell to the US public in food products without a label) by branching out into more specific focus groups seeking the promotion of biotech abroad. This included the Collaborative Agricultural Biotechnology Initiative (CABIO), and its subsidiary, a public relations arm focused on promoting policy friendly to biotechnology called the Program for Biosafety Systems (PBS). PBS is noted for its aggressive push against various governments’ use of the Precautionary Principle, a moral and political principle that protects society from risk in the face of a lack of scientific consensus, in decisions not to plant GMOs.
USAID’s support for biotechnology also extends to its personnel. For example, Judith Chambers was one of the main forces behind the strategies pursued to further the biotech agenda at the ABSP. After working as a senior advisor to USAID, she later served as Director of International Government Affairs at Monsanto, and is now head of PBS.
The point of all these acronyms and associations is to show how a tangled consortium (these are just some of the groups), funded by taxpayer dollars via USAID, seeks to further the aims of biotech abroad, especially in Africa, where Kenya, Mali, Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda and Zambia were singled out and have been the testing grounds for this strategy.
The obvious beneficiaries of such international development are the handful of corporations which own the patents and the technology, and which produce the herbicides and pesticides required by the use of such seeds. Josephat Ngonyo, head of the Kenya Biodiversity Coalition, a network of 60 community groups, small farmers and food security organizations in Kenya, stated in a teleconference yesterday organized by the National Family Farm Coalition that he didn’t feel that farmers were considered when governments made agricultural policies. He sited building infrastructure, like roads, as well as a need for markets as real ways to help farmers. Africans like Ngonyo have a right to be worried — they can look to India to see what a future relying solely on biotech seeds could look like, where a depleted water table, poisoned waterways and farmer suicides have been the result of the first Green Revolution.
The bottom line is that biotechnology requires a spin campaign because it is a marginal approach to the very big and very real problems we face in agriculture. Indeed, there is no one-fits all solution to food security. Yet the US government still pursues the same stubborn, limited policy.
Secretary Clinton continued the mis-guided rhetoric yesterday, despite the fact that hunger is not a yield problem, while speaking at KARI:
“Farmers in Africa have also faced the lack of investment from the private sector as well as governments and the global community, while technologies that have helped farmers in other parts of the world haven’t yet been adapted to the extent necessary to Africa’s needs. Together, these challenges have eroded the foundation of African agriculture. But that foundation is being rebuilt. The scientists here at KARI are taking the lead. I’ve just met with researchers who are cultivating hardier crops that can feed more people and thrive in harsher conditions, disease-resistant cassava plants, sweet potatoes enriched with Vitamin A to prevent blindness, maize that can flourish in times of drought.
The breakthroughs achieved in these labs and others throughout Africa can go a long way toward making sure that farmers who work from sunup to sundown can grow enough to support their families and so people aren’t forced to pull their children from school or sell their livestock to survive a food shortage.”
It is noteworthy that we are even having this discussion, and I commend the administration for talking about food security. (It is also noteworthy that it has taken many months to find a head of USAID — which could be a sign of a real effort to change the direction of that organization.)
But instead of tired solutions that are not working, we need a paradigm shift, says Dr. Hans Hennen, who has worked in Nairobi for 27 years and was co-chair of the International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) report. The IAASTD report [pdf] was sponsored by the World Bank, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Health Organization (WHO), and represented four years of work by 400 scientists. “We can do better and more using a broader set of tools [than biotechnology],” Hennen continued. The report, which came out in 2008, stated unequivocally that business as usual in agricultural production was not an option, pushing for a more broad-based approach to answering the question:
What must we do differently to overcome persistent poverty and hunger, achieve equitable and sustainable development and sustain productive and resilient farming in the face of environmental crises?
Biotechnology is a reductionist pipe dream which is overly dependent on waning resources. By contrast, the IAASTD looked a agro-ecological solutions that focused on agricultural resilience. Agriculture according to the IAASTD requires multifaceted, local solutions. While biotechnology has been promising drought tolerance and higher yields for years without delivering, there are real answers available now — like drought tolerant varieties, suited to certain areas, which are naturally bred; science that focuses on building the quality of the soil and the capacity for that soil to hold more water; or push and pull solutions that deal with pests naturally by attracting beneficial insects or planting compatible species that act as decoys for those pests.
So now what are we going to do with the 20 billion in aid pledged by the G-8 last month to promote food security in Africa? In light of what we now know about USAID, and the fact that there are biotech friendly advisers like Technology and Science Advisor to Secretary Clinton Nina Fedoroff and Chief Scientist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rajiv Shah in the administration, it is not hard to assume how those monies might be used. But President Obama should significantly change our policy if he wants to truly help the continent he says he cares so much about.
Obama administration: Study the IAASTD. If there is any hope for a better food system in Africa and the U.S., we must first accept that what is being practiced now is not sustainable, and begin to start the process of making it so.
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9 Comments so far
Show AllThe story represents the "tip of the iceberg" as it relates to food, health and gmo.
The use of GMO's has been called by many reliable health professionals as the great human experiment. Concurrent with the introduction of food produced from gmo's, there has been a meteoric rise in a variety of auto-immune diseases.
Equally frightening for the third world nations is the fact that they have lived for thousand so years off of seeds they were able to save from one year to the next. Now, they have ruined their water and land and are slaves to the patent holders in just another American scam disguised a way to save humanity. Angela McCall home and office cleaning
In times of famine, small farmers will eat their seeds. They have no seed to plant the following year.
In 1985, drought and famine hit Africa. Seed was eaten. International funds were provided to buy commercial seeds (including USA for Africa. Africa ran out of seeds and millions of farmers could not plant to end the famine.
Farmers left their land for city slums and feeding camps. Many never returned to the land. All that remained was agribusiness, who commanded the resources of USAID and the national government.
Famine has not been eliminated from Africa. Millions head for the camps and the cities. One of the tragic consequences of this migration is the spread of cholera, tuberculosis and AIDs.
Money that was being put into GMF could have been put into new varieties that were more drought resistant. IPM (integrated pest management) could have been used to lower the need for pesticides, herbicides and even fertilizer.
Instead the money went to GMF.
I seriously doubt that Hillary and Obama will do anything. Bill, through the Clinton Foundation, has supported the elite and fucked the poor. What makes you think Hillary and Barack will be any different.
Great post as always ducksawce,
I think one thing we all need to acknowledge is that famine is the natural state of all successful evolutionary species at some point in their development. It is unavoidable. And, from an evolutionary standpoint, it weeds out the inferior genes. Pumping up the African population with GMO trash food is surely only going to result in an explosion of new human births and the extinction of most of the wildlife diversity in Africa.
We need to understand what we are. We are Homo sapiens. And our natural state is famine and war. Right now, the Clinton/Bush tribes are bound and determined to burn down the whole world and make a profit while doing it.
Our concern shouldn't be trying to alter nature, because ultimately that FrankenFood approach is likely to fail. Our concern should be to get the Headhunters out of the government.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
Ahh, social darwinism.
Let me reframe your argument: disease is a natural state of all successful evolutionary species at some point in their development. It is unavoidable. And, from an evolutionary standpoint, it weeds out the inferior genes. Pumping up the US population with single payer healthcare is surely only going to result in a population explosion of the poor, sick and uneducated, and the continued degradation of the world environment by rapacious US consumers.
You have me there. Checkmate. (I was indeed applying a different yardstick to Africa than the USA.)
But the current system of HMO's is totally broken so I'm willing to try something else. I'm think I'm for single payer: but I must confess I know very little about it. Healthcare in the US is taxpayer subsidized (in many ways) and all citizens should have a right to it. Where I live, there is no health insurance, but I can see an American trained doctor for about ten dollars. It's a better system for this part of the world in my opinion. Every time there's a big pension fund or a treasury or government program in the US, you can bet NeoCons are plotting to rob it. Just like TARP. I'm a hybrid Naderite/Libertarian (mutant?) what I want to know is why we have to force our crappy American Society on the whole world? Should they be forced to choke on GMO food like us if they don't want to?
I don't believe in the consilience of evolution (or the correlation you framed with health care) like social darwinism, my remarks were meant to be confined to the realities of tribal population being a direct result of food supply as it is with all animals. Food programs sound like they address Africa's problems; I contend that they only amplify it. World wide birth control is the taboo subject that Repukes and religious nuts don't want discussed, so, if history is any guide, we are ripe for an extinction event in the not to distant future. Peasants slash and burn activities currently account for one third of the carbon footprint.
Feel free to tear down my strawman if you like, he's not looking to sturdy anyway... I guess I'm advocating a isolationist America for a while, because most of our intervention has been such a disaster (from what I can see.) We can't even provide a very high domestic standard of living for many Americans any more or a reasonable amount of meaningful democracy.
TJ
"Will Obama Let USAID’s Genetically Modified Trojan Horse Ride Again?"
In another strange chess move, Obama will likely say "yes" and mean "no". Hope springs eternal.
UGH!
Learn about Codex and who is taking a stand.
www.healthfreedomusa.org is a non-profit run by a physician who closed a natural medicine practice to stand up for natural medicine and an unadulterated food supply. She does this with her husband, a retired Army General.
They attend the meetings and have helped African gov'ts stand up to these things, but the onslaught, as we see here, is relentless.
Not to worry - GMF will not make it beyond the test plots of USAID and the Kenyan Government.
USAID, World Bank, IMF, FAO, WTF money benefits the rich only. In an agricultural economy, like Kenya, where less than 25% of the land is arable, most agricultural funding goes to agribusiness - be it coffee, tea or pineapples. The sweet potatoes are for the commercial market -
USAID has spent several decades destroying agriculture in Kenya - what makes you think Hillary is any different.
Read Stiglitz, who taught at the University of Nairobi. He knows that the key to development of smallholder - peasant farming - is land reform, access to land title, access to small amounts of credit and improvements to transport and marketing systems.
Small farmers will never afford GMC. They will never afford required imputs. The kenyan Government will dedicate foreign funds to develping agribusiness which benefits the elite only.
Yet another global fraud to benefit the elite.
Thanks ducksawce,
I didn't know that.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson