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A Future for Agriculture, A Future for Haiti
We plant but we can't produce or market. We plant but we have no food to eat. We want agriculture to improve so our country can live and so we peasants can live, too. - Rilo Petit-homme, peasant organizer from St. Marc, Haiti
What would it take to transform Haiti's economy such that its role in the global economy is no longer that of providing cheap labor for sweatshops? What would it take for hunger to no longer be the norm, for the country no longer to depend on imports and hand-outs, and for Port-au-Prince's slums no longer to contain 85% of the city's residents? What would it take for the hundreds of thousands left homeless by the earthquake to have a secure life, with income?
According to Haitian peasant organizations, at the core of the solutions is a commitment on the part of the government to support family agriculture, with policies to make the commitment a reality.
Haiti is the only country in the hemisphere which is still majority rural. Estimates of the percentage of Haiti's citizens who remain farmers span from 60.5% (UN, 2006) to 80% (the figure used by peasant groups).
Despite that, food imports currently constitute 57% of what Haitians consume (World Bank, 2008). It didn't used to be that way; policy choices made it so. In the 1980s, the U.S. and international financial institutions pressured Haiti to lower tariffs on food imports, leading to a flood of cheap food with which Haitian farmers could not compete. At the same time, U.S.A.I.D. and others pressured Haiti to orient its production toward export, leaving farmers vulnerable to shifting costs of sugar and coffee on the world market.
Because of the poor state of their production and marketing and the lack of basic services, 88% of the rural population lives in poverty, 67% in extreme poverty (UNDP, 2004). Things have grown worse for them since the 2008 hurricane season, when four storms battered Haiti in three weeks, destroying more than 70% of agriculture and most rural roads, bridges, and other infrastructure needed for production and marketing. At least during the earthquake, only one farming area, around Jacmel, was badly damaged.
There is a direct relationship between the state of agriculture and the earthquake's high toll in deaths, injuries, and homeless
"It's not houses which will rebuild Haiti, it's investing in the agriculture sector," says Rosnel Jean-Baptiste of Tèt Kole Ti Peyizan Ayisyen (Heads Together Small Peasant Farmers of Haiti). Those interviewed for this article, including dozens of peasant farmers from five organizations as well as economists and development experts, agree that the current moment offers opportunities for secure employment for the majority, rural development, diminished hunger, and resettlement with employment of those displaced from earthquake-hit areas.
If reinforced, agriculture could help feed the nation, which is currently suffering a dire food crisis. More than 2.4 million Haitians are estimated to be food-insecure. Acute malnutrition among children under the age 5 is 9% and chronic malnutrition for that age group is 24% (World Food Programme, 2010). The poverty is political in origin, largely due to World Bank and IMF conditions on loans which have squeezed the poor, and free trade policies which have made it impossible for farmers to grow enough food to meet the needs. Securing adequate and affordable Haitian-grown food is one step toward diminishing that poverty, while another is rejecting IMF prescriptions.
Agriculture
could also offer a solution for the hundreds of thousands of internally
displaced people now residing in rural areas. In interviews with dozens
of Port-au-Prince residents who are taking refuge in the Central Plateau, most say they would stay there if they could find a way to sustain themselves. If they could be given the land and resources necessary to begin farming, they would not need to return to city sweatshops, with their lack of living wage, job security, or health or safety protections. Port-au-Prince
"We are meeting with different sectors to construct a Haiti where all Haitians feel like children of the land," says Sylvain Henrilus of Tèt Kole. Peasant groups - even those with historic distrust of each other - and other allies are meeting regularly to plan their advocacy and mobilization for reorienting H
- Food sovereignty, the right of a people to grow and consume its own food. With trade policies which support local production,Haiti's levels of self-sufficiency could increase.Chavannes Jean-Baptisteof the Peasant Movement of Papay and the National Peasant Movement of the Papay Congresssays, "The country has the right to determine its own agricultural policies, its own food production policies, to produce for family and for local consumption in healthy and simple agriculture which respects the environment, Mother Earth, as the mother of future generations."
- Decentralization of services. The ‘people outside,' as rural inhabitants are known, must have access to services equal to the people ofPort-au-Prince. The ability to meet their needs where they are is both their right and a way to keepPort-au-Princefrom again becoming overcrowded. Rosnel Jean-Baptiste says, "We need to deconstruct the capital, bringing services into the country and helping people find jobs there."
- Technical support, especially for sustainable, ecological farming. Farmers in the region of the Artibonite, for example, stated that their melons, bananas, and tomatoes are not producing well, but they don't know what the problem is or how to resolve it. They need advice from agronomists. They also need credit to help them buy equipment, support with storage and marketing, reforestation, and assistance with irrigation and water management. Elio Youyoute, a member of a community peasant association in the South, says, "We are trying to grow enough food to feed the cities, but we need help from the state."
- Land reform.Those who work the land need secure tenure. Otherwise they willcontinue tobe unable to support themselves on what Haitians call ‘a handkerchief of land,'plots sometimes no larger than15' x 15'. Land reform must be not justa one-time hand-off, which wouldquickly revert to its previous concentration as strugglingfarmers are forced toselltheirsmallgardens, but a change intenure laws accompanied bytechnical support.SylvainHenrilus ofTèt Kole says, "The land reform we need is not what Préval did in his first term,which was to just divide a bit of land into very small plots without any support,but wherethose who work the land have the right to that land with all the infrastructure and means-notjust to adequately feed thepeople but to export as we used to do, to have our sovereignty in all dimensions."
- Seeds, whatDoudou Pierre of Vía Campesina'scoordinating committeecalls"the patrimony of humanity."Haiti's seed stock is not going towards the March planting seasonas intended, butrathertoward feeding the flood of internally displaced people. Farmers need help in procuringseedsupplies, which they insist not be genetically modified.Chavannes Jean-Baptisteinsists that "If people start sending hybrid, NGOseeds, that's the end of Haitian agriculture."
- A ban on food aidin the medium- to long-term.U.S.A.I.D. alone is giving $113 million in food aid this year, according to an Associated Press article on February 26.Farmers agree that aid is critical in this moment of crisis,but say that the government needs toquicklydo everything it canto shore up productionso thatdomesticagriculture can begin replacing the aid.Otherwise,Haitiwill grow even more dependent,and multinational food andseed companies willovertakeHaiti's marketeven more.
The challenges are many. They include advanced environmental destruction and concentration of land. The chief challenge is securing the state's commitment of the priorities outlined above. The government has a long history of responding not to peasant farmers but to the needs of the large landowning class and more recently, to the U.S. and other foreign powers looking to dump or sell food in Haiti.
Farmer after farmer interviewed indicated a resolve to work to change this state of affairs, recognizing that it will be a long haul. Says Tèt Kole's Rosnel Jean-Baptiste, "It's up to us social movements to put our heads together to change the situation of food production and the model of the state in Haiti."
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11 Comments so far
Show AllLook to Jamaica and Oregon... Hemp helps with all the problems in this article.
http://hempworld.com/Hemp-CyberFarm_com/htms/countries/jamaicah.html
Great article. A real article, not only slyly covering a Monsanto agenda to insert GM-seeds into Haiti and take over even farming from people there.
I sincerely wish the IPS would expose Hillary Clinton's efforts in Africa and India on behalf of US agribusiness which would destroy peasant farmers and people's lives and health. She makes a human rights speech that if translated is a corporate globalization plan. She goes to India to undo their seed law protections for farmers and their biodiversity protection while saying she cares about women and children and health.
IPS would do a lot of good if they would start describing the corporate language being used to offer "humanitarian" aid that in trust colonizes countries. Most progressives don't understand what is being said when it comes to agriculture.
Even here, there is little response, though other articles on Haiti that seem "political" get attention. The left needs to understand that the take over of food is the ultimate political move, and it is happening here, too.
Appreciate this article and IPS' work.
Beverly ,I would look to Central American seed savers exchanges and food banks before using U.S. aid.As soon as the U.S. interests see your article mentioning land reform and social justice they will scream "Socialism" and balk!Private U.S. seed saver exchanges that deal in O.P. Heirlooms will help if they can.They need growers!U.S. govt. aid from D.O.A.will have only Hybrid and G.M.O. corporate crap to donate.Mostly post date low germination garbage.If I could have my dream job ,ethno botanical seed exchange and distribution would be it!
Stick to Raul Castro ,Michelle Bachelet ,and Hugo Chavez if you want dependable state support.I miss my friend Selange BeCastle ,if anyone knows of her whereabouts Port a Prince area,please contact C.D. administrators thanks.
peace
The kerning between letters and words is so tight that this article is very awkward reading. Somebody should fix it right away so more can appreciate and understand the desire for a movement back to the land.
I wonder what President Aristide would say.
What I want to know is, Where is the so-called government of Haiti?
It would appear that as long as they could siphon of NGO dollars and put them in Cayman Island and Swiss accounts they existed as a pretense, but once the earthquake hit, they literally disappeared into the night. (Perhaps flown by our planes like bin Laden family members out of the U.S. after 9/11...)
Now that the US military first took over the airport and then controlled the situation on the ground, does Haiti even have a government, or is it the US military?
And, I, too, "...wonder what President Aristide would say." And do, if given a chance.
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We also need to talk about sustainable and non-sustainable POPULATION GROWTH.
Reorienting the Haitian economy to agriculture is the way to go, but food sovereignty would have had a better chance of succeeding if implemented before the population there last doubled.
Earthquake coverage of these beautiful people gives me the impression that Haitians are ideally suited to make this communitarian dreqm a reality.
But I can't comprehend why not even she has mentioned the critical need to slow the birth rate on that mountainous ISLAND.
With climate change, and vastly too many people sharing or competing for resources, we can not simply hope that if more women get an opportunity to be educated, then they will decide and have the power to have fewer children. That seems to have been the non-plan exercised by many international organizations in many countries with desperately poor people.
It isn't working. Aid workers can feel good about not imposing their beliefs on others,( much less practicing coercive measures, such as allowing doctors to tie the tubes of tired women who have already had more children than they can care for, and who have no door to lock), but the overcrowded conditions continue to make life brutal for many islanders, however beautiful.
Do any readers knowing of any groups trying to offer contraception and plan B? Is it safe to do so?
When dropping Haitian food import barriers crushed farmers, it must have made food cheaper, easing city life, but draining money from the country. Now that global grain prices skyrocketed, causing problems for food buyers, there must be an encouraging effect for farmers, and for the country as a whole.
Would be great to see Americans help Haiti, but judging from our past there, and our current food policy at home, we're more likely to get in the way.
We have our own profound problem with food; it's just that it doesn't look like hunger yet. Haiti and North America both cd benefit from soil development and adoption of smart local practices that respect natural cycles. Haiti is living those cycles not being respected, largely at our insistence.
Nevermore writes in part:
"...Aid workers can feel good about not imposing their beliefs on others,( much less practicing coercive measures, such as allowing doctors to tie the tubes of tired women who have already had more children than they can care for, and who have no door to lock),..."
Good points. But what are you gonna do for "entertainment" when you're living in a nylon tent without TV or a radio or probably even a deck of cards and there are no books and anyway you can't read or write and the IMF has driven you off your land and the city you moved to just turned into a pile of rubble?
If I were a demographer or other sociological professional, I'd be asking who is predicting a spike in Haitian pregnancies after this disaster and who is predicting fewer. Could be an interesting window into human behavior, and who is right about the issue of overpopulation.
Come to think of it, Haiti is so unique that there must be hordes of NGOs just studying it to death.
Meanwhile, tube-tying need not be coercive, esp. if Cuban female doctors were allowed in...
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The vultures are circling overhead.
I've been paying a lot of attention to vultures and other birds lately. They can serve as a great metaphor for human behavior.
Vultures tend to be cowards, and furtive. They are capable of being social creatures, thus for example, sharing a red squirrel carcass roadkill, but they lack the claws to simply swoop down and pick that carcass up off the road and remove it to their nest. I have never seen a vulture nest.
Canadian geese are far more social. They will squawk at each other on a frozen lake for hours, a seeming cacophony, and then suddenly they will all lift into the air and head in a single direction. How did they know that the snow had melted in the harvested cornfield 2 miles away? Cloud computing.
The people of Haiti know what is being done to them. For centuries. They keep their own language, with which they share fragments of New Orleans Creole and French Gayana, and one would expect, a certain portion of Montreal.
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