EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Wisconsin Bill Would Treat Organic Milk, Sharp Cheddar, Brown Eggs as "Junk Food"
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Climate Change's 'Evil Twin': Ocean Acidification
- Disaster Capitalism Strikes as Hedge Funds Circle Near-Bankrupt Municipalities Like Vultures
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Wisconsin Bill Would Treat Organic Milk, Sharp Cheddar, Brown Eggs as "Junk Food"
- Climate Change's 'Evil Twin': Ocean Acidification
- In 'March Toward Disaster,' World Hits 400 PPM Milestone
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
Popular content
Today's Top News
Haitian Farmers Commit to Burning Monsanto Hybrid Seeds
"A new earthquake" is what peasant farmer leader Chavannes Jean-Baptiste of the Peasant Movement of Papay (MPP) called the news that Monsanto will be donating 60,000 seed sacks (475 tons) of hybrid corn seeds and vegetable seeds, some of them treated with highly toxic pesticides. The MPP has committed to burning Monsanto's seeds, and has called for a march to protest the corporation's presence in Haiti on June 4, for World Environment Day.
In an open letter sent of May 14, Chavannes Jean-Baptiste, the Executive Director of MPP and the spokesperson for the National Peasant Movement of the Congress of Papay (MPNKP), called the entry of Monsanto seeds into Haiti "a very strong attack on small agriculture, on farmers, on biodiversity, on Creole seeds..., and on what is left our environment in Haiti."1 Haitian social movements have been vocal in their opposition to agribusiness imports of seeds and food, which undermines local production with local seed stocks. They have expressed special concern about the import of genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
For now, without a law regulating the use of GMOs in Haiti, the Ministry of Agriculture rejected Monsanto's offer of Roundup Ready GMO seeds. In an email exchange, a Monsanto representative assured the Ministry of Agriculture that the seeds being donated are not GMO.
Elizabeth Vancil, Monsanto's Director of Development Initiatives, called the news that the Haitian Ministry of Agriculture approved the donation "a fabulous Easter gift" in an April email.2 Monsanto is known for aggressively pushing seeds, especially GMO seeds, in both the global North and South, including through highly restrictive technology agreements with farmers who are not always made fully aware of what they are signing. According to interviews by this writer with representatives of Mexican small farmer organizations, they then find themselves forced to buy Monsanto seeds each year, under conditions they find onerous and at costs they sometimes cannot afford.
The hybrid corn seeds Monsanto has donated to Haiti are treated with the fungicide Maxim XO, and the calypso tomato seeds are treated with thiram.3 Thiram belongs to a highly toxic class of chemicals called ethylene bisdithiocarbamates (EBDCs). Results of tests of EBDCs on mice and rats caused concern to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which then ordered a special review. The EPA determined that EBDC-treated plants are so dangerous to agricultural workers that they must wear special protective clothing when handling them. Pesticides containing thiram must contain a special warning label, the EPA ruled. The EPA also barred marketing of the chemicals for many home garden products, because it assumes that most gardeners do not have adequately protective clothing.4 Monsanto's passing mention of thiram to Ministry of Agriculture officials in an email contained no explanation of the dangers, nor any offer of special clothing or training for those who will be farming with the toxic seeds.
Haitian social movements' concern is not just about the dangers of the chemicals and the possibility of future GMO imports. They claim that the future of Haiti depends on local production with local food for local consumption, in what is called food sovereignty. Monsanto's arrival in Haiti, they say, is a further threat to this.
"People in the U.S. need to help us produce, not give us food and seeds. They're ruining our chance to support ourselves," said farmer Jonas Deronzil of a peasant cooperative in the rural region of Verrettes.5
Monsanto's history has long drawn ire from environmentalists, health advocates, and small farmers, going back to its production of Agent Orange during the Vietnam war. Exposure to Agent Orange has caused cancer in an untold number of U.S. Veterans, and the Vietnamese government claims that 400,000 Vietnamese people were killed or disabled by Agent Orange, and 500,000 children were born with birth defects as a result of their exposure.6
Monsanto's former motto, "Without chemicals, life itself would be impossible," has been replaced by "Imagine." Its web site home page claims it "help[s] farmers around the world produce more while conserving more. We help farmers grow yield sustainably so they can be successful, produce healthier foods... while also reducing agriculture's impact on our environment."7 The corporations' record does not support the claims.
Together with Syngenta, Dupont and Bayer, Monsanto controls more than half of the world's seeds.8 The company holds almost 650 seed patents, most of them for cotton, corn and soy, and almost 30% of the share of all biotech research and development. Monsanto came to own such a vast supply by buying major seed companies to stifle competition, patenting genetic modifications to plant varieties, and suing small farmers. Monsanto is also one of the leading manufacturers of GMOs.
As of 2007, Monsanto had filed 112 lawsuits against U.S. farmers for alleged technology contract violations or GMO patents, involving 372 farmers and 49 small agricultural businesses in 27 different states. From these, Monsanto has won more than $21.5 million in judgments. The multinational appears to investigate 500 farmers a year, in estimates based on Monsanto's own documents and media reports.9
"Farmers have been sued after their field was contaminated by pollen or seed from someone else's genetically engineered crop [or] when genetically engineered seed from a previous year's crop has sprouted, or ‘volunteered,' in fields planted with non-genetically engineered varieties the following year," said Andrew Kimbrell and Joseph Mendelson of the Center for Food Safety.10
In Colombia, Monsanto has received upwards of $25 million from the U.S. government for providing Roundup Ultra in the anti-drug fumigation efforts of Plan Colombia. Roundup Ultra is a highly concentrated version of Monsanto's glyphosate herbicide, with additional ingredients to increase its lethality. Colombian communities and human rights organizations have charged that the herbicide has destroyed food crops, water sources and protected areas, and has led to increased incidents of birth defects and cancers.
Vía Campesina, the world's largest confederation of farmers with member organizations in more than sixty countries, has called Monsanto one of the "principal enemies of peasant sustainable agriculture and food sovereignty for all peoples.11 They claim that as Monsanto and other multinationals control an ever larger share of land and agriculture, they force small farmers out of their land and jobs. They also claim that the agribusiness giants contribute to climate change and other environmental disasters, an outgrowth of industrial agriculture.12
The Vía Campesina coalition launched a global campaign against Monsanto last October 16, on International World Food Day, with protests, land occupations, and hunger strikes in more than twenty countries. They carried out a second global day of action against Monsanto on April 17 of this year, in honor of Earth Day.
Non-governmental organizations in the U.S. are challenging Monsanto's practices, too. The Organic Consumers Association has spearheaded the campaign "Millions Against Monsanto," calling on the company to stop intimidating small family farmers, stop marketing untested and unlabeled genetically engineered foods to consumers, and stop using billions of dollars of U.S. taypayers' money to subsidize GMO crops.13
The Center for Food Safety has led a four-year legal challenge to Monsanto that has just made it to the U.S. Supreme Court. After successful litigation against Monsanto and the U.S. Department of Agriculture for illegal promotion of Roundup Ready Alfalfa, the court heard the Center for Food Safety's case on April 27. A decision on this first-ever Supreme Court case about GMOs is now pending.14
"Fighting hybrid and GMO seeds is critical to save our diversity and our agriculture," Jean-Baptiste said in an interview in February. "We have the potential to make our lands produce enough to feed the whole population and even to export certain products. The policy we need for this to happen is food sovereignty, where the county has a right to define it own agricultural policies, to grow first for the family and then for local market, to grow healthy food in a way which respects the environment and Mother Earth."
Many thanks to Moira Birss for her assistance with research and writing.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


54 Comments so far
Show AllYES to burning those GMO seeds of fraud ! What says you GMO hacks (Kernelz, Greg R, cman2, etc...) now? Bring 'em on !!
GO HAITI ! India, I recommend you do the same before the corporate fascists successfully get the Indian gov't to pass a law outlawing speaking out against GMO.
Will US farmers have to become as desperate as Hatians before they do the same things here?
I sure hope not.
Max__I would say this demonstrates exactly why Haiti is heading for extinction.
Anyone burning high quality donated seed deserves to go hungry and the people sponsoring that action are part of their problem. Farmers the world over have used GM seeds for quite a number of years and know the benefits or they would not pay extra to obtain them. I believe thousands of farmers opinions are worth considerably more than one or two radicals in Haiti. It is questionable whether the corn used for human consumption is even available in GM form, as it is primarily for field corn, which is not the same as sweet corn, a totally different operation. Anyone wanting ordinary seed can always buy that as it is used for mandated refuge requirements, which all farmers have to abide by. Haiti will not go very far with advice of people like you.
Kernelz, I have recently received copies of documents from a friend of mine who is self-employed and contracts to the Dept of Agriculture and the reports are very disturbing on what the future of seeding with GMO is all about. I may not be a farmer or even a gardener but I can tell where science is used for fraudulent and destructive purposes and there are details on plans being worked out to set standards on how far companies can go on modifying their seeds for profiting purposes. By profiting purposes, I mean setting the seeds such that the same crops that they yield will be deprived of essential vitamins and minerals and yet the produce while it may look perfectly all right will sell for the same price. Agribusiness did this on meat and diary when they used corn feed to strip off essential vitamins and minerals while introducing ecoli all for the want of profit and they are doing it again but this time on fruits and vegetables. If Monsanto wanted to donate truly high quality seeds even if were GMO, they would be going against their own traditions of going profit hungry. With the documents I received with more disturbing ones to come, I smell foul play in the works. Even if it just so happens to be high quality, there is something that will probably cause it to expire soon and the minute Monsanto hooks its customers to buy more, here come the lower quality fast expiring seeds. Don't worry though. The CIA and DEA are out to protect Monsanto here and in other nations. Mankind will only pay the price for trying to take over Mother Nature's job. It happened on meat and diary and it will happen to the produce should this continue.
PS: There was no need to flag Kernelz's reply whoever that was.
I didn't flag kernelz's reply but I would have.
kernelz is simply another industry troll paid to deflect criticisms of Monsanto and GMOs on CD. There isn't a true statement in his entire post.
GMO seeds are "high quality" only to the companies that manufacture and sell them. Their success owes more to general ignorance and Monsanto's relentless bribery of government officials in the US and abroad than to their intrinsic worth.
q
Exactly right, VP.
These bogus "spite flaggings" occur daily, and can only be explained by some combination of intellectual and moral weakness: cowardice, vindictiveness, or stupidity.
I agree with both of you. I have flagged twice, both times against commercial ads that have nothing to do with the topic. If you disagree with a post, briefly state why and move on. I do not engage in prolonged back and forths either as at makes for boring clutter.
I have done Google advanced search and found as many as 11,000 comments flagged within a 24 hour period. (Search -"Why are you flagging this comment"). Reviewing that volume of flags is an undue stress on the CD staff.
Joe
If flagging presents an intolerable burden for the CD admins then they can (and should) disable the feature.
". . . against commercial ads that have nothing to do with the topic."
Why does it matter if a commercial ad (i.e. presentation of a for-profit entity's selective presentation of information and disinformation) is directly or indirectly relevant or completely irrelevant to a topic? Dishonest discourse has no place in a serious discussion.
kernelz's posts are not intended to extend arguementation. They are simple and witless efforts to deflect (not dispute) well founded criticism.
q
Gee, if you can't make a decent argument then resort to some childish insults.
q
Hey, professor (?), how about telling me what I would "challenge" in kernelz's absurd post.
kernelz makes no arguments and presents no logic. He simply vomits up the same unfounded statements that we always see in threads about Monsanto and GMOs, claims that have been examined and proven false repeatedly.
Treating kernelz's posts as intellectually honest propositions is naive at best.
q
Quickstepper__ you better quick step out to farm country and see what is going on out there. I have been a farmer for over 50 years and every farmer I know uses GM seed and would not think of going back to the older straight bred seed except for the percent they are forced to plant. These scare stories are not helpful to anyone, and it is foolish to get so carried away on propaganda that is being promoted by some that have obviously little knowledge of agriculture. There is no reason why ordinary varieties cannot be used for many years for food production if that is desired. Most of the GM corn and soybeans are used for livestock feed or export. Would you want farmers trying to outlaw your cell phones because they might cause brain cancer?
"I have been a farmer for over 50 years and every farmer I know uses GM seed and would not think of going back to the older straight bred seed except for the percent they are forced to plant. "
Such "farmers" have sold their souls the corporate devils and do not deserve to be called farmers as such. We all like to cut down unnecessary workloads but GMO/hybrid is pushing it. Speaking of forced to plant, how come you think it's ok for companies like Monsanto to force farmers to "plant" their bullshit "or else" ?
"These scare stories are not helpful to anyone, and it is foolish to get so carried away on propaganda that is being promoted by some that have obviously little knowledge of agriculture."
Neither is lying to and misleading the public about a bad idea by sugarcoating it as "good". Do you realize how many harmful products ruined and destroyed millions of lives yearly because of daily misleading advertisement?
If you wanna talk about scare stories, then please explain the upcoming bill in India to outlaw speaking against GMO. If GMO/hybrid were really what you claim it to be, then there would not be cowardly and desperate attempts to stifle objections to the idea.
"Most of the GM corn and soybeans are used for livestock feed or export."
No wonder the meat and diary lose their nutritive value and then they profit because people find themselves having to come back for more when their bodies don't get the proper nutrients the first and second servings were supposed to provide.
All you have to do is google "Monsanto Sues" and you'll see what a terrorist organization Monsanto is. Monsanto sues farmers, sues countries, sues companies, either to force its way into trade agreements or to force farmers to pay for plants that popped up in their fields due to drift. It is not a matter of a few isolated incidents. Monsanto has a huge, full time, vicious team of legals that kick down doors and rip down curtains for the monstrous company whose name, ironically, means "my saint".
Ours is a nation of apathy, but the world out there is not so apathetic.
After reading over a long period of time, I agree with your evaluaton of kernelz. He is probably working for Monsanto or a giant monocrop corn enterprise. Unlike with the newspapers, which publish few letters, here on CD it is easy to make comments to provide counter information and commentary to readers who may be new. It is practice for talking with neigbors, co-workers, friends etc. Without getting completely diverted, I think somebody should respond. Flagging does not accomplish that in my opinion.
Joe
"Anyone burning high quality donated seed deserves to go hungry and the people sponsoring that action are part of their problem."
People simply do not trust Monsanto. Other countries have rejected Monsanto and anything they offer, going back as far as 2002. In fact there are so many countries who do not trust Monsanto that you are in the minority in this world, not that you'd know it from our media or government regulators with swinging doors to industry.
Before being allowed to sell their crap in Mexico, Monsanto had to make promises to the Mexican government that it would not sue farmers for having Monsanto genes in their fields without having bought seeds from or signed contracts with Monsanto. This is because Monsanto's reputation precedes it.
People know, everywhere but here.
Cannabis/hemp could have been used to spare everyone the can of worms GMO opens up. It's so pathetic that the plant of peace that could actually help repair the long damaged soil at least some has to be outlawed and that's another reason I got so into hemp these past few years like some others. I mean it should be obvious that truly high quality seeds can only come from the plants themselves, not by genetic modification even if it is theoretically possible. Bad soil results in poor quality produce. I wouldn't be surprised to find a cozy conversation between DEA folks and Monsanto folks at some expensive restaurant or something. I know hemp isn't everything but when one studies the details and realizes that leaving it out of science and calling it quackery along with alternative medicine is morally reprehensible, then it becomes clear that calling GMO a part of "science" and not quackery is all about dangerously profiteering. Perhaps hemp and algae will have to wait so that Peak Oil just might make this nation really wake up on GMO like everywhere else. History will just have to show years of wasted efforts on GMO all because of banning Cannabis, a peaceful gift of Mother Nature IMHO.
PS: Hemp used to be used a lot throughout Asia but on my trip to the Far East in Jan and Feb, I was very disappointed to find out that hemp was relatively unknown to most except the Chinese at best. Cannabis in general is not illegal throughout Japan, India, China, etc... but it's as if people never heard of it. I hope those nations catch on and make use of that plant and others to help enrich the soil and put Monsanto and the likes out of business by showing that nothing beats Mother Nature.
Tell that to all the Indian farmers who committed suicide when they went bankrupt trying to make a living from GMO crops .....
Do you work for Monsanto? Your post says either support Monsanto's diabolical seeds or you deserve to starve to death. There is some cautionary information about Monsanto in the movie "Food Inc". That information is sufficient cause for not getting hooked on this company and these seeds. And there is more about their role worldwide, including in India as is mentioned by aquifer in the post below.
This "gift" is like the first free hit from your heroin dealer.
Joe
Is it too much trouble to actually read the article? It specifically says the seeds are not GMO. How much hysteria can we whip up? This is just too stupid to participate any further.
Hybrid or GMO, it makes no difference whatsoever because it is all the same scam. Hybrid and GMO are like coal and nuclear. Both are dangerous and neither one of them deserves approval from the Haitian farmers. I have plenty of info on the dirty secrets of "hybrid" seeds as well in addition to this article to prove that "hybrid" is just as dangerous. Why don't you try out fruits and vegetables from GMO/hybrid seeds yourself before selling that crap around and then give us your results if you're lucky that is?
These Monsanto creeps would give a blind person a weasel, and tell them it's a seeing-eye dog! I would believe the seeds are not GMO only after I sequenced the entire genome...of every single seed.
Sioux Rose
Dr I: Right on! Monsanto is GUILTY of war crimes, why would anyone trust them with any thing? Like the Capital One commericial, "What's in your wallet?" For Monsanto, it's "What's in YOUR cereal?"
well, when you actually read the article, it points out that many of these "hybrid" seeds are treated with highly toxic chemicals:
"The hybrid corn seeds Monsanto has donated to Haiti are treated with the fungicide Maxim XO, and the calypso tomato seeds are treated with thiram.3 Thiram belongs to a highly toxic class of chemicals called ethylene bisdithiocarbamates (EBDCs). Results of tests of EBDCs on mice and rats caused concern to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which then ordered a special review. The EPA determined that EBDC-treated plants are so dangerous to agricultural workers that they must wear special protective clothing when handling them."
And furthermore, the locals would prefer local seed - a very smart move on their part. Food sovereignty is key to any country's prosperity;
"Vía Campesina, the world's largest confederation of farmers with member organizations in more than sixty countries, has called Monsanto one of the "principal enemies of peasant sustainable agriculture and food sovereignty for all peoples."
It's too bad our farmers don't do the same. The problem is that we have already contaminated much of our local seed ....
There is sanity in this world, just none from the corporate world. Imagine, taxpayer dollars subsidizing the producers of toxic food. It's just nuts.
I bet they claim a tax write off, even after the seeds are burned.
What I want to know is what these Monsanto folks eat. Do they buy organic, or do they eat their own poison?
Given the pernicious aggression of Monsanto's lawyers, I wouldn't be surprised to learn that Monsanto's employees are required to sign pledges that they will not discuss their personal dietary choices in public.
q
I believe their preferred diet is human red blood cells...Nasty vampires they are.
This story came out in Ode Magazine in the year 2000. I believe that Granada Food Services has been fired but I'm not sure. In any case, when you click links to this story, you mostly get the response "File not found: /Monsanto/moncafeteria.cfm" As usual Monsanto probably just threatened to sue.
Anyway, story begin:
Monsanto Goes GMO-Free - in its Cafeteria
UNITED KINGDOM. From now on, staff at the British headquarters of biotech giant Monsanto will be eating only non-genetically modified products on their lunch breaks. Foods containing genetically modified soy and corn are no longer available in the company cafeteria. Granada Food Services, which manages the canteen, is said to be concerned about health risks. Monsanto's press department contends the action was not the result of a boycott initiated by worried employees of the U.S. multinational.
MaxP:
I've got other things to do rather than discuss this anymore.
Sure you do. You aren't a farmer and you couldn't make the case for GMO. Thank you for admitting defeat. Now go back to your Limbaugh bunker and fart away. I'm sure Monsanto and the CIA will try again on trying to assault Haiti but I'm glad the Haitian farmers are GMO mf-ers like you. LMAO !
PS: Hybrid is no different from GMO when everything is taken into consideration so don't bother.
Monsanto is evil. We need a law against Roundup.
"People in the U.S. need to help us produce, not give us food and seeds. They're ruining our chance to support ourselves," said farmer Jonas Deronzil of a peasant cooperative in the rural region of Verrettes.
Isn't that the whole idea (of U.S.Corporate sponsored programs in Haiti)? To keep the Haitian people from supporting themselves in order to keep them working for a dollar a day for the multi-national corporations, like Fruit of the Loom, Hain, or other such corporations the U.S. has fostered there?
The Monsantos, the Dows, the Bayers and Coca-Colas of the world are killing developing nations, and the environment, for maximum profits! Evil indeed!!!
Just what Haitians need.. seeds as "gifts" slathered in Ethylene bisdithiocarbamates (EBDCs).
As if GMO "terminator seeds" and other agro-frankenstein creations aren't bad enough, now even non-GMO, hybridized seeds contain health (if not life) compromising chemicals, virtually certain to do a body bad.
Pay Attention Folks!!!
Seeds being "gifted" to Haiti today could be MANDATED to be planted in the US tomorrow.
The Farm-Food Police shall deploy shortly... have your papers ready.
Let's hope that the example of a small and devastated half-island standing up to a BigCorp will be noticed, applauded, and followed by other nations' farmers, even ours.
Go Haiti! Burn those seeds and don't let Monsanto trick you like they have other countries.
Bravo Haiti! They know when a Trojan horse is headed their way, after years of corporate colonial meddling. Go organic! You get better prices for it, because it's the best food.
Bravo, Bliss doubt!
Haitian farmers probably have more worry about than how much money they will make on some dangerous technology being sold to them and I think that they connect very well with their customers.
Here in the US, there is a disconnect between farmers and customers. Processing and supermarkets are the middlemen. Farmers have been deprived legally and educationally of good farming and brainwashed into being profit driven and "easy" technologies. Open up the fridge of a US farmer and see what's stored. Don't be shocked to find more processed foods. Their shortcut practices in farming and buying processed foods has made a lot of them fatter over the years. The consumers have been brainwashed into relying too much on trips to the supermarket. The consumers and farmers are used to answering to Mammon and not to Gaia. Why else would it be a high priority to put maximizing profits on lower quality yields as opposed to maximizing the nutritive and environmentally safe value of what is being grown?
Thankfully, some US farmers are speaking out but you are correct that burning GMO/hybrid seeds is unlikely to be part of any US farmers' high priorities.
Silly me. I should have said "YES to burning those hybrid seeds of fraud !" But "hybrid" or GMO, it's all the same. For Monsanto to "donate" dangerously chemically treated seeds to Haitian farmers is just as sinful as Saddham Hussein's chemical warfare against the Kurds and the Iranians in his time.
"YES to burning those hybrid seeds of fraud !"
A commenter on Truthout said "Don't just burn Monsanto seeds, burn Monsanto."
I would include a list of other big agris like ADM, Cargill, etc... as well.
". . . treated with extremely toxic pesticides" -- well, I take back the suggestion that they eat the gift rather than planting it!
Burn!
Burn!
Burn!
Burn is better than throwing in the ocean, which was my initial suggestion. The fires could be used for cooking food.
Joe
Brave MPP! This action against the devil Monsanto shows the same level of consciousness and sacrifice as people striking to form a union. Hungry and poor, they give up immediate food for the possibility of having a future. I am moved to tears by this.
Joe
Why is it that we cannot burn the CEO's, COO's and all those responsible for creating this monstrosity called Monsanto? How much time do we have left before all the honey bees are dead and gone and what will be pollinating the flowers and the foodstocks after they are gone. I think that our time on this earth is pretty well over and for sure we do not deserve to exist after all the crap we have managed to pull over the centuries. The United states should have a wall built around it and you should be forced to exist without contact with the outside world until the last of your are dead and gone... I used to be one of you, now all I have is shame for what you have become.
With or without GMOs, the Haitian small farmer is doomed.
When disaster struck, all available seed was diverted to Port au Prince to feed millions of dislocated "urbanites".
The 65% of the Haitian population that makes up the small holder farming sector was left without seed for the upcoming rainy season. The small farmers in the countryside could not let their city relatives starve.
"Free" food aid from the US and the WFP replaced the food produced locally. There is no way small farmers can compete with free food.
No seeds...no market...no production
In many underdeveloped countries, food aid is "cornered" by the political elite and controlled for their profit.
As long as free food continues to arrive, small farmers will be unable to compete with the politically connected. A sucessful peasantry cannot exist in a tragically corrupt country - backed by US agribusiness, who also make a large profit off of "food" aid.
But wait ... there are larger profits to be made by controlling the seed and agricultural input markets.
And we can continue to share our profits with the same government officials who now profit from food aid. They can ensure that the Haitian small holder never gets access to traditional "creole" seeds.
Viva la revolution....
Has anyone thought about the impact of all that burning chemicalized seed? What happens when the fumes of the chemicals get into the air? How many workers/people around the burn sites will wind up with cancer or parkinson's disease or other such disastrous illness or genetic mutations that may affect their unborn?
Haitians need to protest the acceptance of the seeds in the first plance.
Here's one in depth, revealing, investigative article for corp's Farmer John, the Monsanto troll:
"Monsanto’s Harvest of Fear"
"Monsanto already dominates America’s food chain with its genetically modified seeds. Now it has targeted milk production. Just as frightening as the corporation’s tactics–ruthless legal battles against small farmers–is its decades-long history of toxic contamination."
by Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele
May 2008 Vanity Fair Magazine
"Monsanto one of the 'principal enemies of peasant sustainable agriculture and food sovereignty'."
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/05/monsanto200805
This article clarifies Monsanto's business plan for our planet: Human annihilation thru greed !