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October 16: Day for Rebuilding Local Food Economies & Protesting Agribusiness

by: Jill Richardson

Sat Oct 16, 2010 at 06:00:00 AM PDT


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Today is "World Food Day," which makes it ripe for other groups to also claim it as a day to celebrate all kinds of other things. And I've got two for you today. First, above the fold, it's a day for "Ending Poverty by Rebuilding Local Food Economies" (brought to you by the newly founded US Food Sovereignty Alliance). Additionally, if you click to see below, I've posted a press release by La Via Campesina, who declares today an "International day of Action against Agribusiness and Monsanto."

October 16:  Ending Poverty by Rebuilding Local Food Economies/World Food Day.  La Via Campesina - a global movement fighting for food sovereignty and agrarian reform - calls for actions against transnational corporations responsible for privatizing seeds, promoting a chemical-dependent, industrial-scale form of agriculture and aquabusiness/industrial fisheries that bankrupt and displace fishers, farmers, and farmworkers. Local food economies are the solution. Some suggested actions:

  • Declare Who Fishes Matters by signing the petition and uploading your own short video about why the concentration, consolidation and industrial-scale takeover of our fisheries is a bad idea. For more action steps, see this link.
  • Support CIW's Campaign for Fair Food against supermarkets that refuse to pay higher wages to farm workers
  • Host a Food Justice Workshop to share food and information about taking back our local food systems
  • Celebrate and organize Grub Parties with local chefs, gardeners, farmers, and eaters to build community and dismantle racism and sexism (See this link.)
  • Promote local food with Farmers' Market Fair Food Festivals
  • Protest BP in solidarity with fishermen, farmers, restaurant workers, and others in the Gulf of Mexico food system
Jill Richardson :: October 16: Day for Rebuilding Local Food Economies & Protesting Agribusiness
La Via Campesina release:

October 16th: International day of Action against Agribusiness and Monsanto

On the occasion of the meeting of the United Nations Convention on Biodiversity (CBD) in Nagoya, Japan, and to mark World Food Day on October 16, 2010, La Via Campesina calls for actions around the world to denounce the role of agribusinesses such as Monsanto and their destruction and corporatization of biodiversity and life.

Even though the UN declared 2010 the International year of Biodiversity, the CBD is meeting at a time of unprecedented biodiversity destruction. As well as animals, insects and birds, the world is also seeing the disappearance of thousands of plant varieties as agribusiness destroys, contaminates and privatizes the World Heritage stored inside the seeds and plants nurtured by generations of farmers over thousands of years of agriculture on Earth. Since 1900, approximately 90% of the genetic diversity of agricultural crops has been lost from farmer's fields. Biodiversity is also endangered by land-grabbing and the displacement of communities who are actually protecting biodiversity.

Agribusiness corporations are attempting to monopolize seeds through the use of hybrid seeds, patents and laws that make farmers' seeds illegal. Intellectual property rights systems that are upheld or enforced by institutions such as WTO or TRIPS are putting nature into private hands. Monsanto has become a true giant - the company owns almost a quarter of the patented seed market worldwide, and keeps taking over seeds companies particularly in Europe. The top ten biggest companies control almost 70% of the world's seeds. The company is now entering the "aid business", selling its seeds in Africa with the Bill Gates Foundation through the "Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA)".

Not only do the TNCs sell seeds, they also provide toxic chemicals with devastating effects. Huge monocultures treated with cocktails of agrochemicals will further destroy the world's biodiversity as well as peasant communities. In the world of Monsanto, Syngenta, Bayer and others, there is no space for biodiversity, just uniformity, biotechnology and profit.

Within the decision making spaces on climate change, agribusiness promotes aggressively technologies that destroy biodiversity such as transgenic trees plantations or GM seeds, solutions which are fasly presented as better adapted to the new climate.

La Via Campesina knows that the future of our planet depends on our ability to protect, nurture and promote agro biodiversity. We, peasant men and women propose to develop the richness and diversity of our farms, plant varieties, cultures and traditions. Seeds are part of the World Heritage and should remain into public and community-based use, not private ownership.

It is the model of peasant agriculture in its diversity that will allow us to adapt to the demographic and climatic changes which are already upon us.

As we confront the agribusinesses in our fields through promoting our alternatives, we refuse to recognize their "rights" as owners of the planet's biodiversity and we will also confront them through political actions in the coming weeks, at the FAO, the CBD and the UN Climate Talks (UNFCCC).

We call for Actions worldwide around October 16th to protect biodiversity and confront transnational corporations such as Monsanto.

La Via Campesina invites you to coordinate your actions with the call of the network "Climate Justice Action!" in order to organise direct actions worldwide for climate justice on October 12th, 2010. http://www.climate-justice-act...

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Africa's small farmers (4.00 / 2)
speak:
Africa is hungry - 240 million people are undernourished. Now, for the first-time, small African farmers have been properly consulted on how to solve the problem of feeding sub-Saharan Africa. Their answers appear to directly repudiate a massive international effort to launch an African Green Revolution funded in large part by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Instead of new hybrid seeds, chemical fertilisers and pesticides, family farmers in West Africa said they want to use local seeds, avoid spending precious cash on chemicals and most importantly to direct public agricultural research to meet their needs, according to a multi-media publication released on World Food Day (Oct. 16).



"If a man is as wise as a serpent, he can afford to be as harmless as a dove" Cheyenne

'Bout time someone started listening to them (4.00 / 2)
Kind of like the old adage - Give a man a fish, feed him for a day, teach him to fish and he'll feed himself for his whole life.

What the 'new' green revolution in Africa wants is to sell the guy the fish, the firewood to cook it, and the seasonings to make it pallatable, to use a rather obtuse analogy. They definately don't want the man to do for himself.

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


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