By Grain.org
We are shocked and offended by an article co-signed by Jose
Graziano da Silva, Director General of the UN's Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO), and Suma Chakrabarti, President of the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD),
that was pusblished in the Wall Street Journal on September 6, 2012.In the
article, they call on governments and social organisations to embrace the
private sector as the main engine for global food production.
While referring specifically to
Eastern Europe and North Africa, the heads of these two influential
international agencies make a clear call for a world wide increase in
private sector investment and land grabbing. They say that the private sector
is efficient and dynamic and call on companies to "double investment
in the land itself". Meanwhile, they dismiss peasants and those few
remaining policies that protect them as burdens "holding back"
agricultural development that should be eliminated. To do so, they urge
governments to facilitate the growth of big agribusiness. Their article was
published in the context of a joint FAO and EBRD conference in Istanbul on
September 13th, which they describe as the largest and
most important gathering of
companies and decision-makers in agribusiness.
FAO Director General Jose Graziano da Silva |
Graziano da Silva and Chakrabarti
make a number of biased claims in the article that obscure the reality when it
comes to agriculture and food. They point to Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan as
successful examples of agribusiness that have transformed these countries from
"the agricultural wastelands of the 1990s" into "leading grain
exporters." But at no time do they mention that the official statistics
from all three countries show that small farmers and peasants are more
productive than big agribusiness.
Peasants and small farmers,
especially women, account for over half of Russia's agricultural production but
occupy only a quarter of the agricultural lands. In the Ukraine, they produce
55% of the agricultural output on only 16% of the land, while in Kazakhstan,
where they occupy half of the land, they account for 73% of agricultural
production. The fact is that these countries are fed by their peasants and
small farmers. And this is true the world over. Wherever offical data are
available, as in the EU, Colombia and Brazil, or in the studies undertaken in
Asia, Africa and Latin America, peasant farming is shown to be more efficient
than large-scale agribusiness.
Contrary to what is claimed by the
Director General of the FAO, those who really have the capacity to feed the
world are the world's men and women farmers and peasants. The expansion of
agribusiness has only exacerbated poverty, destroyed the potential for
dignified rural livelihoods, increased pollution and environmental destruction,
and brought back the scourge of slave labor and a series of recent food and
climate crises.
For social movements and the
peasants and small farmers of the world, it is unacceptable and even
incomprehensible for a Director General of the FAO to be promoting the
destruction of peasant farming and an increase in land grabbing. It is
particularly troubling for this to occur after three years of careful, hard
work by La Via Campesina and other organisations in constructing the FAO's
voluntary guidelines to protect communities against land grabs and after
Graziano da Silva had repeatedly assured farmers' organisations during his
campaign for Director General of the FAO that he would promote and validate the
importance of peasant agriculture and the critical role small farmers must play
in food production.
The language used by Graziano da
Silva and Chakrabarti is offensive. Phrases like "fertilize this land with
money" or "make life easier for the world's hungry" call into
question the FAO's ability to do its job with the necessary rigor and
independence from large agribusiness companies and fulfill the UN mandate to
eradicate hunger and improve the living conditions of rural people.
We wonder what the FAO means by the
"International Year of Family Farming" when its Director General says
that the obstacles to improving agricultural production are "relatively
high levels of protection, lack of proper irrigation, [and] small and
uneconomically sized farms." This vision and the FAO's subservience to the
demands and interests of greedy investors undermines all the work at
conciliation that has taken place in recent years between farmers'
organisations and the FAO.
And it raises questions about why the FAO has not
developed a proposal for concrete and effective action to promote peasant
agriculture and family farming as a fundamental response to a global food
crisis that is once again enriching transnational banks and corporations. Where, we wonder, will peasant families go if
these plans to transform their lands into industrial megafarms are successful?
Beyond the issue of the FAO
abandoning its mission, it is also of deep concern that the EBRD is playing
such an active role in profitting from and promoting investments in land
grabbing and the take over of agriculture by big agribusiness. The EBRD's
stance is all the more dangerous now that its area of operation is expanding in
North Africa.
What is needed for agriculture and
the planet is just the opposite of what Chakrabarti and Graziano da Silva
propose. Humanity and those suffering from hunger need the agro-cultures
of rural areas, which represent half the world's population and make peasant
farming possible, to be protected and promoted-- because peasant farming is
more efficient and productive, because it produces at least half of the global
food supply and most of the employment in rural areas, and because it can cool
the planet.
The livelihoods of peasants and
indigenous peoples and their food production systems cannot be destroyed to
create a new source of mega profits for a tiny group of elites. We need
comprehensive and effective agrarian reforms that put lands and territories
back into the hands of rural peoples. The commodification and grabbing of lands
must be stopped and reversed. We do not need agribusiness; we need more
communities and more peasant and indigenous families farming with dignity and
respect.
Small
farmers feed the world !
Agribusiness grabs it !
Agribusiness grabs it !
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