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The
US
Declares Iraqi Farmers Cannot Save Their Own Seeds
When the Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO) celebrates biodiversity on World Food Day on October
16, Iraqi farmers will be mourning its loss.
A new report [1] by GRAIN and Focus on the Global South has found
that new legislation in Iraq
has been carefully put in place by the US that prevents farmers from
saving their seeds and effectively hands over the seed market to
transnational corporations. This is a disastrous turn of events for Iraqi
farmers, biodiversity and the country's food security. While political
sovereignty remains an illusion, food sovereignty for the Iraqi people
has been made near impossible by these new regulations.
"The US
has been imposing patents on life around the world through trade deals.
In this case, they invaded the country first, then
imposed their patents. This is both immoral and unacceptable", said
Shalini Bhutani, one of the report's authors.
The new law in question [2] heralds the entry into Iraqi law of
patents on life forms - this first one affecting plants and seeds. This
law fits in neatly into the US vision of Iraqi
agriculture in the future - that of an industrial agricultural system
dependent on large corporations providing inputs and seeds.
In 2002, FAO estimated that 97 percent of Iraqi farmers used saved
seed from their own stocks from last year's harvest or purchased from
local markets. When the new law - on plant variety protection (PVP) - is
put into effect, seed saving will be illegal and the market will only
offer proprietary "PVP-protected" planting material
"invented" by transnational agribusiness corporations. The new
law totally ignores all the contributions Iraqi farmers have made to
development of important crops like wheat, barley, date and pulses. Its
consequences are the loss of farmers' freedoms and a grave threat to food
sovereignty in Iraq.
In this way, the US
has declared a new war against the Iraqi farmer.
"If the FAO is celebrating 'Biodiversity for Food Security'
this year, it needs to demonstrate some real commitment", says Henk
Hobbelink of GRAIN, pointing out that the FAO has recently been cosying
up with industry and offering support for genetic engineering [3].
"Most importantly, the FAO must recognise that biodiversity-rich
farming and industry-led agriculture are worlds apart, and that
industrial agriculture is one of the leading causes of the catastrophic
decline in agricultural biodiversity that we have witnessed in recent
decades. The FAO cannot hope to embrace biodiversity while holding
industry's hand", he added.
Grain: World Food day
Iraq's new patent law: A declaration of war against
farmers
When former Coalition Provisional
Authority (CPA) administrator L. Paul Bremer III left Baghdad
after the so-called "transfer of sovereignty" in June 2004, he
left behind the 100 orders he enacted as chief of the occupation
authority in Iraq.
Among them is Order 81 on "Patent, Industrial Design, Undisclosed
Information, Integrated Circuits and Plant Variety." This order
amends Iraq's
original patent law of 1970 and unless and until it is revised or
repealed by a new Iraqi government, it now has the status and force of a
binding law. With important implications for farmers and the future of
agriculture in Iraq,
this order is yet another important component in the United States' attempts to radically
transform Iraq's
economy.
WHO GAINS?
For generations, small farmers in Iraq
operated in an essentially unregulated, informal seed supply system.
Farm-saved seed and the free innovation with and exchange of planting
materials among farming communities has long been the basis of
agricultural practice. This has been made illegal under the new law. The
seeds farmers are now allowed to plant - "protected" crop
varieties brought into Iraq
by transnational corporations in the name of agricultural reconstruction
- will be the property of the corporations. While historically the Iraqi
constitution prohibited private ownership of biological resources, the
new US-imposed patent law introduces a system of monopoly rights over
seeds. Inserted into Iraq's
previous patent law is a whole new chapter on Plant Variety Protection
(PVP) that provides for the "protection of new varieties of
plants." PVP is an intellectual property right (IPR) or a kind of
patent for plant varieties which gives an exclusive monopoly right on
planting material to a plant breeder who claims to have discovered or
developed a new variety. So the "protection" in PVP has nothing
to do with conservation, but refers to safeguarding of the commercial
interests of private breeders (usually large corporations) claiming to
have created the new plants.
Grain: Corporate Control
"As part of sweeping "economic
restructuring" implemented by the Bush Administration in Iraq,
Iraqi farmers will no longer be permitted to save their seeds, which
include seeds the Iraqis themselves have developed over hundreds of
years. Instead, they will be forced to buy seeds from US corporations.
That is because in recent years, transnational corporations have patented
and now own many seed varieties originated or developed by indigenous
peoples. In a short time, Iraq
will be living under the new American credo:
Pay Monsanto, or starve.
"The American Administrator of the Iraqi CPA (Coalition Provisional
Authority) government, Paul Bremer, updated Iraq's intellectual property
law to 'meet current internationally-recognized standards of protection'.
The
updated law makes saving seeds for next year's harvest, practiced by 97%
of Iraqi farmers in 2002, and is the standard farming practice for
thousands of years across human civilizations, to be now illegal.
Instead, farmers will have to obtain a yearly license for genetically
modified (GM) seeds from American corporations. These GM seeds have
typically been modified from seeds developed over thousands of
generations by indigenous farmers like the Iraqis, and shared freely like
agricultural 'open source.'” Iraq law Requires Seed
Licenses November 13, 2004
"According
to Order 81, paragraph 66 - [B], issued by L. Paul Bremer [CFR], the
people in Iraq are now
prohibited from saving seeds and may only plant seeds for their food from
licensed, authorized U.S.
distributors.
The
paragraph states, "Farmers shall be prohibited from re-using seeds
of protected varieties or any variety mentioned in items 1 and 2 of
paragraph [C] of Article 14 of this chapter.
"Written
in massively intricate legalese, Order 81 directs the reader at Article
14, paragraph 2 [C] to paragraph [B] of Article 4, which states any
variety that is different from any other known variety may be registered
in any country and become a protected variety of seed - thus defaulting
it into the "protected class" of seeds and prohibiting the
Iraqis from reusing them the following season. Every year, the Iraqis
must destroy any seed they have, and repurchase seeds from an authorized
supplier, or face fines, penalties and/or jail time." IndyMedia
Iraqis
Can't Save Seed January 19, 2005
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© 2006 by St.Clair
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