Keeping seeds in peoples' hands - The Right to food and nutrition watch 2016
Launched at FAO Headquarters, the Right to Food and Nutrition Watch 2016 warns seeds and biodiversity are under threat as a result of the increasing corporate capture and the states’ neglect. Gathering the views of civil society organizations, social movements and scholars the world over, the renowned publication exposes how business seeks to privatize, monopolize and control seeds by patenting and commodifying this very source of life at the expense of peoples’ human rights and the maintenance of biodiversity. Peasant seeds systems, which feed the world and are resilient in times of natural disasters, are at risk.
The Watch hosted a special focus on the relationship between the right to food and the migrant workers exploitation in Italian agriculture, taking as a case study, among others, the situation of the Sikh agricultural workers in the Agro Pontino, in central Italy. The article, "From Slave Labor to Your Dinner Table: Migrant Workers on Italy’s Farms" was curated by Terra Nuova in collaboration with the researcher and journalist Marco Omizzolo.
Amongst other findings, the Right to Food and Nutrition Watch 2016 , entitled “Keeping Seeds in Peoples’ Hands” highlights:
- Peasant seeds systems, which have fed most world population for centuries, are endangered by the imposition of intellectual property rights and patents. Their rights to save, use, exchangeand sell seed have been increasingly neglected by states in order to advance a corporate agenda. Seed and agrochemical transnational corporations (TNCs) seek to privatize,monopolize and control this source of life at the expense of human rights and the maintenance of biodiversity. Recent trends, such as the new round of giant mergers – Bayer with Monsanto, Dow Chemicals with Du Pont and Syngenta with ChemChina, to name but a few , show that corporations are aiming for a tighter grip on genetic resources to reap even larger profits.
- TNCs, often with the support of states, are driving processes of environmental degradation, climate change, and biodiversity loss, inducing violence, conflicts, evictions, and displacements. The corporate food regime is leading to the disintegration of small-scale farming and small-scale fisher es as sustainable livelihoods, and to the destruction of collective ways of managing seeds, land and natural resources as commons.
- Access to and control over seeds and natural resources are directly related to the rising levels of criminalization and killings of human rights defenders. Only in 2015, more than three people were killed every week defending their land, forests and rivers against destructive industries. The fact that the criminalization of human rights defenders is increasingly associated with environmental struggles gradually blurs the line between environmental and human rights struggles.
In its recommendations, it emphasizes:
- States must thus step up and fulfill their human rights obligations by adopting stronger policies and laws that recognize and protect peasants' rights to save, use, exchange and sell seed, as found in the FAO Seed Treaty and currently debated in the negotiations for a UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas. We also need to re-think the contours of the right to food and nutrition so as to better integrate new challenges with regard to control of, and access to, natural resources.
- There is a need for coordinated "warning systems" to support victims and activists that are being harassed, criminalized and imprisoned for defending the commons. The alarming number of killings and acts of violence vis-à- vis human rights defenders shows that current laws and mechanisms at national and international levels are insufficient.
- As echoed by last year’s edition “People’s Nutrition is Not a Business”, States need to preventcorporate influence in international processes (such as the SDGs) and corporate capture of public policy-making. The human rights agenda is being perverted by those defending the privatization and commoditization of resources.
You can access the Watch here.