Gates Foundation Slammed for Plan to Privatise African Seed Markets
UNITED NATIONS, Mar 23 (IPS) - The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) has been attacked by activists over alleged support of a plan to privatise African agricultural markets.
United Kingdom social justice organisation Global Justice Now levelled the claims at the Gates Foundation and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) on Monday, saying the two agencies were holding a "secret meeting" in London to promote a plan to help companies sell seeds in Africa, that will cut out small farmers.
"This morning in response food justice campaigners have held a demonstration outside the offices of the BMGF in London, with placards calling on the foundation to ‘free the seeds' and handing out packets of open-pollinated seeds as a symbol of the alternative to the corporate model promoted by USAID and BMGF," Global Justice Now said in a release.
"A papier mâché piñata representing the commercial control of seed systems was smashed by the protesters, with thousands of seeds inside being spilled over the steps of the entrance to the BMGF."
Global Justice Now said the London meeting was in response to a study by Monitor-Deloitte, commissioned by USAID and the Gates Foundation, which examined how corporate seed producers could better penetrate African markets.
"For generations, small farmers have been able to save and swap seeds. This vital practice enables farmers to keep a wide range of seeds which helps maintain biodiversity and helps them to adapt to climate change and protect from plant disease," Global Justice Now food sovereignty campaigner Heidi Chow wrote in a blog post on their website.
"However, this system of seed saving is under threat by corporations who want to take more control over seeds."
The group claims such "corporate-produced hybrid seeds" bring higher harvests in initial years, but later show unpredictable growth patterns.
"This means that instead of saving seeds from their own crops, farmers who use hybrid seeds become completely dependent on the seed companies that sell them," the blog post continued.
"Often the seeds are sold in packages with chemical fertiliser and pesticides which can lead to spiralling debt as well as damaging the environment and causing health problems."
Chow called the plan "another form of colonialism" for forcing African farmers to depend on corporate interests for their continued survival.
"We need to ensure that the control of seeds and other agricultural resources stay firmly in the hands of small farmers who feed the majority of the population in Africa rather than allowing big agribusiness to dominate even more aspects of the food system."
Ali-Masmadi Jehu-Appiah, Chair of Food Sovereignty Ghana, also expressed concern over the power that corporate interests would hold over farmers.
Activists worldwide are using the Twitter hashtag #FreeTheSeeds to protest the meeting and the plan.
Follow Josh Butler on Twitter @JoshButler
Edited by Roger Hamilton-Martin
© Inter Press Service (2015) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service