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NEWS & LETTERS, August-September 2002

Protesters challenge World Food Summit

The streets of Rome were filled with 40,000 protesters in June, marching against the World Food Summit held under UN auspices. Participants included farmers from the Third World and Europe, environmentalists and activists from the movements against capitalist globalization, who contrasted the politicians dining on lobster and foie gras with the 12.8 million southern Africans now at risk of starvation.

The U.S. led the fight to turn the World Food Summit into a vehicle for biotech and agribusiness multinationals, using the fight against hunger as a pretext for selling biotechnology and demanding opening of markets.

Many delegates from poor countries objected. Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni insisted that technology is not the solution: “The most fundamental problems are not the weather; are not lack of improved seeds. The main causes of food shortages in the world are really three: wars, protectionism in agricultural products in Europe, the USA, China, India, and Japan, and protectionism in value-added products on the part of the same countries.”

The U.S. did not even let the summit recognize the right to safe and nutritious food, which is implied by the 1948 UN Declaration on Human Rights.

Many protesters echoed the message of French farmer and anti-globalization activist Jose Bove: “GMOs (genetically modified organisms) are no answer to hunger. It is just that big multinationals want to control all the rights to seeds.”

Activists also held a counter-summit in Rome, the World Forum for Food Sovereignty. The counter-summit’s closing declaration attacked “globalization and liberalization, intensifying the structural causes of hunger and malnutrition [resulting in] displacements of peoples and massive migration, the loss of jobs that pay living wages, the destruction of the land and other resources that peoples depend on, an increase in polarization between rich and poor and within and between North and South, a deepening of poverty around the world, and an increase of hunger in the vast majority of nations.”

The declaration called for “strengthening of production by the poor themselves for local markets or the radical redistribution of access to productive resources that is fundamental to real change for the better.” To the plans of the rulers, it “counterpose[s] the unifying concept of Food Sovereignty as the umbrella under which we outline the actions and strategies that are needed to truly end hunger.”

As important as it was, what the declaration disregarded was that the phenomenon it attacked, “the unbridled monopolization and concentration of resources and productive processes in the hands of a few giant corporations,” is the law of development of capitalism. Or to be precise, one pole of that law, the other pole being the growth of poverty, unemployment, revolt of the exploited working class, and new passions and new forces to uproot this outmoded capitalist system, which has shown a far greater ability to generate famine and war than human development.

--Franklin Dmitryev

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