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GM supporters confronted in India (15/3/2004)

The Indian environmental group PASUMAI THAAYAGAM has successfully confronted GE supporters at their meeting on "Shaping the future of Rice" in Chennai, India.
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PASUMAI THAAYAGAM confronts GMO supporters with a banner stating "Rice is life - Not corporate business." PASUMAI THAAYAGAM  (Green Motherland)
Press Release

CHENNAI - India, March 12: Activists from Pasumai Thaayagam (Green Motherland, a environmental action group in South India) surprised GMOs' supporters - Gerard Barry, Golden Rise Network Coordinator, IRRI and former Monsanto employee; William James Peacock, Chief, CSIRO Canberra, Australia; M.K. Bhan, Secretary, Department of Biotechnology, Govt. of India, with a banner stating. "International Year of Rice 2004, Rice is life - Not Corporate business, Say No to GMOs - Genetically Modified Organisms, Don’t let big business rule the world" in events that were organized by the M S Swaminathan Research Foundation at Chennai, India. The activists distributed a pamphlet on 'corporate control over rice'.

The MSSRF had organized two events on March 12 and 13, 2004  in Chennai to commemorate  the occasion of the 'International Year of Rice 2004' - 1. National Colloquium on Molecular Breeding and Shaping the Future of Rice, 2. Forum on Biotechnology and the future of rice. Both events were largely represented and dominated by panelists who favored the introduction of the GM seeds for increasing food production.

Voicing his concern, Dr. R. Anbumani, President, Pasumai Thaayagam, released a press release which states  "Today's industrial agriculture system compromises the very earth on which all our future food needs depend. The failures of the current approach to farming threaten the rich and poor. Rather then growing food to meet the needs of local communities for healthy, diverse diet, industrial agriculture produces crops to sell on world markets.

Rice is the main staple of  South Indians and therefore our agricultural systems have historically been rice growing. The growth rate of rice production in India had comedown drastically from 3.0 percent per annum during the period 1985-89 to 1.5 percent currently. In certain pockets, the growth rates have remained stagnant. This is the direct outcome of the Green Revolution, which blindly copied western methods of farming that used heavy doses of chemical fertilizers, pesticides and insecticides, resulting in incalculable damage to the soil. The impact of Green Revolution on our lands and water as also the future and the divide it created amongst the rich and poor is well known. Let us remind those who tell us that the Green Revolution brought in food surplus that a) it fed only those who were already quite well fed and b) 1/3 of Indian population is still malnourished.

Hunger and poverty go hand in hand. Technological 'solutions' like genetic engineering (GE) overshadow the real social and environmental problems that cause hunger. The argument that GE is vital to feed the world and has a central role to play in enhancing agriculture productivity is based on the assumption that hunger is the result of too little food. GE proponents ignore the fact that most hungry people live in countries that have a surplus of food rather then deficit.

Pasumai Thaayagam demands real solutions.  The future for farming lies in recognizing its role not only in the production of food, but also in providing clean water, diverse wildlife and plants, and the fertile soil on which the future depends.

Pasumai Thaayagam will strongly oppose the development, cultivation, and import/export of genetically modified rice because it ignores food safety, weakens both domestic and global agriculture, and negatively impacts the environment. And also because the future of our children and the country is at stake."

(We deeply acknowledge the material provided by Dr. Devinder Sharma)

PASUMAI THAAYAGAM (Green Motherland) No. 9, Lyn Wood Lane, Mahalingapuram, CHENNAI - 600 034, Tamil Nadu, India. Email: [email protected]
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International Year of Rice 2004
Rice is life - Not Corporate business
Say No to GMOs
Don't let big business rule the world
STOP !  YOU REALLY HAVE NO RIGHT TO PLAY GOD!

While some of us have been continuing our fight against those entities that are plundering and tampering nature to suit their fat pockets, a few rather enlightened individuals and their organizations in our own backyards, have been quietly abetting business and scientific interests that are detrimental to nature.

The impact of the Green Revolution on our lands and water as also the further divide it created amongst the rich and the poor is well known.  Let us remind those who tell us that the Green Revolution brought in food surplus that a) it fed only those who were already quite well fed and b) 1/3 rd of our population is still malnourished.

This is a plea to raise your voice and might against such initiatives - our duty to our future.

Rice is now Oryza syngenta !

The launch of a high-yielding dwarf rice variety by the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) on Nov 28, 1966 marked the beginning of Asia’s struggle for freedom from hunger. Perhaps drawn by the promise of the ‘miracle rice’ - the IR8 rice variety -- the Food and Agri- culture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) dedicated 1966 as the International Rice Year.

Thirty-eight years later, as the United Nations dedicates 2004 to the world’s most important staple food once again, celebrating it as the International Year of Rice, the starchy grain has undergone a complete metamorphosis. In 1966, the miracle rice seeds that ushered in the green revolution belonged to the species - Oryza sativa -- a mankind’s heritage.

Since the time the indica variety of wild rice was known to be growing in the northern and southern slopes of the Himalayas - and that was some 15,000 years ago - rice has been regarded as probably God’s greatest gift to human society.

Staple food for more than half the world’s population, rice is part of the Asian culture, rice is the unstated religion of Asia, and in essence rice is the life of Asia. It is in Asia still that more than 97 per cent of the world's rice is grown. Nearly 91 per cent of world’s rice is produced in Asia, and 92 per cent is eaten in Asia. Rice is the principal food of three of the world’s four most populous nations: People's Republic of China, India and Indonesia. For more than 2.5 billion people in these three countries alone - rice is what they grow up with. For centuries, rice has been the sociology, tradition and lifeline for the majority world.

That was an era associated with Oryza sativa, the biological name for rice, we know. That was the period when rice was freely available for farmers, consumers and the scientists. Whether it were the 200,000 plant accessions of rice that were known to be cultivated some 200 years ago, or the handful of dwarf and high-yielding rice varieties and its numerous national variants the world over that have led the march against hunger in the recent past, rice was a realm of nature.

As the world begins to commemorate the International Year of Rice 2004, a leading multinational agribusiness giant, Syngenta, has already claimed ownership of rice. In other words, biological inheritance of the world’s major food crop is now in the hands of a Swiss multinational. The journey of rice, beginning with the emergence of wild rice some 130 million years ago, transcending through the Himalayas, passing through southern China, hopping to Japan, traveling to Africa, traded to Middle East and the Mediterranean, shipped to Mexico and America, has finally ended at the banks of river Rhine in Basel, Switzerland -- under the monopoly control of Syngenta.

As that brouhaha was unfolding several years ago, agribusiness giants kept on assuring the scientific community that crops like rice, wheat and other cereals are of no commercial interest to them. Their focus was on cash crops like strawberries, cut flowers, tomatoes and the likes, which could rake in big profits. This prompted universities, which developed such technologies in the first place, to license these to the private corporations. Knowing well that patenting alone will determine who wields power over farming and world food system, a tug of war began over who controls the rice plant genome - the raw sequences in the genetic code.

The tussle over the monopoly control of rice extends to its 12 chromosomes. These chromosomes contain 430 million base pairs of DNA, and are expected to have about 50,000 genes. Syngenta, in collaboration with Myriad Genetics Inc of USA, has beaten Monsanto in the game by sequencing more than 99.5 per cent of the rice genome. Syngenta has already made it clear that it will restrict access to the genomic map and expects proprietary control over any research carried out with the information.

Top executives of Syngenta have already told the New York Times that while the companies would not seek to patent the entire genome, they would try to patent individual valuable genes. They categorically stated that Syngenta and Myriad were well on their way to finding many of those. First Monsanto, which made international headlines in April 2000, for announcing to share its working draft (rougher, 60 per cent) of the genome map with international researchers sequencing the rice genome under a publicly funded International Rice Genome Sequencing Project (IRGSP), and then Syngenta making it clear of the efforts to seek patents on genes with visible commercial output, the race is on to draw proprietary control over something that existed in nature.

There are conflicting reports of the latest tally of patents over rice genes. Some researchers say that more than 900 genes have already been patented. Earlier, GRAIN had compiled a list of 609 patents on rice genes drawn till Sept 2000, 56 per cent of which were owned by private companies and research institutes in the western countries. Top of the list was the American giant Du Pont with 95 patents, followed by Mitsui, Japan, with 45 patents. In the next three years, especially after the mapping of the rice genome by Syngenta, a majority of the patents would surely be in the lap of a handful of multinational agribusiness companies.

The daylight robbery of genetic wealth - appropriately termed as biopiracy - continues unabated in connivance with top scientists, international organizations and the policy makers. The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), which governs the 16 international agricultural research centers for public good, has actually welcomed the recent developments in rice. The Rockefeller Foundation, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) and even the FAO and UNDP have refrained from standing up against what appears to be the nefarious design of the private companies in the name of research and development. In fact, the CGIAR has even gone a step ahead by taking Syngenta on its board - thereby ensuring that the company gets a free access to the world’s biggest rice germplasm collections that it has.

Syngenta subsequently gained exclusive rights on the controversial Golden Rice technology in exchange for help with the IPR issues and the different testing of the rice for a humanitarian project. This happened when the international community was negotiating an agreement to see that the 70-odd patents that were coming in the way of free transfer and application of the technology were removed. Ingo Potrykus, university professor of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, who developed the Golden Rice, was in a desperate haste to see that his name is enshrined in history as the saviour of the malnourished. Greenovation, a spin-off company from the University of Freiburg in Germany, was therefore founded in 1999 to out-license university research to life science companies.

The patent was applied a year later, naming Igno Potrykus and his colleague Beyer as the inventors, and facilitating an agreement with Zeneca, now Syngenta. For the Swiss company, the IPR over Golden Rice provides a human face to its manipulative gene control designs. The company has already announced that the technology will be free for farmers in the developing countries with annual incomes of less than US $ 10,000, a wonderful exercise in public relations knowing well that the Golden Rice has little utility and relevance for the developing countries.

The quest for control over rice does not end with patenting of its genes. In 2002, stung by criticism, Syngenta India had to pull out from the controversial research collaboration with the Indira Gandhi Agricultural University (IGAU) at Raipur. The collaboration would have given the company commercial rights to over 19,000 strains of local rice cultivars held by the university. These rice varieties were painstakingly gathered by the agricultural scientist R H Richharia in the 1970s. In exchange, the university would have received an undisclosed amount of money and royalties. Environmentalists and some scientists had opposed the deal on the ground that Richharia's collection is a national wealth and not a private property of the university and that opening the database to a multinational company is a "sellout". “We are very disappointed to see the mislead- ing and false accusations that were made (against the collaboration)," a company official was quoted as saying. What is however relatively unknown is the fact that the Richharia rice collect- ions were not the only plant species that the company had an eye for. It has reportedly gone into numerous agricultural universities in India, singing agreements that enable the company commercial rights over the hybrid rice varieties in lieu of five per cent royalties from sales.

Patrick Mulvany of the Intermediate Technology Development Group (ITDG) is a distinguished researcher who has closely followed the biodiversity trail. “Not just national collections, but also CGIAR genebanks (which contain over 600,000 plant accessions) will come under increasing pressure from multinationals in the next year or two, to exchange the genetic resources in genebanks under public control for traitorous pieces of silver,” he warns. Accordingly, as "Plant genetic resources for food and agriculture" are defined in the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources’ Article 2 as "any genetic material of plant origin of actual or potential value for food and agriculture", it should be quite clear that IPRs are NOT allowed on these genetic resources.

However, the eminent Commission on Intellectual Property Rights, set up by the UK government, has already jumped the gun and has interpreted Article 12.3(d) as meaning that patents can be taken out on genes derived from the seeds kept under the rules of the multilateral systems (those 35 genera of food crops, including rice, wheat, maize and potatoes, and 29 forages covered by the MLS in its Annex 1). Mulvany explains: “The crucial words ‘in the form received’ mean that material received cannot be patented as such, but they do allow patents to be taken out on modifications (however defined) to that material." (CIPR report Ch 3).

In simple words, even the CIPR has failed to foresee the underlying threat to food sovereignty. Not realizing that such an interpretation will lead to scientific apartheid against the developing countries. After all, with the product and process patents coming into vogue in agriculture, the dice is loaded against public sector agricultural research. As a result of private control over genes and biological processes, farm research in the public sector will be rendered redundant. It has already happened in the rich industrialized countries where universities have increasing gone private or are surviving on private funds. To begin with, rice research will be the biggest casualty for the developing countries. With a few private companies vying for the crumbs, rice is essentially in the grip of Syngenta.

The International Year of Rice 2004 is in reality a celebration of the private control of one of the mankind’s most precious heritage - rice plant. It is a toast to acknowledge the emergence of Switzerland on the world’s rice map.

Oryza sativa, therefore for all practical purposes will become Oryza syngenta.  

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