Don’t Put Monsanto in Charge of Ending Hunger in Africa

Yifat Susskind
Published: Sunday 27 May 2012
“There are differences, of course. Unlike big companies, small-scale women farmers do not grab millions of acres of land for monoculture plantations that destroy local biodiversity.”
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This past weekend, President Obama hid out from protesters at Camp David. He was hosting the leaders of the world’s eight wealthiest economies, known as the G8. As they readied to meet, on Friday, Obama put forward his New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition.

This occasion gave Rajiv Shah, the administrator of the US Agency for International Development, the chance to make an astonishing statement:

“We are never going to end hunger in Africa without private investment. There are things that only companies can do, like building silos for storage and developing seeds and fertilizers.”

That’s news to millions of women farmers in Africa. Their harvests feed their families and generate income that sustains local economies. For generations, they have been doing just those things: storing their harvests, protecting and developing seeds, using natural fertilizers.

Smallholder women farmers save and exchange seeds that help keep local crops viable. They demonstrate how to adapt to climate change by adjusting planting cycles, experimenting with new drought-resistant crops and more. They produce crucial food supplies using the small-scale, organic methods that are increasingly recognized as vital to the health of the planet—and everyone who lives on it.

There are differences, of course. Unlike big companies, small-scale women farmers do not grab millions of acres of land for monoculture plantations that destroy local biodiversity. They do not develop the terminator seeds that hold farmers hostage to the seed patent rights of corporations. They are not the inventors of chemical fertilizers that worsen climate change.

Those honors belong to the very companies that President Obama is inviting to oversee Africa’s food security. We know that their primary goal is not anybody’s food security but their own bottom line. That’s why it’s governments, and not corporations like Monsanto, that should bear responsibility for funding and developing agriculture. It is simply not true that only companies can build silos and develop seeds and fertilizers.

President Obama anticipated these criticisms when he addressed “whether this New Alliance is just a way for governments to shift the burden onto somebody else.” He was quick to assure that, even in hard economic times, his administration would continue to make investments in development aid. Let’s make sure that those investments work to prioritize the right to food over corporate profits.

Because here’s the truth: we’re never going to end hunger in Africa without upholding the rights of smallholder women farmers who feed the continent and care for its ecosystems.



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ABOUT Yifat Susskind

Yifat Susskind is the Executive Director of MADRE, an international women's human rights organization. She has worked with women’s human rights activists from Latin America, the Middle East, Asia and Africa to create programs in their communities to address women's health, violence against women, economic and environmental justice and peace building. She has also written extensively on US foreign policy and women’s human rights and her critical analysis has appeared in online and print publications such as The New York TimesThe Washington PostForeign Policy in Focus and The W Effect: Bush’s War on Women, published by the Feminist Press in 2004. Ms. Susskind has been featured as a commentator on CNN, National Public Radio, and BBC Radio.

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8 comments on "Don’t Put Monsanto in Charge of Ending Hunger in Africa"

Dr. Zeki Ergas

May 29, 2012 2:14am

And Monsanto is responsible for the between 150.000 and 180.000 Indian farmers who committed suicide by drinking Monsanto's RoundUp herbicide a few years ago because they were bankrupted after massive Monsanto GMO crop failures. One should read or watch Vandana Shiva's essays and videos on the importance on developing, storing and exchanging local seeds...

HopeforAmerica

May 28, 2012 6:03pm

PEOPLE: WE NEED TO PUT PRESSURE ON BILL GATES. GATES IS A HUGE PART OF THE PROBLEM.

"Gates Foundation has invested heavily in converting Asian, African agricultural systems to GMOs" (Huff, 2012).

WHY isn't anybody addressing the fact that Bill Gates /Gates Foundation has strong ties to Monsanto??!! Gates hired "a former Monsanto executive of 25 years; Dr. Robert Horsch. Horsch is the same Dr. that developed Roundup" (Huff, 2012). Gates has been pooring 100's of millions of dollars in GMO research. In addition to Gates Grants to GMO research, in 2012 Gates purchased 500,000 Shares of Monsanto", (Huff, 2012).

**Reference: Huff, Ethan A. (March 2012). Natural News. Info Wars. "Bill Gates, Monsanto, and Eugenics: A Corporate Takeover of Agriculture". Retrieved May 28, 2012 from; http://www.infowars.com/bill-gates-monsanto-and-eugenics-a-corporate-tak....

Ed Bradford

May 28, 2012 12:29pm

Are the 90% of scientists who approve of Montsanto's science the same 90% of scientists that approve of global warming? We are talking about consensus science, aren't we?

Scott Ashley

May 28, 2012 10:08am

I keep hearing references about a super weed created by or as a result of monsanto's genetic engineering. If or when this weed hits the environment we might find that monsanto has the only pesticide that can control it. Wouldn't that be lovely.

notfallow

May 27, 2012 1:16pm

The uber national companies, Monsanto and their kind, will destroy everything in their quest for profits. Go no further than IOWA and talk to farmers there. If they are turned loose in Africa, they don't stand a chance.
And sadly, it won't matter which party is in "power".

grasshopper

May 27, 2012 12:45pm

Obama has turned out to be as bad as Bush on allowing Monsanto to take over our food supply. I am very disappointed, but this has caused me to be aware that it does not matter who we elect to the office of President, they are only a talking head and all the power in DC is with the people who have been hanging around forever. Kissinger, Greenspan, Bush, (both) all that bunch who think we are too stupid to know what is good for us. They want to control everything and the NWO shit. It is slowly happening. Our rights are slipping away and nobody wants to acknowledge it. Poison in our food, air and water.. shows what their goal is....

Jeffrey Hill

May 27, 2012 10:17am

Putting Monsanto in charge of ending hunger in Africa is like putting Pablo Escobar in charge of ending cocaine trafficking in the western hemisphere.

rAmen

May 27, 2012 2:58pm

Perfect analogy!