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Food Sovereignty - the Movie

Via Phil, here's a short movie shot at the World Summit on Food Sovereignty. A fine introduction to the subject.


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Posted on 28 August, 2007 - 14:40

 

UK Food and Poverty Report - an analysis

The British Food Standards Agency (FSA) have come out with some useful research on the nation’s health, and food poverty. The message from the media seems to be this: ‘the poor don’t have it as bad as we thought’.

To some extent this is a welcome message – it goes some way to countering the national sport, as British as cricket, of heaping contempt on poor people (though I suspect that it’ll take a little more than this report to make the practice disappear completely).

Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse - men eating badly ... read more »

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Posted on 17 July, 2007 - 18:39

 

If you love me, don't feed me junk

At the G8 protests in Germany, my friend Ingeborg Tangeraas has just given a powerful speech in support of farmers rights, and food sovereignty. You can find it at the Via Campesina website, with pictures. Text only below.

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Dear friends,

My name is Ingeborg Tangeraas and I am representing the small peasants union in Norway and Via Campesina international coordinating committee as a representative from Europe. Via Campesina is an international movement with millions of peasants, landless and agricultural workers – we are men, women and youth from 132 organisations in 56 countries all over the world. ... read more »

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Posted on 7 June, 2007 - 18:44

 

All that's local isn't gold

The folk over at Portside have circulated an article from the San Jose Mercury News. It decries the treatment of workers at local neighbourhood stores, and is another reminder that 'local' need not be synonymous with 'ethical'....

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Groups decry labor abuses at 'mercado' markets

Campaign will inform workers of their rights

By Jessie Mangaliman - Mercury News

Scores of California workers employed in small neighborhood stores in Latino and Asian communities are enduring abuse in the workplace - unpaid wages, long hours without breaks, verbal and sexual abuse - union and civil rights officials said this week. ... read more »

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Posted on 23 April, 2007 - 04:47

 

Two new articles on the Nyeleni Food Sovereignty Conference

The Bangkok Post carries two fine articles on Nyéléni : the 2007 World Summit on Food Sovereignty by Supara Janchitfah. Here's Planting Seeds for Mother Earth and below you'll find Unconventional Gathering.

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Planting Seeds for Mother Earth

Women delegates from all continents at the World Forum on Food Sovereignty renewed their commitment to self reliance in food and social justice, writes SUPARA JANCHITFAH

This open-air auditorium served as the venue for delegates from 98 countries to exchange their ideas and formulate their action plans to fight for food sovereignty.
Lamduan Serathong participated in one of the small forums of people from Southeast and East Asia to analyse the problems that farmers are encountering and what they can do about them.

Lamduan Serathong collected some of the African seeds that were left on the stage in front of the auditorium tent after the opening ceremony of the World Forum on Food Sovereignty. The Malian host had offered the seeds and some root crops as an offering to Mother Earth during the ceremony.

"I want to add more varieties of seeds in Thailand's soil. I will plant some on my small plot of land, and if they grow well, I will distribute them to my neighbours and our networks," said Lamduan, a mother of two and a former fisherwoman on the Moon River.

Lamduan had an offering of her own; she had carried with her some sweet tamarin seeds from Thailand and gave them to some of the conference participants and local Malians. She also planted some of the seeds at the training centre where the forum took place.

She showed delegates from other countries how to plant, water and nurture the seeds with organic fertilisers, using a mixture of her native Isan dialect and body language, which was probably more effective than any interpreter.

"I think they understand what I want to say, because most of us are farmers. To us farmers, seeds are very crucial for our lives - not something we have to sterilise and sell, " she added with broad smile.

She was referring to the practices of transnational companies which try to patent seed types and sell sterilised versions so that farmers have to rely on the companies to sell them more seeds for the next year's crop.

Lamduan and other farmers present at the forum were well-acquainted with the poignant experiences of farmers around the world who have little control, or sovereignty, over their own agricultural agendas.

More than 10,000 Indian cotton farmers have committed suicide in a recent years because they could not pay their debts after selling their cotton. Many factors led to this circumstance. The Indian government is under pressure to honour its committments under World Trade Organisation agreements and also international lenders to get rid of official subsidies. For the same reasons, it announced in 2005 that it was no longer committed to procuring cotton from local farmers.

Locals in Mali have their own way of cooking food.

"I feel sad that our seeds are now in the hands of corporations that prevent seed saving. In the past, seeds were a free resource, available just from the practice of farming. Why do we have to buy them? They are forcing us to open up our markets," she said, adding that seed monopolies rob farmers of life.

Another indigenous woman at the forum, Atysheykarin Indigena Arhuaca from Colombia, told another seed-saving story of black slave women in South America.

Dating back around 1600 to 1700, the slaves who worked in the fields were not allowed to save seeds, but many women hid them in the braids of their hair. Some of these women were able to escape and return back to Africa, Atysheykarin explained, and they planted the seeds from South America in their ancestral lands on their home continent.

"To me, seeds mean not only food, but the freedom to grow food," said Atysheykarin.

The story of Nyeleni

At the conference, women from around the world also learned of some of the problems that many African women face. For example, many indigenous women do not have the right to own property, although they are often the ones who must take care of it.

Despite abuse and discrimination toward women and poor people in general, the women who gathered at Mali know that there is no battle they cannot win if they are only willing to fight it.

The story of Nyeleni was told on the first day of the forum, February 22. Nyeleni was an only child, which in her part of Africa was considered a curse. She suffered in her youth from all the mocking she and her parents were subjected to by the men of the village. She secretly resolved to remove this slur that men had cast on her by defeating them on their own ground - farming and working the land.

Nyeleni's first priority was not marriage, as is common for most young women, but to bring honour to her family and to women, all women. She took part in farming competitions and defeated all the champions in her village and in the surrounding region. Her reputation grew. The more arrogant men would still challenge her, but day after day they were all defeated, to their disgrace.

Nyeleni's fame grew beyond the limits of her region, and she earned the respect of people from all walks of life. Her life story became a legend, and according to that legend, she domesticated the fonio, or "angry rice", cereal that many people eat today.

The story of Nyeleni reinforced the spirits of the female delegates who have been fighting against patriarchy - a system that impoverishes life, resources and eco-systems - in their own homelands. They are also fighting against imperialism, neo-liberalism, neo-colonialism and the agents that promote such systems.

Lamduan and the other women at the forum are growing the seeds to foster the care of Mother Earth,. With their earnest commitment to work for their own food producing systems and policies that provide everyone with an adequate amount of healthy, affordable, and culturally appropriate food, these women hope to regenerate all the friendly ecosystems of the planet.

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Unconventional Gathering ... read more »

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Posted on 20 March, 2007 - 13:50

 

Food Sovereignty: An Introduction

The 2007 World Summit on Food Sovereignty has come to an end. Of the many good things at the conference's website is one of the best definitions of Food Sovereignty. Here are the edited highlights from the Declaration, to which 500 representatives from over 80 countries signed their names:

We are fighting for a world where… ... read more »

 

Nyéléni : the 2007 World Summit on Food Sovereignty

Yes, I've just come back from one international conference, having cast a few (and soon many more) aspersions on it. But not all such gigs are lamentable. Via Campesina's African organisations are mounting a major colloquium on food sovereignty in Mali later this month. The forum, oddly enough, is called "Nyéléni 2007". Here's a short gloss explaining why.

"Nyéléni was an only child, which in Africa was considered a curse. Nyéléni, as a girl and only child of her parents, suffered in her youth from all the mocking her parents were subjected to. She secretly resolved to remove this slur that men had cast on her by defeating them on their own ground, that is to say agriculture and working of the land. ... read more »

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Posted on 11 February, 2007 - 18:57

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