
Devinder Sharma
I am rather amused to read that hundreds of people signed an AgBioWorld
Foundation petition appealing to Aventis CropScience to donate 5 million
pounds of genetically-engineered experimental rice to the needy rather
than destroy it. And at the same time, I am glad to know that the appeal
did not motivate the FDA and the USDA to listen to the mischievous
proposal in the name of "humanitarian intentions".
Aventis has expressed concern about the hungry in the world, stating that
it is "working hard to ensure that US farmers can grow abundant,
nutritious crops and we hope that by contributing to that abundance all
mankind will prosper". And AgBioWorld Foundation, at the same time conveys
its "disapproval of those who, in the past, have used situations similar
to this one to block APPROVED food aid to victims of cyclones, floods and
other disasters in order to further their own political (namely,
anti-biotechnology) agendas."
I do not have to go into the reasons why AgBioWorld Foundation feels
agitated over the actions of those "who block APPROVED food aid to victims
of cyclones, floods and other disasters." The world knows that there is a
strong lobby of scientists who are blind to the real cause behind the
growing hunger. Their only interest is to ensure that some private
companies can make increasing profits in the name of hunger and
starvation. Their only interest is to ensure that the corporatisation of
agriculture, ably assisted by an unsound science of biotechnology, helps
in further marginalising millions of farmers in the developing countries.
Aventis, Syngenta, Monsanto, and Cargill's are to be world's food-giver.
And everyone in the majority world must queue up before them with a
begging bowl. Isn't this similar to what Shylock used to do in William
Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice? Remember, Shylock looking always for an
opportunity to extract his "pound of flesh?"
Well, if the AgBioWorld Foundation and Aventis are IN REALITY keen to
eradicate hunger, please join the efforts that we intend to make in India
to make available food to those who cannot afford it. It is my appeal, on
behalf of the New Delhi-based Ecological Foundation, to all those who feel
moved by the pictures of malnourished people on the television screens, to
all those who feel agitated over the growing disaparities leading to
hunger and dispair, to come forward, be a partcipant, and contribute for
the cause of hunger and malnutrition. Together we can make a difference.
If your heart bleeds at the millions who die of starvation and hunger,
here is an opportunity to do your little bit. And I am not talking of five
million pounds (or about two and half million kilos) for the sake of
public relations and propaganda. I am talking of 40 MILLION TONNES of
foodgrains that is lying surplus in India !
More than 40 MILLION TONNES of foodgrains (in addition to the requirement
of about 20 million tonnes for the food buffer) are stock piled in the
open. This, when the government figures itself declare that out of the 360
million people officially living below the poverty line, as many as fifty
million are victims of starvation. It is an ironic illustration of that
cliche, a problem of plenty. While surplus food stocks rot in the open,
thousands die of starvation and hunger. And as if this is not enough, the
government has allowed the sale of foodgrains at a throwaway price to
traders and merchants for export when people in the country are waiting
endlessly for two square meals a day!
The IMF, World Bank and World Trade Organisation, which lead the
modern-day Shylocks, have instead asked the Indian government to redefine
the 'beneficiaries" of the publicly-funded distribution system. As a
result, the government has excluded millions of people, earning more than
Indian Rs 1,500 (US $ 40) a month, from purchasing subsidised foodgrains.
The situation is such that in Dharvi, Asia's largest slum in the heart of
Mumbai, only 150 families have been classified as living below the poverty
line !
With the Indian government refusing to provide food to the needy and
helpless, and with the IMF, World Bank and the WTO asserting that the
hungry be left at the mercy of the market forces, there is no hope for
these millions. These are not the children of a lesser god. They too are
made of the same blood and flesh as you and me. They too need food to eat,
to survive and to live in this wonderful planet. They DO NOT need your
sympathies. They DO NOT need genetically modified food that you and me are
not willing to accept as part of our daily diet. They need the normal food
which is being eaten away by rats and insect pests. They need the
foodgrains that is being damaged by rain and moisture. They need the food
that has been essentially grown by them but which they cannot afford to
buy.
Let us together make that abundant and rotting food available to these
hapless millions. They need your support and not your publicity stints.
They don't need your signatures for an appeal to the Indian government.
They need you to come forward and make that dream possible.
Here is an humanitarian opportunity for the AgBioWorld Foundations' and
the Aventis CropSciences' of the world to demonstrate their REAL concern
for the poor and hungry. Every contribution that you make to the
Ecological Foundation will be used for MAKING FOOD AVAILABLE to the hungry
millions. And believe me, the food that lies openly stacked in India is
not genetically manipulated. It is fit for human consumption.
In the name of the poor and hungry, - Devinder Sharma, The Ecological
Foundation, New Delhi-110 063, India.
* NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed for research and educational purposes only. **
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Last Updated on 5/25/01 Email: information@biotech-info.net |
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