|
NO PATENTS ON RICE! NO PATENTS ON LIFE!
Statement from peoples' movements and NGOs across Asia
Revised August 2001
Rice means life to us in Asia. It is the cornerstone of our food systems,
our languages, our cultures and our livelihoods for thousands of years.
Our farming communities throughout the region have developed, nurtured
and conserved over a hundred thousand distinct varieties of rice to suit
different tastes, conditions and needs.
The so-called "Green Revolution", spearheaded by the International
Rice Research Institute (IRRI), in collaboration with national agricultural
research systems, has been in fact a chemical take-over of rice farming.
In the name of feeding Asia's growing population, it brought us wholly
unsustainable farming systems replacing farmers' varieties with seeds
that require costly external inputs such as pesticides, synthetic fertilizers,
massive irrigation systems and coercive credit schemes. It replaced diversity
with uniformity and transformed farmers into mere farm workers.
Consequently, farmers lost their seeds, their knowledge, their self-confidence
and their unique cultural heritage. In response, people throughout Asia
are struggling to rebuild more sustainable agriculture systems hinged
on farmers' control of genetic resources and time-tested local knowledge.
In the past, the whole cycle of the rice economy, from production to
distribution, was under the control of farmers themselves. Today, global
corporations are taking over the rice sector. They are establishing their
grip through tie-ups with public research, interference in national policy-making,
and the further spread of chemical dependent technologies - and now, genetically
engineered (GE) seeds.
Throughout Asia, the trend in public and private rice research is to
promote new rice varieties that will bring greater control to industry
but even more harm to farmers, our health and the environment. For example,
rice that is genetically engineered to resist herbicides or carry Bt toxins
will lead to increased pesticide levels not to mention ecological disruption.
Other GE rices expressing traits such as resistance to tungro, blast or
bacterial blight are being heavily promoted despite the existence of safe
and sustainable alternatives developed and practised by farmers. meanwhile,
F1 hybrid rice is already being commercialised, forcing farmers to buy
seed every planting season from transnational corporations and gravely
threatening what is left of the genetic diversity in our rice fields.
If technological tools to control the seed were not enough, corporations
are now securing the legal tools. The WTO Agreement on Trade Related Aspects
of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) gives global corporations the
'right' to claim monopoly ownership over rice through patents and similar
mechanisms. Companies have already started to claim intellectual property
rights (IPR) on rice. From zero a few decades ago, there are now over
600 biotech patents on rice genes, plants and breeding methods worldwide.
Over 90% of them are held by corporations and research labs in the industrialised
countries. IPRs on rice give companies immoral and unethical monopoly
control and force farmers to pay for the use of genetic resources and
knowledge which originated from them, as in the famous case of the basmati
rice patent. While this is unacceptable, governments across Asia are being
pressured to recognise patents and plant breeders' rights so that corporations
can control the whole agricultural sector, starting with the seed.
Throughout the region, Asian people are working together to counter these
trends. This work involves conserving and further developing more sustainable
traditional rice farming systems at the grassroots level, while campaigning
against any kind of intellectual property regime over life
forms.
In view of the adverse impacts of increasing corporate control over Asia's
food, peoples and cultures, we demand the following:
1. Government and other sectors must recognise and support initiatives
by farmers and farmer groups who are developing, adapting and using sustainable
agriculture practices in their farms and strengthen farmer-based research,
extension and exchange in ecological agriculture.
2. Governments must recognise that farmers' and community rights have
precedence over intellectual property rights and that IPRs destroy biodiversity
and hence, farmer's livelihoods. Many initiatives to develop and implement
farmers' and community rights are underway across Asia, and must be supported
and strengthened.
3. We encourage Asian governments to support the African Group proposal
to ban the patenting of life forms under TRIPS. Further, this ban should
extend to all forms of IPR on genetic resources and traditional knowledge.
4. Governments must monitor all cases of biopiracy in rice - such
as the basmati (India/Pakistan), jasmine (Thailand), XA21 (Mali) - and
act swiftly to counteract them.
5. Genetic engineering of rice and other foods should be prohibited.
6. WTO out of agriculture.
7. No patents on rice! No patents on life!
This statement is a joint initiative of the following groups and individuals.
Please contact any of them for further information. We encourage people
to endorse this statement and join or support our actions. Endorsements
should be sent to Masipag.
|

BIOTHAI
801/8 Ngamwongwan 27, Soi 5, Muang
Nonthaburi 11000
THAILAND
biothai@pacific.net.th
CEDAC
P.O. Box 1118
Phnom Penh
CAMBODIA
Tel/Fax: (855-23) 880 916
cedac@camnet.com.kh
GRAIN
www.grain.org
HEKS Cambodia
P.O. Box 445
Phnom Penh
CAMBODIA
Tel: (855-23) 36 24 76
Fax: (855-23) 21 54 27
heks@forum.org.kh
KMP
82-C Masikap Ext., Bgy Central
Quezon City
PHILIPPINES
Telefax: (63-2) 922 0977
kmp@quickweb.com.ph
www.geocities.com/kmp_ph/
MASIPAG
3346 Aguila St., Rhoda Subd.
Los Baños, Laguna 4030
PHILIPPINES
Tel: (63-49) 536 6183
Fax: (63-49) 536 5549
masipag@mozcom.com
PAN-Indonesia
Jl. Persada Raya #1
Menteng Dalam
Jakarta 10210
INDONESIA
biotani@rad.net.id
PAN-Philippines
Lot 2 Blk 3, Salome Tan St
BF Executive Village
Las Piñas City 1740
PHILIPPINES
pidiong@yahoo.com
Philippine Greens
108 V. Luna St., Sikatuna Village
Quezon City
PHILIPPINES
Tel: (63-2) 921 5165
rverzola@yahoo.com
UBINIG
5/3 Barabo Mahanpur, Ring Road, Shaymoli
Dhaka 1207
BANGLADESH
Tel: (880-2) 811 14 65
Fax: (880-2) 811 30 65
ubinig@citechco.net
Dr. Oscar Zamora
Department of Agronomy
University of the Philippines at Los Baños
College, Laguna 4031
PHILIPPINES
Tel: (63-49)536 2466
obz@mozcom.com
|