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New book plants seed for biodiverse food production
Posted by: Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: January 19, 2009 06:52AM

An NAU political science professor is working with Southern African farmers
studying their agricultural expertise and exposing trade agreements that
could threaten the world's food supply.

For more than 30 years, Carol Thompson has been consulting on international
agriculture trade issues, spending months or years at a time living in
Southern African countries studying agricultural expertise and working to
?expose constraining trade agreements imposed upon African farmers.?

He recent book, Biopiracy of Biodiversity - Global Exchange as Enclosure,
analyzes current international agricultural trade policies, explains how
they originated, and how they are impacting the world and indigenous
cultures.

?The future of the planet depends not so much on military power nor on
capital speculation but on each one of us making daily food choices that
affect global exchange or enclosure of biodiversity?our collective
nourishment, our wealth,? Thompson explains.

Cowritten with Andrew Mushita, director of the Community Technology
Development Trust in Zimbabwe, the book analyzes international policies for
sustainable farming, the successes and failures of industrial agriculture,
and the need to preserve biodiversity as a policy for future food security.

?Today only 12 plants provide 75 percent of the food in industrialized
countries, making us all vulnerable,? Thompson says. ?Africans still rely on
2,000 plants for their food biodiversity.?

The book tackles complex issues such as the World Trade Organization's
patenting strategies that are ?exploiting natural resources,? she says.

?Biopiracy may be a new word, but the act is old,? remarks Thompson, who
often dresses in colorful African fabric dyed by some of the plants she is
hoping will be protected. ?Biopiracy is the taking of organisms, such as
plants or seeds, from communities where they are shared by all, and their
patenting by corporations, which privatize a living organism for profitable
gain.?

The problem is that although it is traditional for farmers in Southern
African countries to share seeds and their knowledge about them, it also is
becoming common practice for other countries to profit from the seeds and
their healing benefits without compensating the original farmers.

?Pharmaceutical corporations are privatizing and patenting the genes of
plants to sell for profit," she continues. ?It is actually the stealing of
plants that were once shared and given as gifts from indigenous farmers
throughout 7,000 years of agriculture.?

Thompson says the corporate pillaging of seeds is destroying the world's
biodiversity, and the book stresses the need for policy alternatives.

?With trade policies as open as they are, fields and species are often
destroyed or polluted by newer genetically modified organisms,? Thompson
notes. ?The healing properties of indigenous plants also define local
communities, which are becoming powerless as corporations get stronger.?

Thompson cites the plant hoodia, nurtured by the San peoples in Southern
Africa, as an example of trade agreements gone wrong. When nomadic hunters
and gatherers pointed out its characteristics as a hunger-suppressing plant,
corporations quickly produced a diet pill, making millions in profit, but
only .0001 percent of the profit goes back to the San.

?I am a political economist who is seeing that if you only spend time taking
local initiatives, you can be crushed by international laws and control,?
she says.

Thompson's current work with Southern African farmers includes working on
policies to protect their knowledge about adapting crops for the
implications of climate change.

She has served as a consultant for various international organizations,
including the Southern African Development Community, the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and UNICEF. Her primary
research focus is on the impact of international finance and trade on food
security.

Published by Africa World Press, Inc., Biopiracy of Biodiversity - Global
Exchange as Enclosure, is available at www.amazon.com.
www.checkbiotech.org



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